Slab vs Loose-Snow Avalanche

Slab and loose-snow avalanches are the two basic avalanche types. A slab avalanche releases a cohesive layer of snow over a weak layer along a crown line and causes most avalanche deaths; a loose-snow avalanche (sluff) starts at a point in cohesionless snow and fans out, usually smaller. Recognizing which is possible is fundamental to avalanche safety.

Aspect Slab Avalanche Loose-Snow Avalanche
Release Cohesive slab fails at once Starts at a point, fans out
Shape Crown line, wide Triangular fan
Snow Bonded slab over weak layer Loose, cohesionless snow
Danger Causes most fatalities Usually smaller, still hazardous
Key concern Burial under deep debris Cliffs, terrain traps, when wet/large

It's a slab avalanche if…

  • A whole cohesive layer releases at once
  • There's a distinct fracture crown
  • It breaks above the trigger point

It's a loose-snow avalanche if…

  • It starts at a single point
  • It fans out downhill in a triangle
  • The snow is loose and unconsolidated

Verdict

Slab avalanches are the primary killer — a cohesive slab releasing over a weak layer can break above and bury you deeply. Loose-snow sluffs are usually smaller but still dangerous near cliffs, terrain traps, or when wet and large. Avalanche education teaches you to assess both; this is an overview, not training.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between a slab and loose-snow avalanche?

A slab avalanche releases a cohesive, bonded layer of snow all at once over a weaker layer, fracturing along a crown line and often breaking above the person who triggers it. A loose-snow avalanche (sluff) starts at a single point in loose, unconsolidated snow and fans outward as it descends. Slabs are usually larger and far deadlier.

Which type of avalanche is more dangerous?

Slab avalanches are responsible for the great majority of avalanche fatalities, because they can release a large, deep mass that buries victims under dense, set-up debris. Loose-snow avalanches are typically smaller and less lethal, though they can still sweep you into hazards or bury you when large or wet.

How do you know which avalanche problem exists?

Through the local avalanche forecast and snowpack assessment, which identify the current avalanche problems (such as storm slab, persistent slab, wind slab, or loose dry/wet). Recognizing and managing these requires formal avalanche education — this comparison is a general overview, not a substitute for training.

Related: Slab Avalanche · Loose-Snow Avalanche · Avalanche · Snowpack · Avalanche rescue