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  • Everest South Col vs North Ridge: which route should you climb?

    Everest South Col vs North Ridge: Which Route Should You Climb? | Global Summit Guide
    Mountain Routes / Himalaya

    Everest South Col vs North Ridge: which route should you climb?

    8,849 m
    Everest summit
    Nepal
    South Col side
    Tibet
    North Ridge side
    ~$50K
    North side savings
    Part of the Everest route series This direct comparison supports our Everest route master comparison and our broader Everest route framework. Master comparison →

    Mount Everest has two standard commercial routes: the South Col from Nepal (the original first-ascent route used by Hillary and Tenzing in 1953) and the North Ridge from Tibet (first climbed by a Chinese expedition in 1960). The two routes converge near the summit but follow fundamentally different paths up the mountain — different base camps, different objective hazards, different infrastructure, and meaningfully different costs. This guide breaks down the head-to-head comparison: difficulty, success rates, costs, weather, and how to choose between them. For broader route context see our Everest South Col vs North Ridge master page and our Everest route comparison framework.

    The head-to-head at a glance

    South Col (Nepal)

    The Classic Route
    CountryNepal
    First ascent1953 (Hillary/Tenzing)
    Base camp5,364 m
    Approach12-day trek
    Crux hazardsKhumbu Icefall
    Camp 4 elevation7,920 m (South Col)
    Summit day routeSouth Col → SE Ridge
    Commercial cost$45K – $100K+
    Annual climbers~400-600
    Helicopter rescueExcellent (to ~7,000m)

    North Ridge (Tibet)

    The Alternative Route
    CountryChina (Tibet)
    First ascent1960 (Chinese expedition)
    Base camp5,150 m
    ApproachVehicle access
    Crux hazardsFirst/Second/Third Steps
    Camp 4 elevation8,300 m (high camp)
    Summit day routeNE Ridge via the Steps
    Commercial cost$35K – $60K
    Annual climbers~100-200
    Helicopter rescueLimited (Chinese restrictions)
    The 30-second answer

    South Col for infrastructure. North Ridge for cost savings and fewer crowds.

    The South Col is the dominant commercial route with more operators, better rescue infrastructure, and the famous Khumbu Icefall as both its primary hazard and its iconic image. The North Ridge offers meaningful cost savings (10-30% cheaper), vehicle access to base camp instead of a 12-day trek, fewer crowds at the high camps, but more technical climbing on the upper mountain and limited rescue capability. Most modern climbers choose the South Col.

    Why Everest has two routes a brief history

    For the first three decades of Everest attempts (1921-1953), Tibet was the only access. The early British expeditions including the famous 1924 attempt with George Mallory and Andrew Irvine all approached from the north via Tibet because Nepal was closed to foreign visitors. When Nepal opened in 1949 and Tibet was closed by China in 1950, the South Col route became the only practical option. The 1953 first ascent by Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay used the South Col approach, establishing it as the standard route.

    The North Ridge was finally climbed in 1960 by a Chinese expedition (the ascent was disputed for decades but is now widely accepted) and re-opened to international climbing in the 1980s. Modern commercial Everest expeditions began offering both routes in the 1990s, with the South Col remaining dominant due to better-developed infrastructure in Nepal and easier permit access. The full historical context is in our Everest route comparison framework.

    The South Col route day by day character

    The South Col route is the iconic Everest experience. The journey starts with a flight to Lukla in Nepal, followed by a 10-12 day trek through Sherpa villages including Namche Bazaar, Tengboche Monastery, and Dingboche, reaching Everest Base Camp at 5,364 m. The trek itself is a meaningful acclimatization process and one of the most famous trekking routes in the world.

    Section Elevation Character
    Base Camp5,364 mTent city on the Khumbu Glacier
    Khumbu Icefall5,400-5,900 m~3-7 hour passage through serac field
    Camp 16,065 mAbove the icefall in the Western Cwm
    Western Cwm6,000-6,400 m“Valley of Silence” — flat glacial valley
    Camp 2 (Advanced BC)6,400 mMain acclimatization and staging camp
    Lhotse Face6,800-7,500 mSteep ice face with fixed ropes
    Camp 37,200 mMid-face camp on the Lhotse Face
    Yellow Band7,500-7,800 mLimestone band traverse
    Camp 4 (South Col)7,920 mHigh camp before summit push
    The Balcony8,400 mResting platform on summit day
    South Summit8,749 mFalse summit before the true peak
    Hillary Step~8,790 mFamous rock step (changed after 2015 earthquake)
    Summit8,849 mThe highest point on Earth

    The signature features of the South Col route are the Khumbu Icefall (the single most dangerous section), the Western Cwm with its dramatic Lhotse Face headwall, and the long summit ridge from the South Col through the Balcony, South Summit, and Hillary Step to the top. The total elapsed time from arriving at Base Camp to the summit is typically 6-8 weeks including multiple acclimatization rotations.

    What climbers remember about the South Col

    The Khumbu Icefall is the defining feature climbers describe — moving through it in pre-dawn darkness with seracs the size of houses above you and the glacier creaking under your feet. Most climbers traverse the icefall 6-8 times during a single expedition, each crossing a calculated bet that the ice will hold for the time it takes to pass through.

    The North Ridge route day by day character

    The North Ridge approach is dramatically different from the South Col. Climbers fly to Lhasa or Kathmandu (sometimes combining both), then drive across the Tibetan plateau to Base Camp at 5,150 m. There is no trek — vehicles drive directly to base camp. The acclimatization happens through several days at base camp and rotations up to Advanced Base Camp at 6,400 m.

    Section Elevation Character
    Base Camp5,150 mDrive-in tent camp on Rongbuk Glacier
    Interim Camp5,800 mAcclimatization stop
    Advanced Base Camp6,400 mMain staging camp
    North Col Wall6,400-7,020 mSteep glaciated face with fixed ropes
    Camp 1 (North Col)7,020 mSaddle between Everest and Changtse
    Camp 27,500 mOn the North Ridge proper
    Camp 37,900 mHigh camp before summit push
    Camp 4 (high camp)8,300 mFinal high camp for summit attempt
    First Step~8,564 mRock step on summit ridge
    Second Step~8,610 mThe famous step — ladder installed 1975
    Third Step~8,710 mFinal rock obstacle before summit pyramid
    Summit8,849 mThe highest point on Earth

    The signature features of the North Ridge route are the long summit-day traverse from the high camp through the three Steps, the more exposed terrain on the upper mountain, and the historically significant Mallory route that early British expeditions attempted. The Second Step has been equipped with a fixed Chinese ladder since 1975 — without this, the step would be a class 5.7+ rock climb at 8,610 m.

    The key differences side by side

    Dimension South Col (Nepal) North Ridge (Tibet)
    Approach10-12 day trek through KhumbuVehicle drive across Tibetan plateau
    Base camp altitude5,364 m5,150 m
    Number of high camps4 (BC, C1, C2, C3, C4)4 (BC, ABC, C1, C2, C3)
    Highest camp before summitSouth Col (7,920 m)High camp (8,300 m)
    Summit day elevation gain~930 m (7,920 → 8,849)~550 m (8,300 → 8,849)
    Primary objective hazardKhumbu Icefall serac fallCold + technical steps
    Technical climbing difficultyLimited (icefall + Lhotse Face)More sustained (Steps + ridge)
    Cold exposureModerate (Nepal weather)Severe (Tibetan plateau)
    Wind exposureModerateSevere (jet stream interaction)
    Commercial operators~30-40 active~10-15 active
    Crowding on summit dayOften very crowdedLess crowded
    Rescue infrastructureHelicopter to ~7,000 mLimited helicopter access
    Permit complexityStandard Nepal processComplex Chinese permits
    Political riskStablePeriodic closures by China
    Famous deaths / disasters1996, 2014, 2015 disasters1924 Mallory/Irvine, 1996 north side
    The single biggest structural difference

    The South Col concentrates objective hazards in the lower mountain (Khumbu Icefall) and shifts to relatively safer terrain higher up. The North Ridge has fewer objective hazards in the lower mountain but more sustained technical climbing and severe cold on the upper mountain. This produces different decision-making patterns: South Col deaths often happen during summit-day exhaustion on the descent, while North Ridge deaths often happen on the upper mountain Steps when climbers cannot complete the long summit-day traverse.

    Cost comparison honest numbers

    Cost category South Col (Nepal) North Ridge (Tibet)
    Climbing permit$11,000 (Nepal royalty)$8,000-12,000 (China)
    Operator fee (budget)$35,000-45,000$30,000-40,000
    Operator fee (mid-range)$50,000-70,000$40,000-50,000
    Operator fee (luxury)$80,000-130,000+$55,000-80,000
    Sherpa climber (1:1 ratio)$10,000-15,000 extraIncluded or $5,000-10,000
    Oxygen (bottles)Included in operator feeIncluded in operator fee
    Helicopter access (start)$2,000-5,000 (optional)N/A (drive-in)
    Gear (if needed)$8,000-15,000$8,000-15,000
    International flights$1,500-3,500$1,500-3,500
    Total typical cost$45,000-100,000+$35,000-60,000

    The North Ridge is meaningfully cheaper than the South Col, typically by 10-30%. The price difference reflects three main factors: lower commercial competition on the North side (fewer operators bidding against each other), simpler base camp logistics with vehicle access, and historically lower-cost Sherpa support on the Chinese side. The full Everest cost framework is in our cost to climb Everest guide.

    Success rates honest data

    Modern Everest success rates on both routes have improved dramatically from the historical baseline due to better forecasting, more reliable oxygen systems, and Sherpa-supported fixed-rope infrastructure. Current commercial expedition success rates:

    • South Col guided commercial expeditions: approximately 55-70% summit success rate in good weather seasons, 30-50% in difficult seasons. The 2019 traffic jam season produced notably lower rates due to summit-day crowding.
    • North Ridge guided commercial expeditions: approximately 50-65% summit success rate in good weather seasons. The lower numbers reflect harsher weather windows and the longer summit-day traverse rather than fundamentally lower commercial standards.
    • Both routes — bad weather seasons: can drop to 20-30% success when weather windows are limited or operators turn back groups for safety.

    The single biggest determinant of summit success on either route is the weather window, not the route choice. Climbers who arrive during a season with a multi-day stable window have dramatically higher success rates than climbers in a season with tight or broken windows. Operator quality (Sherpa team experience, fixed-rope reliability, decision-making) is the second biggest factor.

    Safety comparison empirical fatalities

    Both routes have killed many climbers

    Mount Everest has approximately 340 total deaths across all routes since 1921. The deaths are distributed across both standard routes roughly proportionally to climber numbers — both routes are extremely dangerous. The per-climber fatality rate on the modern commercial routes is approximately 1 percent, meaning roughly 1 in 100 climbers who attempts the summit dies on the mountain. The empirical death-rate framework is in our most dangerous mountains analysis.

    Where climbers die differs meaningfully between the routes:

    South Col primary fatality patterns

    • Khumbu Icefall: serac collapse and avalanche. The 2014 Khumbu Icefall avalanche killed 16 Sherpas in a single event.
    • Death Zone exhaustion: climbers running out of energy or oxygen on the long descent from the South Summit.
    • Summit-day storms: the 1996 disaster (8 deaths) involved climbers caught in an afternoon storm on the upper mountain.
    • Avalanche on the upper mountain: the 2015 earthquake-triggered avalanche killed 22 at Base Camp.

    North Ridge primary fatality patterns

    • Cold exposure: Tibetan plateau winds and severe cold cause frostbite and hypothermia at higher rates than the South side.
    • Long summit-day traverse: climbers running out of time or energy on the extended ridge traverse.
    • The Steps: exhaustion-related falls on the technical sections at extreme altitude.
    • Historical context: the 1924 Mallory/Irvine deaths, the 1996 disaster also affected the north side, and various smaller-scale incidents throughout history.

    Who should choose which route honest assessment

    Choose South Col if…

    The classic experience

    — You want the iconic Hillary/Tenzing route

    — You value the Khumbu trek as part of the experience

    — You want the broadest operator selection

    — You want maximum rescue infrastructure

    — You prefer better-developed commercial support

    — Budget is less of a constraint

    Choose North Ridge if…

    The cost-conscious alternative

    — Budget is a meaningful constraint

    — You want fewer crowds on summit day

    — You want vehicle access (no trek)

    — You have stronger technical climbing skills

    — You value the historical Mallory route

    — You accept limited rescue infrastructure

    Beyond the two standard routes briefly

    Everest has many additional routes beyond the two commercial standards, almost all of which are technical alpine objectives climbed by elite teams rather than commercial expeditions:

    • West Ridge — first climbed 1963 by an American expedition. Significantly harder than either standard route.
    • Northeast Ridge (Mallory route variant) — the route Mallory and Irvine attempted in 1924, completed later by various parties.
    • South Pillar — Polish-style technical route on the south face.
    • North Face direct lines — multiple variants climbed by Japanese, Swiss, and other expeditions.
    • Kangshung Face (East Face) — the most remote face, technically demanding and rarely attempted.

    For commercial climbers, the South Col and North Ridge remain the only practical options. Everything else is in the realm of elite alpine mountaineering. The broader context is in our Everest route comparison framework.

    Seasonal patterns when to climb

    Season Months South Col North Ridge
    Spring (primary)April-MayStandard seasonStandard season
    Pre-monsoonLate MayMost summit days happen hereMost summit days happen here
    MonsoonJune-SeptemberNot climbedNot climbed
    Autumn (secondary)September-OctoberRare attemptsRare attempts
    WinterDecember-FebruaryExtreme – rarely attemptedExtreme – rarely attempted

    Both routes use the same primary climbing season — spring/pre-monsoon (April-late May). The peak summit window is typically May 15 to May 30. Both sides receive jet stream interference outside this window, making summit attempts impossible. Some operators offer autumn (post-monsoon) attempts but success rates are much lower due to colder conditions and shorter windows.

    ★ Everest Master Resources

    The complete Everest climbing framework

    Route comparisons, costs, seasonal patterns, and the broader Everest expedition framework.

    Master comparison →

    The bottom line on South Col vs North Ridge

    The South Col from Nepal and the North Ridge from Tibet are the two standard commercial routes on Mount Everest, both of which converge near the summit but take fundamentally different paths up the mountain. The South Col is the dominant commercial route with better infrastructure, more operators, the iconic Khumbu Icefall, and the famous Hillary/Tenzing first-ascent legacy — but costs typically run $45,000-100,000+. The North Ridge offers meaningful cost savings (10-30% cheaper at $35,000-60,000), vehicle access to base camp, fewer crowds, and the historical Mallory route — but accepts more technical upper-mountain climbing, harsher cold, and limited rescue infrastructure. Success rates are similar between the two routes (55-70% on good seasons), and the per-climber fatality rate is approximately 1% on both. Most modern climbers choose the South Col for its commercial infrastructure; climbers with budget constraints or who value smaller crowds increasingly choose the North Ridge. The full framework is in our Everest South Col vs North Ridge master comparison, with broader route context in our Everest route framework.

    Frequently asked questions

    What is the difference between the South Col and North Ridge routes on Everest?

    The South Col route ascends Mount Everest from Nepal via the Khumbu Icefall, Western Cwm, Lhotse Face, and the South Col before the final summit ridge. The North Ridge route ascends from Tibet (China) via the East Rongbuk Glacier, the North Col, and the North Face before the summit ridge. The two routes converge near the summit but take fundamentally different paths up the mountain. The South Col is the original first-ascent route used by Hillary and Tenzing in 1953 and is the more commercially developed route. The North Ridge was first climbed in 1960 by a Chinese expedition and has historically seen lower climber numbers.

    Which Everest route is easier?

    The South Col route is generally considered slightly easier and is the more popular commercial route, primarily because of better-developed infrastructure, more guide services, and more rescue capability. However, both routes are extremely difficult and dangerous. The North Ridge has fewer objective hazards in the lower mountain (no Khumbu Icefall) but is longer, colder, and has more exposed terrain on the upper mountain including the famous First, Second, and Third Steps. Most modern Everest climbers choose the South Col for its more developed commercial support.

    What is the North Col on Everest?

    The North Col is a saddle at approximately 7,020 meters (23,031 feet) between Mount Everest and Changtse, a satellite peak on the Tibetan side. The North Col serves as the location for Camp 1 on the North Ridge route and is reached by climbing the steep North Col Wall from Advanced Base Camp at 6,400 m. The North Col was the gateway for early 20th century British Everest expeditions including the 1924 expedition with Mallory and Irvine. The col itself is heavily glaciated and requires fixed-rope ascent for most climbers.

    What is the Khumbu Icefall?

    The Khumbu Icefall is a section of the Khumbu Glacier between Base Camp at 5,364 meters and Camp 1 at 6,065 meters on the South Col route. The icefall is a chaotic field of seracs, crevasses, and ice towers that shifts daily as the glacier moves downhill. The Khumbu Icefall is the most dangerous section of the standard Everest route, having killed climbers including 16 Sherpas in the 2014 avalanche disaster. Ladders and fixed ropes are installed each season by Icefall Doctors to make passage possible, but the route remains hazardous throughout each climbing season.

    Which Everest route has a higher success rate?

    Both routes have similar overall success rates in the modern commercial era, typically 50 to 70 percent on a given season for guided climbers in good weather windows. The South Col has slightly higher success rates due to better infrastructure and more reliable weather windows. The North Ridge has lower numbers of attempts but proportionally similar success rates. Success rates are heavily influenced by weather, operator quality, individual climber fitness, and acclimatization rather than the route itself.

    Which Everest route is cheaper?

    The North Ridge route from Tibet is generally cheaper than the South Col route from Nepal by approximately 10 to 30 percent. Costs for the North Ridge typically range from 35,000 to 60,000 USD compared to 45,000 to 100,000+ USD for the South Col. The price difference primarily reflects lower commercial competition on the North side (fewer operators competing), simpler logistics with vehicle access to base camp rather than helicopter or trek, and historically lower permit costs from China. However, China has periodically restricted access to the North side which can disrupt expeditions.

    Which Everest route is more dangerous?

    Both routes are extremely dangerous. The South Col route concentrates most fatalities in the Khumbu Icefall (avalanche and serac collapse risk) and the Death Zone above the South Col on summit day. The North Ridge concentrates fatalities on the upper mountain steps, the long summit-day traverse, and exposure to severe cold on the more weather-exposed north face. The historical death rate is approximately 1 percent per climber on both routes in the modern era. Total deaths are higher on the South Col simply because more climbers attempt it, not because the per-climber risk is higher.

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