Mountain Difficulty Calculator
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Estimate MountainFYI difficulty grade from distance, elevation, terrain, and altitude
The Mountain Difficulty Calculator translates objective trail parameters into MountainFYI's 1-5 difficulty grade. Hikers and climbers can input the key metrics of any route — total distance, elevation gain, maximum altitude, terrain type, and exposure level — and receive an estimated difficulty grade with a detailed breakdown of contributing factors.
The calculator uses a weighted scoring algorithm that mirrors how experienced mountaineers assess route difficulty. Distance and elevation gain form the physical demand baseline, but altitude effects (which increase exponentially above 3,000m) and terrain technicality can push the grade significantly higher. A 10km hike gaining 1,000m on a well-maintained trail is fundamentally different from the same statistics on loose scree above 4,000m.
The output is not just a single number — it provides a radar chart showing how the route scores across five dimensions (Physical Demand, Technical Difficulty, Altitude Effect, Exposure, and Navigation Complexity). This nuanced view helps hikers understand exactly why a route earns its grade and which aspects require the most preparation.
The calculator also suggests similar-difficulty mountains from the MountainFYI database, allowing users to calibrate their experience. An optional 'conditions modifier' lets users factor in season, weather forecast, and party size/experience.
사용 방법
- Enter total route distance (km or miles)
- Enter total elevation gain (meters or feet)
- Enter maximum altitude reached (meters or feet)
- Select terrain type from the dropdown: Well-maintained trail / Rocky path / Scree/Talus / Scramble (hands required) / Technical rock / Snow/Ice / Mixed (rock + ice)
- Select exposure level: None / Mild (steep drops nearby) / Moderate (narrow ridge, some exposure) / Severe (knife-edge, sustained exposure) / Extreme (vertical exposure, rope recommended)
- Optionally enable the "Conditions Modifier" to adjust for season and weather
- Click "Calculate Grade" to see the result
- Review the radar chart breakdown and explore suggested mountains at the same difficulty level
사용해 보기
요소별 분석
활용 사례
- • A hiker considering a new trail reads the stats (12km, 1,400m gain, max 2,800m, rocky path) but has no intuition for difficulty — the calculator converts this to Grade 3, comparable to Striding Edge on Helvellyn
- • A mountaineering club leader assessing whether a planned route is appropriate for the group's skill level uses the party experience modifier to see how beginners vs. experienced members would perceive the difficulty
- • A guidebook author wants to assign consistent difficulty grades across 50 routes and uses the calculator as a standardization tool
- • A hiker who has only climbed Grade 2 mountains wants to understand what would change at Grade 3, and uses the radar chart to see that exposure and terrain difficulty increase significantly
- • A winter mountaineer wants to know how a summer Grade 2 route transforms in December — the conditions modifier shows it becomes Grade 3.5