What Is Simul-Climbing?

Simul-climbing (simultaneous climbing) is a speed technique where both the leader and follower climb at the same time while tied to the same rope, with protection placed between them, rather than one belaying the other. It is much faster than pitching but riskier, since a fall by either climber can pull the other, so it's reserved for easier terrain or experienced teams.

MountaineeringTechniquesAdvanced
Simul-climbing (simultaneous climbing) is a speed technique where both the leader and follower climb at the same time while tied to the same rope, with protection placed between them, rather than one belaying the other. It is much faster than pitching but riskier, since a fall by either climber can pull the other, so it's reserved for easier terrain or experienced teams.
What it isBoth climbers moving at once, roped
ProtectionGear placed between the two
Benefit / riskFast, but a fall pulls both
DifficultyAdvanced

Simul-climbing (simultaneous climbing) is a speed technique where both the leader and follower climb at the same time while tied to the same rope, with protection placed between them, rather than one belaying the other. It is much faster than pitching but riskier, since a fall by either climber can pull the other, so it’s reserved for easier terrain or experienced teams.

How it works

Both move together with gear clipped between them — a running belay — instead of pitching.

Why and when

For speed on moderate alpine terrain, where moving fast beats objective hazards. Educational only; not a substitute for instruction.

Frequently asked questions

What is simul-climbing?

Simul-climbing is when both climbers move at the same time, tied to the same rope, with several pieces of protection clipped between them — a 'running belay' — instead of one climber belaying a stationary rope. It covers ground far faster than climbing pitch by pitch.

Is simul-climbing dangerous?

It's riskier than normal pitched climbing, because a fall by either climber can pull the other off, and there's no static belayer to catch a leader fall directly. It demands easier terrain relative to the team's ability, solid protection between climbers, and experienced partners.

When do you simul-climb?

On long routes and in alpine climbing, where speed is itself a safety factor (beating weather and objective hazards), and on terrain well within the team's ability where a fall is unlikely. It's a tactic for moving fast over moderate ground, not for pushing your limit.

Sources