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Beta (climbing)
Climbing term for route information
Climbing term for route information

Beta is a climbing term that designates information about how to ascend a climbing route, and the specific climbing techniques required—and how to apply them—to overcome the key challenges encountered. Traditionally sourced in climbing guidebooks, online databases and apps now provide detailed climbing beta. The term is attributed to Texan climber Jack Mileski.
When a climber completes a route on their first attempt and without falling, it is called an onsight if they had no beta, or a flash if they had beta (a completion after several failed attempts is called a redpoint). New grade milestones in the on-sighting and flashing of routes are actively followed in the climbing media. The discovery of new beta has led to the re-grading of notable and historic climbing routes.
Description
The complexity of beta can range from a small hint about a difficult section (i.e. referred to as "some" beta), to a step-by-step instruction of the entire climb (i.e. referred to as "the" beta). Multiple route options–and thus betas–are particularly common on long multi-pitch climbing and big wall climbing routes, for example on the famous Yosemite route Freerider and its optional "Huber boulder problem".
In rock climbing, beta can include background information about a route's grade of difficulty (e.g. what drove the grade), detailed aspects about the crux (e.g. "you need to use your left hand, not your right"), the climbing style needed (e.g. long reaches or tiny crimps), the best way to protect the route (e.g. "insert a number 4 SLCD before attempting the crack"), and specific information about hand or foot holds. For mountaineering and alpine climbing, beta may include information about the approach (e.g. crossing bergschrunds), the ability to find the correct route (e.g. "avoid the crack system on the left"), the feasibility of exiting the route before completing it (e.g. key abseils to set up), and the situation regarding rock-fall and avalanche dangers.
Sometimes climbers display beta on a graphical beta-map (a more detailed move-by-move instruction guide than the route topo). Advanced climbers on very difficult routes try to connect the beta of their route to their muscle memory, so they don't have to think about the next move.
Competition climbers are given a fixed time to inspect the route as a group before the competition, but once the climbing begins, they must remain in the isolation zone away from the climbing wall, to prevent them learning more beta from watching fellow competitors attempting the route. During a time-limited pre-competition inspection, climbers try to work out the beta starting from the top of the route and working down, to avoid losing time.
Derived terms
The derived term spraying beta designates when a third party begins to impart unwanted beta without being asked for it (which can ruin an onsight attempt). The term breaking beta designates when a climber is able to bypass or skip a whole sequence of moves (e.g. using a dyno).
Access
The official climbing guidebooks were the first systematic forms of beta. With the development of the internet, a significant quantity of more detailed beta began to accumulate (e.g. complete YouTube videos on how to climb a specific route, per example opposite).
Both established climbing guidebook publishers (e.g. 'RockFax' in Europe), and the new dedicated online climbing databases (e.g. Mountain Project and 'theCrag.com'), began to aggregate this detailed beta in online databases and apps, alongside the traditional guidebook-type information. Open-source beta databases such as 'OpenBeta' also aggregate user-generated climbing beta.
Origin

The original use of the term beta in climbing is generally attributed to the late Texan climber Jack Mileski, who climbed predominantly in the Shawangunks during the 1980s and early 1990s (before his murder by his girlfriend). "Beta" is short for Betamax, an early videotape format. Reputedly, Mileski had a near photographic recall of many routes in the Gunks and would share said info with his friends while they climbed.
Onsights and flashes
When climbers are attempting a graded climbing route for their first time, a distinction is made on whether they complete the route on their first attempt without falling. This distinction is further split depending on whether they had prior beta about the route. Where they had no beta, their ascent is called an onsight, and where they had prior beta, it is called a flash.
The climbing media records new grade milestones of onsights and flashes of major sport climbing routes. As of 2023, the highest milestone in flashing a route was by Czech climber Adam Ondra who in 2018, became the first-ever climber in history to flash a graded sport climbing route, Super Crackinette. As of 2025, the highest milestone for on-sighting a route was set by German climber Alex Megos who in 2013, became the first-ever climber in history to onsight a graded sport climbing route, Estado Critico. In 2025, Italian climber Laura Rogora became the first-ever female climber to onsight (Ultimate Sacrifice in 2025) an graded sport climbing route.
Effect on re-grading
When a climber has made the first ascent (or first free ascent) of a climbing route, they will assign a technical grade to the route to reflect the difficulties encountered. This grade will be a function of the particular beta that the climber used to make their first ascent. As subsequent climbers repeat the new route, they may discover new beta that makes the route easier and thus lowers its grade. Notable examples include the 2021 downgrading of Bibiliographie from –the world's highest grade at the time–to after a slightly easier sequence of moves was worked out for the crux. New beta can also emerge from new climbing techniques; examples being the introduction of knee pads that enabled knee bar rests, and use of more advanced heel hooks. In 2002, the famous bouldering route Dreamtime was downgraded from being the world's first-ever graded boulder to being grade , with the discovery of new beta that used heel hooks to make the route slightly easier, thus reducing the grade.
Notable beta

Certain famous climbs have beta around very specific necessary sequences of movements or actions that have in themselves become notable:
- "Rose Move". In 1985, leading French climber chipped out a series of tiny pockets on a limestone sport climbing route in Buoux to create * La Rose et le Vampire*, only the fourth-ever route at the grade of in climbing history. The elegant sequence of cross-over movements needed to overcome its crux became known as the "Rose Move".
- "King Swing". One of the most famous pieces of beta in big wall climbing is the 100-foot pendulum that climbers need to execute to move from a crack-system that ends at 'Boot Flake' into a new crack-system that starts at 'Eagle Ledge' on the Nose (VI 5.9 C2) of El Capitan in Yosemite.
References
References
- "Climbing Terminology".
- (8 May 2006). "A Glossary of Climbing terms: from Abseil to Zawn".
- Lucas, James. (13 July 2022). "What You Didn't Know About Alex Honnold & His Free Solo of Freerider".
- Andrew Bisharat. (6 October 2009). "Sport Climbing: From Toprope to Redpoint, Techniques for Climbing Success". [[Mountaineers Books]].
- Pesterfield, Heidi. (26 July 2007). "Traditional Lead Climbing: A Rock Climber's Guide to Taking the Sharp End of the Rope". Wilderness Press.
- McGrath, Don. (10 October 2014). "Learn This: Mental Training for Climbers". climbing.com.
- Claassen, Paige. (27 July 2023). "Getting Pumped? Making Mistakes? You Should Train Your Muscle Memory".
- Pardy, Aaron. (28 May 2023). "10 Tips for Comp-Style Boulder Problems".
- (29 October 2020). "What Is Climbing Beta? – Climbing Jargon Explained".
- Adamson, Michael. (6 February 2009). "The Guidebook Odyssey – Unearthing the epic task of writing a guidebook".
- Gerry, Aaron. (29 September 2023). "The Best Climbing Apps of 2023".
- Gerry, Aaron. (4 May 2021). "Mountain Project, OpenBeta, and the Fight Over Climbing Data Access".
- McDonald, Dougald. (November 2004). "Woman Convicted of Murder, Heads to Prison".
- Samet, Matt. (August 2011). "The Climbing Dictionary: Mountaineering Slang, Terms, Neologisms & Lingo". [[Mountaineers Books]].
- Pesterfield, Heidi. (2007). "Traditional Lead Climbing: A Rock Climber's Guide to Taking the Sharp End of the Rope". [[Wilderness Press]].
- Pardy, Aaron. (2 November 2022). "Onsight and Flash – What Do They Mean?".
- (2 October 2020). "What Is A Redpoint In Climbing? – Climbing Jargon Explained".
- "Adam Ondra / Interview after world's first 9a+ flash at St. Léger in France". planetemountain.
- "Alexander Megos, l'intervista dopo il primo 9a a-vista mondiale".
- (July 2025). "Laura Rogora claims historic first female 8c+ onsight, 'Ultimate Sacrifice' at the Gorges du Loup".
- Silver, Maya. (1 August 2025). "Two-time Olympic Climber Laura Rogora Achieves Hardest Female Onsight Ever".
- (9 February 2017). "Inflating Grades and Egos: A Climbing Difficulty Discussion". climbing.com.
- (2016). "Scales of Difficulty in Climbing". Central School of Mountaineering, [[Club Alpino Italiano]], Italy.
- Clarke, Owen. (8 September 2021). "Stefano Ghisolfi on Climbing the World's Hardest Grade… and Then Downgrading It".
- (16 November 2009). "Dreamtime, a dream which vanished for a second only".
- (22 November 2018). "Watch Anna Stohr do the Rose Move on the Famous Rose Route".
- Thornburg, Jim. (22 April 2010). "Buoux: Revisiting France's Crag of the 1980s".
- Bishart, Andrew. (14 June 2015). "Climb Yosemite's El Capitan Like a Rock Star—From Your Computer".
- King, Cameron. "Misjudged Pendulum". [[American Alpine Club]].
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