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  • How Many 14ers Are in Colorado? The Complete List with Heights and Difficulty

    Mountain Lists / Colorado

    How many 14ers are in Colorado? the complete list with heights and difficulty

    58
    Total 14ers
    14,440 ft
    Mount Elbert (highest)
    14,005 ft
    Sunshine Peak (lowest)
    7
    Mountain ranges
    Part of the Colorado mountains series This complete list supports our Colorado 14ers master guide and our best mountains near Denver guide. Master guide →

    Colorado has more peaks above 14,000 feet than any other state — and the question “how many 14ers does Colorado have” has a slightly complicated answer because it depends on how you count. The widely-used number is 58 named peaks, distributed across seven mountain ranges from the Front Range west of Denver to the San Juan Mountains in the southwest corner of the state. The stricter prominence-based count comes to 53. This guide answers the count question definitively, then provides the complete enumerated list with heights, ranges, and difficulty class for all 58. For the full Colorado 14ers framework see our Colorado 14ers master guide and our best mountains near Denver guide.

    The short answer

    Colorado has 58 named peaks above 14,000 feet

    The most widely-used list (used by the Colorado Mountain Club, 14ers.com, and most climbing communities) recognizes 58 named 14ers. A stricter count using a 300-foot topographic prominence rule produces 53 peaks. The difference comes down to whether you count subsidiary summits with limited prominence above their parent peak. Most Colorado climbers use the 58-peak list.

    Why the count varies 53 vs 58

    The disagreement on how to count Colorado’s 14ers comes from a single technical question: what counts as an independent peak versus a subsidiary summit. The standard test is topographic prominence — how much a peak rises above the lowest pass connecting it to a higher peak. The two main conventions:

    • The 300-foot prominence rule (53 peaks) — only peaks with at least 300 feet of clean prominence above the connecting pass count. This is the stricter, more geographically pure definition.
    • The “commonly recognized” rule (58 peaks) — includes named subsidiary summits that climbers historically treat as separate objectives even when they have less than 300 feet of prominence. This is the convention used by the Colorado Mountain Club, 14ers.com, and most climbing communities.

    The five peaks that appear on the 58-peak list but not the 53-peak list are: North Maroon Peak, Conundrum Peak, Mount Cameron, El Diente Peak, and the Crestone Needle/Crestone Peak distinction. Each is a recognizable summit with its own climbing identity even though prominence purists argue it shouldn’t count as an independent peak.

    The convention most climbers use

    The 58-peak list is the canonical Colorado 14er list. When you read “complete the 58 14ers” or see online climbing logs, you’re seeing this list. The 53-peak count appears occasionally in academic mountaineering contexts but is rare in actual climbing community usage.

    The Colorado 14ers organized by mountain range

    Colorado’s 58 14ers are distributed across seven mountain ranges, with the Sawatch and San Juan ranges containing the largest concentrations:

    Mountain range 14ers Highest peak Character
    Sawatch Range15Mount Elbert (14,440 ft)Most 14ers, mostly class 1-2
    San Juan Mountains13Uncompahgre Peak (14,309 ft)Remote, varied difficulty
    Front Range9Grays Peak (14,278 ft)Closest to Denver
    Sangre de Cristo Range10Blanca Peak (14,351 ft)Long approaches, class 2-4
    Elk Mountains7Castle Peak (14,279 ft)Hardest range, class 3-4
    Mosquito Range3Mount Lincoln (14,293 ft)Short, accessible peaks
    Tenmile Range1Quandary Peak (14,265 ft)Single peak near Breckenridge
    Total58Mount Elbert (14,440 ft)Spread across 7 ranges

    The complete list all 58 Colorado 14ers

    Below is the complete enumerated list of all 58 Colorado 14ers, organized by mountain range. Each peak is listed with elevation and difficulty class (1 = walking trail, 2 = hiking with scrambling, 3 = scrambling with exposure, 4 = exposed scrambling near falls). Asterisks (*) mark the five peaks that appear on the 58-peak list but not the stricter 53-peak prominence list.

    Sawatch Range

    15 peaks · Highest concentration of 14ers
    #Peak NameClassElevation
    1Mount Elbert114,440 ft
    2Mount Massive214,428 ft
    3Mount Harvard214,421 ft
    4La Plata Peak214,343 ft
    5Mount Antero214,276 ft
    6Mount Shavano214,231 ft
    7Mount Belford214,203 ft
    8Mount Princeton214,204 ft
    9Mount Yale214,200 ft
    10Tabeguache Peak214,162 ft
    11Mount Oxford214,160 ft
    12Mount Columbia214,077 ft
    13Missouri Mountain214,074 ft
    14Huron Peak214,012 ft
    15Mount of the Holy Cross214,011 ft

    San Juan Mountains

    13 peaks · Remote and varied difficulty
    #Peak NameClassElevation
    16Uncompahgre Peak214,309 ft
    17Mount Wilson414,246 ft
    18El Diente Peak *314,159 ft
    19Mount Sneffels314,150 ft
    20Mount Eolus314,083 ft
    21Windom Peak214,082 ft
    22Sunlight Peak414,059 ft
    23Handies Peak114,048 ft
    24Redcloud Peak214,034 ft
    25Wilson Peak314,017 ft
    26Wetterhorn Peak314,015 ft
    27San Luis Peak114,014 ft
    28Sunshine Peak214,005 ft

    Sangre de Cristo Range

    10 peaks · Long approaches and dramatic ridges
    #Peak NameClassElevation
    29Blanca Peak214,351 ft
    30Crestone Peak314,300 ft
    31Crestone Needle314,203 ft
    32Kit Carson Peak314,171 ft
    33Challenger Point *214,087 ft
    34Humboldt Peak214,070 ft
    35Culebra Peak214,053 ft
    36Ellingwood Point214,047 ft
    37Mount Lindsey214,047 ft
    38Little Bear Peak414,041 ft

    Front Range

    9 peaks · Closest to Denver, most visited
    #Peak NameClassElevation
    39Grays Peak114,278 ft
    40Torreys Peak214,267 ft
    41Mount Evans / Mount Blue Sky114,265 ft
    42Longs Peak314,259 ft
    43Pikes Peak114,115 ft
    44Mount Bierstadt214,065 ft
    45Mount Cameron *214,238 ft
    46Mount Democrat214,148 ft
    47Mount Bross214,172 ft

    Elk Mountains

    7 peaks · Hardest range, technical class 3-4
    #Peak NameClassElevation
    48Castle Peak214,279 ft
    49Conundrum Peak *214,060 ft
    50Maroon Peak (South Maroon)314,163 ft
    51North Maroon Peak *414,019 ft
    52Capitol Peak414,130 ft
    53Snowmass Mountain314,099 ft
    54Pyramid Peak414,025 ft

    Mosquito Range

    3 peaks · Short, accessible, often combined
    #Peak NameClassElevation
    55Mount Lincoln214,293 ft
    56Mount Sherman114,043 ft
    57Mount Democrat (Mosquito side)214,148 ft

    Tenmile Range

    1 peak · Single peak near Breckenridge
    #Peak NameClassElevation
    58Quandary Peak114,265 ft
    A note on the class system

    The Yosemite Decimal System (YDS) classes used above are approximate and based on the standard route up each peak. Many 14ers have harder alternative routes — Longs Peak’s standard Keyhole Route is class 3, but its various technical routes range up to class 5.10+. Conditions also affect difficulty: a class 2 peak in dry summer can become class 4 with snow and ice. Always check current conditions before any 14er attempt.

    The Colorado 14er extremes highest, lowest, hardest, easiest

    Distinction Peak Why
    Highest peakMount Elbert (14,440 ft)Highest in Colorado and the entire Rocky Mountains
    Lowest peakSunshine Peak (14,005 ft)Just 5 feet above the 14,000 ft threshold
    Easiest peakMount Bierstadt (or Mount Sherman)Short, class 2, accessible trailhead
    Hardest peakCapitol PeakClass 4 Knife Edge ridge with severe exposure
    Closest to DenverMount Bierstadt~75 min drive from downtown Denver
    Furthest from DenverWilson Peak / Mount Wilson~6-7 hr drive in southwest Colorado
    Most climbedMount Bierstadt~20,000+ summits per year
    Least climbedCulebra PeakPrivate land, paid permit access only
    Highest range concentrationSawatch Range (15 peaks)Most 14ers in any single Colorado range

    14ers by difficulty class breakdown

    The 58 Colorado 14ers break down roughly this way by class:

    Class Approximate count Examples Skill level required
    Class 1~10 peaksMount Elbert, Pikes Peak, Mt Sherman, Grays Peak, Handies PeakStrong day hiker
    Class 2~30 peaksMount Massive, Mount Harvard, Quandary Peak, Mount BierstadtConfident scrambler
    Class 3~12 peaksLongs Peak, Crestone Peak, Mount Sneffels, Wilson PeakExperienced scrambler with route-finding
    Class 4~6 peaksCapitol Peak, Pyramid Peak, Little Bear, North Maroon, Sunlight, Mount WilsonConfident on exposed terrain, sometimes roped

    Most climbers attempting the 58 peaks build their progression from class 1 and class 2 peaks (Mount Bierstadt, Mount Sherman, Grays/Torreys, Quandary Peak as common starting points), through the class 3 peaks (Longs Peak is often the technical graduation peak for Front Range climbers), to the class 4 peaks last. Capitol Peak, Pyramid Peak, and the Maroon Bells are typically saved for the end because they require both technical confidence and accumulated experience reading mountain conditions. The full Front Range progression context is in our best mountains near Denver guide.

    How long it takes to climb them all

    Completing all 58 Colorado 14ers is a meaningful climbing achievement that most completers take between 5 and 20 years to finish. The realistic timeline distribution:

    • 3-5 years: aggressive completion timeline for fit hikers who climb most weekends throughout the climbing season and prioritize the 14ers as a focused project.
    • 5-10 years: the most common completion timeline for serious 14er climbers who balance the peaks with other life commitments.
    • 10-20+ years: the casual completer pace, climbing 3-5 peaks per year as opportunity permits.
    • Speed records: 14-20 days continuous for the fastest known times. These are not normal completion timelines.

    The reasons completion takes years rather than months:

    • Short climbing season: most 14ers are accessible only from June through September. Each season offers limited weekend windows.
    • Weather windows: afternoon thunderstorms during the standard summer season require climbers to be off summits by 1 PM, limiting attempts.
    • Drive times: the San Juan 14ers and Elk Mountain 14ers are 5-7 hours from Denver, requiring weekend or longer trips.
    • Skill progression: the class 3 and class 4 peaks require prior experience building from easier peaks.
    • Private access: Culebra Peak requires advance booking and paid access through private land.

    Most successful 14er completers follow a roughly similar progression that builds skill, fitness, and experience over time:

    1. First 14er: Mount Bierstadt or Mount Sherman as the gentle introduction to 14,000-foot terrain.
    2. Build the class 1-2 base: Grays + Torreys (combo day), Mount Elbert, Quandary Peak, Mount Massive, Mount Belford + Oxford.
    3. First class 3: Longs Peak via the Keyhole Route is the classic Front Range graduation peak. Crestone Peak in the Sangre de Cristo Range is the alternative.
    4. Build the class 3 portfolio: Crestone Needle, Mount Sneffels, Wilson Peak, Wetterhorn Peak.
    5. First class 4: Pyramid Peak or Little Bear Peak — both committing but accessible class 4 introductions.
    6. The hardest 14ers: Capitol Peak (the famous Knife Edge), North Maroon Peak, Mount Wilson, Sunlight Peak. Most climbers save these for the end.
    7. Logistical outliers: Culebra Peak (private permit), the far San Juan peaks (long drive), and any remaining isolated objectives.
    The peaks that intimidate completers

    Among 14er completers, the peaks most frequently cited as the “hardest” or “scariest” of the list are Capitol Peak’s Knife Edge, the Little Bear Hourglass, the Maroon Bells loose rock, and Sunlight Peak’s summit move. These class 4 peaks require not just technical skill but psychological commitment on exposed terrain where falls would be fatal.

    Why Colorado has so many 14ers vs other states

    Colorado has 58 14ers — more than any other state. The next closest is Alaska with about 21 peaks above 14,000 feet (mostly in the Alaska Range and Wrangell Mountains). California has 12, Washington has 2 (Mount Rainier and one subsidiary peak), and Wyoming has just Gannett Peak at 13,809 ft (not technically a 14er despite often being grouped with them). The geological reasons Colorado has so many 14ers:

    • The Colorado Rockies are a uniquely uplifted region: the Laramide orogeny that built the Rocky Mountains uplifted Colorado terrain to high average elevations — Colorado has the highest mean elevation of any state (6,800 ft average).
    • Multiple parallel ranges: seven distinct mountain ranges in Colorado each have their own 14ers rather than being concentrated in a single range.
    • Erosion patterns: the Colorado Rockies have eroded enough to create distinct peaks rather than continuous high plateaus, while preserving enough elevation to keep peaks above 14,000 ft.
    • Granite and metamorphic core: the bedrock geology produces durable peaks that resist erosion at high elevations.

    Colorado’s 14ers are also generally lower than Alaska’s or California’s highest peaks — Mount Elbert at 14,440 ft is well below Denali (20,310 ft) or Mount Whitney (14,505 ft) — but Colorado has the largest *number* of peaks in the 14,000-14,500 ft range of any state. The broader US peak context is in our best beginner mountains guide and our intermediate climbing guide.

    Colorado 14ers compared to other peak collections

    Collection Number of peaks Region Comparison to Colorado 14ers
    Colorado 14ers58 peaksColoradoThe standard reference
    California 14ers12 peaksSierra Nevada, White MountainsHigher peaks but fewer total
    SoCal Six Pack of Peaks6 peaksSouthern CaliforniaSub-14,000 ft challenge series
    14 Eight-Thousanders14 peaksHimalaya, KarakoramAsian 8,000+ meter peaks, dramatically harder
    Seven Summits7 peaksHighest peak on each continentGlobal high points, expedition climbs
    50 US State High Points50 peaksUSAIncludes 27 Colorado 14ers + others
    Alaska’s High Peaks~21 peaksAlaska Range, WrangellsHigher elevation, far more remote

    The Colorado 14ers are the most popular peak-bagging series in the United States, with active climbing communities, dedicated route-conditions reporting, and a 100+ year history of completion attempts. The framework for understanding how Colorado 14ers fit into broader peak progression is in our SoCal Six Pack training plan for the regional alternative, and our 14 eight-thousanders complete list for the global high-altitude comparison.

    How to start your Colorado 14er journey

    If you are considering starting the Colorado 14ers, the practical advice from completers:

    • Start with Mount Bierstadt or Mount Sherman. Both are class 1-2, short (7-10 miles round trip), and have accessible trailheads. They establish whether 14er climbing is for you.
    • Train for altitude. Climbing at 14,000 feet is physiologically demanding. Build cardiovascular fitness with regular hiking before attempting 14ers. The acclimatization framework is in our altitude acclimatization guide.
    • Start early. 4-6 AM trailhead departures are standard for 14ers. Summer afternoon thunderstorms make 1 PM the absolute latest time to be on summits.
    • Watch the weather. Mountain-Forecast.com and NOAA point forecasts for specific peaks. Check the day before and morning of.
    • Tell someone your plan. Leave detailed plan with someone who will alert authorities if you don’t check in.
    • Carry the gear. Layers, water, headlamp, first aid, navigation. Even on “easy” 14ers.
    • Build progression patience. Don’t attempt class 3-4 peaks until you have multiple class 1-2 peaks under your belt. The skills transfer but the consequence of error doesn’t.
    The honest safety reality

    Colorado 14ers kill several climbers every year, most commonly from lightning strikes on exposed ridges, falls on steep technical terrain, and hypothermia from unexpected weather. The 14ers feel approachable because so many people climb them — but they are real mountains with real consequences. Respect the weather windows. Turn around when needed. The mountain will be there next weekend.

    ★ Colorado 14ers Master Guide

    The full Colorado 14ers framework

    Detailed peak profiles, route guides, seasonal recommendations, and the complete climbing framework for Colorado’s 58 fourteeners.

    Read the master guide →

    The bottom line on Colorado 14ers

    Colorado has 58 named peaks above 14,000 feet, distributed across seven mountain ranges from the Front Range west of Denver to the San Juan Mountains in the southwest. The list uses the widely-accepted 58-peak convention; a stricter prominence-based count produces 53 peaks. The highest is Mount Elbert at 14,440 feet (also the highest peak in the entire Rocky Mountain range). The lowest is Sunshine Peak at 14,005 feet. Most climbers complete the 58 peaks across 5-20 years, building from class 1-2 Sawatch Range peaks through class 3 Sangre de Cristo objectives to the hardest class 4 peaks in the Elk Mountains. Colorado 14ers are the most popular peak-bagging series in the United States and a standard rite of passage for Colorado-based climbers. The full peak-by-peak framework is in our Colorado 14ers master guide, with the closer Front Range context in our best mountains near Denver guide.

    Frequently asked questions

    How many 14ers are in Colorado?

    Colorado has 58 named peaks above 14,000 feet using the most commonly accepted definition, though counts range from 53 to 58 depending on which prominence criterion is applied. The most widely-used list (used by the Colorado Mountain Club and 14ers.com) recognizes 58 peaks. A stricter prominence-based count produces 53 peaks. The 58 peaks are distributed across the Front Range, Sawatch, Mosquito, Tenmile, Sangre de Cristo, Elk, and San Juan ranges, with the Sawatch Range containing the most 14ers of any single range.

    What is the highest 14er in Colorado?

    Mount Elbert at 14,440 feet (or 14,433 ft depending on the survey used) is the highest peak in Colorado and the highest peak in the entire Rocky Mountains. Located in the Sawatch Range near Leadville, Mount Elbert is widely considered one of the easier major 14ers, with a class 1 standard route accessible to fit hikers. Mount Massive at 14,428 feet is the second-highest peak in Colorado, also in the Sawatch Range. Mount Harvard at 14,421 feet is third. The three highest peaks all sit in the Sawatch Range within roughly 30 miles of each other.

    What is the easiest 14er in Colorado?

    Mount Bierstadt at 14,065 feet is widely considered the easiest 14er in Colorado, with a 7-mile round trip class 2 standard route from Guanella Pass. Other commonly-cited easy 14ers include Mount Sherman (Mosquito Range, class 1-2), Quandary Peak East Ridge (Tenmile Range, class 1), Grays Peak and Torreys Peak (Front Range, class 1-2, often combined), and Mount Elbert (class 1 despite being the highest peak). The “easiest” designation depends on length, elevation gain, technical difficulty, and trailhead accessibility — Bierstadt scores well on most metrics for first-time 14er climbers.

    What is the hardest 14er in Colorado?

    Capitol Peak in the Elk Range at 14,130 feet is widely considered the hardest standard 14er in Colorado due to its committing class 4 climbing on the famous Knife Edge ridge. Other notoriously hard 14ers include Pyramid Peak (class 4, loose rock), Little Bear Peak (class 4, Hourglass section), Crestone Needle (class 3 with exposure), the Maroon Bells North and South Maroon (class 4 with rotten rock), and Sunlight Peak (class 4 summit move). Hardness depends on the metric used — pure technical difficulty, length, objective hazards like rockfall, or psychological exposure all produce different rankings.

    What are the Colorado 14ers by class?

    Colorado 14ers are rated using the Yosemite Decimal System for difficulty class. Class 1 (about 15-20 peaks) are walking trails like Mount Bierstadt and Mount Elbert. Class 2 (about 20 peaks) involve hiking with some scrambling, like Mount Sherman and Grays Peak. Class 3 (about 15 peaks) require non-technical scrambling with hands required for balance, like Longs Peak and Crestone Peak. Class 4 (about 5-10 peaks) involve exposed scrambling where falls would be serious, like Capitol Peak, Pyramid Peak, and Little Bear. The class system is approximate and varies somewhat between sources.

    How long does it take to climb all 58 Colorado 14ers?

    Most climbers who complete all 58 Colorado 14ers take between 5 and 20 years to do so. Aggressive hikers can complete the full list in 3 to 5 years with dedicated weekend trips throughout each climbing season. The fastest known speed records for the 58 peaks span just 14 to 20 days continuously, but those records are physically extraordinary and not the typical timeline. The average completer climbs 5 to 10 peaks per year, building up to harder peaks as fitness and experience accumulate. The class 4 peaks in the Elk Range typically come last because they require the most prior experience.

    What is the difference between 53 and 58 Colorado 14ers?

    The difference between the 53-peak and 58-peak Colorado 14er counts comes down to prominence — how much a peak rises above the lowest pass connecting it to a higher peak. The stricter 300-foot prominence rule produces a count of 53 peaks. The looser convention (used by the Colorado Mountain Club and 14ers.com) recognizes 58 peaks including some lower-prominence summits like North Maroon Peak, Conundrum Peak, Mount Cameron, El Diente, and the Crestone Needle/Crestone Peak distinction. The 58-peak list is more widely cited and is the convention used by most climbing communities.

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