| Length | Up to one rope length |
| Bounded by | Two belay stations |
| Single vs multi | One pitch vs several linked |
| Difficulty | Beginner concept |
A pitch is a section of a climb between two belay points, no longer than a single rope length. Routes longer than one rope length are split into multiple pitches that the climbing team ascends one at a time. A single-pitch route is climbed in one go; multi-pitch routes link several pitches up a wall.
How pitches work
The leader climbs a pitch, builds an anchor, and belays the second up to that stance before the next pitch begins.
Single vs multi-pitch
Single-pitch climbs finish in one rope length; multi-pitch routes leapfrog upward over several, adding anchor and transition skills.
Frequently asked questions
How long is a climbing pitch?
A pitch is limited by the rope — at most one rope length, so typically up to 60–70 metres, though many pitches are shorter, ending wherever a good belay stance exists. The leader climbs a pitch, builds an anchor, and belays the second up before the next pitch.
What's the difference between single-pitch and multi-pitch climbing?
Single-pitch routes are climbed in one rope length, and you're lowered or walk off from the top. Multi-pitch routes are longer, so the team leapfrogs up in successive pitches, building anchors and belaying at each station — adding anchor and rope-management skills.
What is a belay station?
It's the anchored stance at the top of a pitch where the leader secures themselves and belays the follower up. On multi-pitch climbs, the team transitions gear and roles at each belay station before continuing.
Sources
- Climbing terms — American Alpine Club