Locking vs Non-Locking Carabiner

Locking and non-locking carabiners serve different roles. A locking carabiner has a securable gate for single, critical connections — the belay device, anchor, or rappel; a non-locking carabiner has a sprung gate for redundant connections like quickdraws. Using the right type in each spot is fundamental to safety.

AspectLocking CarabinerNon-Locking Carabiner
GateLocks shutSprung, can be bumped open
Used forCritical single connectionsRedundant connections
ExamplesBelay, anchor, rappel, tetherQuickdraws, racking gear
SpeedSlower (lock it)Fast
Risk if misusedOpen-gate failure at key points

Use a locker when…

  • It's a single critical connection
  • You're attaching a belay device or rappel
  • You're clipping into an anchor or tether

Use a non-locker when…

  • The connection is redundant
  • You're using a quickdraw
  • You're racking gear

Verdict

Use a locking carabiner anywhere a single open gate would be dangerous, and non-lockers where redundancy already protects you. Knowing which goes where — lockers on belays and anchors, non-lockers on draws — is basic climbing safety.

Frequently asked questions

When should you use a locking carabiner?

At any single, critical connection where an accidental gate opening would be dangerous: the belay device, the master point of an anchor, a rappel setup, or a personal tether. Non-locking carabiners are for redundant connections like quickdraws.

What's the difference between locking and non-locking carabiners?

A non-locking carabiner has a sprung gate that can be bumped open; a locking carabiner adds a sleeve or mechanism that secures the gate. Lockers are for single critical points; non-lockers for redundant ones.

Are non-locking carabiners safe?

Yes, in the right place — they're standard on quickdraws and for racking, where redundancy means one gate opening isn't catastrophic. They become dangerous only if used at single critical connections that should have a locker.

Related: Locking Carabiner · Non-Locking Carabiner · Carabiner · Belay device