| Main sense | A big drop with serious fall consequences |
| Key point | Independent of move difficulty |
| Other sense | Exposure to cold/weather |
| Difficulty | Intermediate concept |
In mountaineering, exposure usually means the degree to which a position has a big drop below it — exposed terrain has serious fall consequences even when the moves aren’t hard, demanding composure. ‘Exposure’ is also used for the body’s dangerous exposure to cold and weather, which can lead to hypothermia.
Terrain exposure
It’s about consequence, not difficulty — easy scrambling on an airy ridge can be highly exposed, testing your composure more than your strength.
The other meaning
‘Exposure’ to cold and weather is a path to hypothermia — a distinct hazard.
Frequently asked questions
What does exposure mean in climbing?
Exposure refers to how much air is beneath you — how big and consequential a fall would be. A highly exposed spot might have easy moves but a sheer drop below, so the danger comes from the consequence of a slip, not the difficulty. Managing the fear it creates is a real skill.
Is exposure the same as difficulty?
No. A move can be physically easy but very exposed (a big drop) or hard but well-protected with no real fall consequence. Exposure is about consequence and the mental challenge it brings, while difficulty is about how hard the moves are.
What's the other meaning of exposure?
Outside the terrain sense, 'exposure' also describes being dangerously exposed to cold, wind, and wet — the conditions that cause hypothermia. Someone 'suffering from exposure' is succumbing to the cold, a separate but serious mountain hazard.
Sources
- Mountain terminology — The Mountaineers