Alpine Peak Quick Reference Cards for Climbers
The bookmarkable scannable reference for 20 major alpine climbing peaks worldwide — grade, cost, season, operators, permit info, and key stats in one-glance card format. The companion to narrative peak guides for when you just need the specs.
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This is the specs-only companion to the Global Summit Guide’s narrative peak coverage. When you need to compare peaks at a glance — grade, altitude, cost, season, operators — without reading 3,000-word profiles, these cards deliver the essential information in one-scroll format. Bookmark this page. Most serious climbers return to it while planning expeditions rather than re-reading full guides.
Cards are organized by region, then by altitude within region. Grade color-codes follow the International French Adjectival System — see legend below. Costs reflect 2026 operator pricing for guided climbs from reputable providers; budget operators run 20–40% less, premium operators 40–80% more. For narrative depth on any peak, follow the link from the peak name to its dedicated guide. For broader progression context see our Top 50 Technical Objectives anchor. Fact-check date: April 19, 2026.
Alpine Grade Legend: What the Colors Mean
Every reference card includes a color-coded IFAS grade pill in its top-right corner. Here’s what each grade actually means for planning purposes.
Easy glacier travel, basic snow/ice skills, intro alpine.
Classic alpine, moderate technical sections, exposure.
Serious alpine, sustained technical demands, commitment.
Expert alpine, high commitment, significant hazards.
Elite level, multi-day, severe technical and objective hazards.
European Alps
Matterhorn
Eiger North Face
Monte Rosa Dufourspitze
Weisshorn
Grossglockner
Himalaya & Karakoram
K2
Island Peak (Imja Tse)
Mera Peak
Andes
Alpamayo
Huascarán Sur
Alaska Range
Denali — Cassin Ridge
Mount Huntington
Patagonia
Fitz Roy
Cerro Torre
Africa & Other High Peaks
More peaks to come in future updates. Currently featuring 20 peaks across 6 regions. Additional peaks to be added in 2026 updates: Elbrus, Vinson Massif, Carstensz Pyramid, Kosciuszko (Seven Summits completion), plus the expanded Nepal technical peak collection and Andes alternatives.
Cost Overview by Peak Tier
Fast reference for budgeting — peak cost ranges organized by expense tier. Use alongside individual reference cards for expedition planning.
| Cost Tier | Peak Examples | Typical Range | What’s Included |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget ($1,500–$3,500) | Kilimanjaro, Elbrus, Island Peak, Mera Peak, Mont Blanc self-guided | $1.5K–$3.5K | Guides, permits, basic logistics; international flight separate |
| Mid ($3,500–$10,000) | Aconcagua, Denali West Buttress, Ama Dablam budget, Huascarán, Alpamayo | $3.5K–$10K | Guided expedition, full support, expedition duration |
| Serious ($10,000–$35,000) | Ama Dablam premium, Denali Cassin, Baruntse, Pumori, Fitz Roy | $10K–$35K | Technical expedition, specialized gear, longer duration |
| 8,000er ($35,000–$100,000) | K2, Manaslu, Cho Oyu, Annapurna, Nanga Parbat | $35K–$100K | Expedition-style, Sherpa support, oxygen, multi-month |
| Everest+ ($50,000–$250,000) | Everest, K2 premium, any full-service Himalayan | $50K–$250K+ | Everything — premium operators with Sherpa 1:1 and oxygen |
See our Mountain Climbing Costs framework for complete budget breakdown across all tiers including gear, training, insurance, and hidden costs.
Quick Reference FAQ: Your Common Questions Answered
What are the key specifications I need to know before climbing a peak?
The essential specifications for evaluating an alpine peak before committing to a climb are: (1) Altitude in meters and feet, which determines acclimatization needs and physiological demand. (2) Technical grade using IFAS (PD, AD, D, TD, ED) and supplementary grades for rock (YDS 5.x), ice (WI 1-6), and mixed (M1-M8). (3) Typical expedition duration — from 2-day alpine climbs to 60+ day Himalayan expeditions. (4) Permit requirements and costs — varies widely from $0 in some regions to $15,000 for Everest spring. (5) Best climbing seasons. (6) Operator cost ranges and recommended providers. (7) Fatality rate and summit rate statistics. (8) Key objective hazards (serac fall, avalanche, rockfall, storm exposure). Quality decision-making requires all eight data points, which is why reference cards format this data in scannable format for comparison across peaks.
How do alpine climbing grades compare across regions?
Alpine climbing grades use different systems across regions but generally follow similar progressions. International French Adjectival System (IFAS) is primary: F (Facile/Easy), PD (Peu Difficile), AD (Assez Difficile), D (Difficile), TD (Très Difficile), ED (Extremely Difficult), ABO (Abominably Difficult). North American National Climbing Classification System (NCCS) runs Grade I-VII roughly corresponding to commitment levels. Yosemite Decimal System (YDS) 5.x is used for rock sections across regions. Water Ice (WI) 1-6 and Mixed (M) 1-8+ are international standards. Regional variations: Russian grades are notoriously strict (a Russian 4B ~ IFAS D+); European guidebooks often grade conservatively; North American guidebooks traditionally grade optimistically. For cross-region comparison, use IFAS as the common framework alongside YDS for rock and WI for ice. Most quality reference sources provide multi-system grades for major routes.
Which alpine peaks are best for intermediate climbers?
The best alpine peaks for intermediate climbers (2-5 years of mountaineering experience) are: (1) Mont Blanc via Goûter Route (AD+) — Europe’s highest peak with established infrastructure and moderate technical demands. (2) Matterhorn Hörnli Ridge (AD) — iconic alpine climbing with fixed protection on key sections. (3) Denali West Buttress (AD+) — serious altitude and cold experience at non-extreme technical grade. (4) Aconcagua Normal Route (F/PD) — 6,961 m of altitude without technical demands. (5) Kilimanjaro Machame Route — 5,895 m hiking peak for first high-altitude experience. (6) Island Peak or Mera Peak in Nepal — 6,000m+ technical peaks with excellent support. (7) Mount Baker or Mount Rainier DC Route — accessible North American snow-and-ice peaks. These peaks combine meaningful challenge with sufficient support infrastructure that intermediate climbers can succeed with proper preparation. Avoid TD/ED objectives (K2, Eiger North Face, Ama Dablam, Aconcagua Polish Glacier) until 5+ years of dedicated alpine experience.
What is the cheapest major alpine peak to climb?
The cheapest major alpine peaks to climb in 2026 are: (1) Kilimanjaro (5,895 m) at $1,800-$4,500 total including trip — Africa’s highest peak, non-technical, commercial infrastructure. (2) Mount Elbrus (5,642 m) at $1,500-$3,500 including travel — Europe’s highest peak, two-route options (South and North). (3) Island Peak Nepal (6,189 m) at $1,800-$3,500 — NMA trekking peak with full support. (4) Mera Peak Nepal (6,476 m) at $1,800-$3,200 — highest NMA trekking peak. (5) Mont Blanc via Goûter (4,810 m) at $1,200-$3,000 if self-guided or $3,500-$5,500 with guide. (6) Aconcagua Normal Route (6,961 m) at $3,500-$6,500 for budget operators. For serious climbers working on progression, combining Kilimanjaro, Elbrus, Island Peak, and Aconcagua provides diverse altitude and terrain experience for total cost under $15,000 including international flights. Everest ($50,000-$230,000) and K2 ($35,000-$55,000) represent the expensive end of the spectrum.
When is alpine climbing season in different regions?
Alpine climbing seasons vary by region and hemisphere: (1) European Alps — mid-June to mid-September primary season; winter climbing December-February for hard objectives. (2) Himalaya/Karakoram — post-monsoon September-November primary (Everest May); pre-monsoon April-May secondary. (3) Alaska — May through early July primary; peak conditions in June. (4) Aconcagua — December-February (Southern Hemisphere summer). (5) Patagonia — November-March with brief weather windows; most active January. (6) Andes (Peru/Bolivia) — May-August dry season. (7) Antarctica — November-January polar summer (Vinson). (8) Denali — May 15 to July 5 classic window. (9) North American Cascades/Rockies — July-early September. (10) Japan (Mt Fuji) — July-early September official season. Planning expeditions requires matching chosen peak to its season, which often dictates annual schedule for serious climbers. See the reference cards for peak-specific season recommendations.
Do you need a guide for alpine peaks?
Whether you need a guide for alpine peaks depends on regulation, peak type, and climber experience. Legally required guides: (1) Nepal — all NMA and Ministry of Tourism peaks require licensed guides by the September 2025 regulations. (2) Kilimanjaro — all climbs require licensed guides and porter teams. (3) Aconcagua — park regulations require registered guides for most climbers. (4) Denali — independent climbs allowed but require permit and demonstrated experience. Self-guided options: (1) European Alps — no guide legally required for most peaks though hut system encourages professional support. (2) North American peaks — Rainier, Baker, Hood, etc. accessible without guides. (3) Patagonia — independent climbing common for experienced teams. Recommended guiding: First-time alpine climbers on any peak benefit from professional guides regardless of legal requirements. Cost adds $1,500-$4,000 to small peaks, $15,000-$40,000 to major expeditions. For progression from moderate to serious alpine climbing, use guides on first 2-3 peaks then progress to self-guided climbs within your experience tier.
Which Alpine peak is best for a first technical climb?
The best first technical alpine climb depends on experience and goals. Top options: (1) Mont Blanc via Goûter Route — Europe’s highest peak, AD+ grade, manageable technical demands, excellent infrastructure. The “classic first 4,000 m” for many climbers. (2) Matterhorn Hörnli Ridge — iconic AD grade, requires confident scrambling and some technical moves, significant exposure. (3) Weisshorn East Ridge — AD+ with good rock and ice experience, less crowded than Matterhorn. (4) Piz Bernina Biancograt — D grade classic with beautiful snow ridge climbing. (5) Grossglockner Austria — PD+ introduction for central European climbers. (6) Monte Rosa Dufourspitze Normal Route — PD+ with excellent altitude experience at 4,634 m. Avoid TD/ED grades as first alpine climbs — Eiger North Face, Grandes Jorasses Walker Spur, Cerro Torre Compressor Route all require extensive prior experience. See our Greatest Alps Mountains Compared guide for detailed peak comparisons.
How do I choose between guided and independent alpine climbing?
Choose between guided and independent alpine climbing based on: (1) Experience level — first 2-3 alpine climbs on any peak benefit from guides; after 10+ climbs, many climbers shift to independent or peer partnerships. (2) Peak difficulty — for AD and below, independent climbing with experienced partners is often appropriate; for D and above, consider guides or expert partners. (3) Objective hazards — peaks with serious objective hazards (Ama Dablam, any 8,000er, Denali) benefit from guided support for safety infrastructure. (4) Logistics complexity — Himalayan expeditions and Patagonia often require professional logistics management. (5) Budget — guided climbs add $1,500-$40,000; independent climbing saves this cost but requires equal or better skills. (6) Legal requirements — Nepal, Kilimanjaro, some parks require guides regardless of personal preference. The transition from guided to independent climbing is itself a skill milestone — most serious climbers maintain “guided progression + independent application” pattern, using guides to acquire skills on harder terrain then applying them independently on similar terrain.
Authoritative Sources & Further Reading
Specifications reflect current 2026 operator pricing, permit fees, and peak information from primary sources:
- International Federation of Mountain Guides Associations (IFMGA) — ifmga.info — Grading standards and guide certification
- American Mountain Guides Association (AMGA) — amga.com — North American guide certification
- The Himalayan Database — himalayandatabase.com — Himalaya/Karakoram statistics
- Nepal Mountaineering Association (NMA) — nepalmountaineering.org — Nepal permit structure and fees
- Nepal Ministry of Tourism — tourism.gov.np — Expedition peak permits, 2025 regulations
- Denali National Park Service — nps.gov/dena — Denali permit and climbing regulations
- Parque Nacional Aconcagua — Mendoza, Argentina park authority
- Kilimanjaro National Park Authority (KINAPA) — park fees and regulations
- Operator websites: Alpine Ascents International, IMG (International Mountain Guides), Madison Mountaineering, Mountain Professionals, Climbing the Seven Summits, Furtenbach Adventures, 8K Expeditions, Seven Summit Treks, Asian Trekking, RMI Expeditions
- Reference texts: Freedom of the Hills (The Mountaineers), Alpine Climbing: Techniques to Take You Higher (Houston & Cosley), individual peak guidebooks
Related Guides Across the Hub
Detailed guides for specific peaks, plus the broader technical climbing progression and supporting topics.
Back to the Master Hub
This guide is one of 71 across 12 thematic clusters on Global Summit Guide. The master hub organizes every guide by experience tier, specific peak, skill area, and region.

