Sport grades for Mountaneering by the Federation of the Mountaneering of Russia

Male

Female

Source
  • III: 2x1B, 2x2A, 2B
  • II: 2A***, 3x3A, 2x3B
  • I: 3A***, 4A, 4A**, 4B, 4B**, 2x5A*
  • CMS: 5A**, 2x5B*, 6A
  • MS: Complicated and could not be done outside of Russia
  • IMS: 3x6B, including 6B** and 6B****

  • * - One of the accents should snow or mixed type.
  • ** - The accent is done in the group of two.
  • *** - The accent should be done as a leader of the group.
  • **** - Should be first time accent. Noone ever climbed this route before you.

Source
The technical grades are the following:

Source
The overall grade of a route is defined within a scale of 1 to 6, with subdivisions A and B, as follows:
  • 1A - Any type of ascent which can be regarded as more than simple hiking. No lower limit of ascent in meters and no specified elevation is needed to qualify for this grade.
  • 1B - Easy ascent of a peak between 2000-5000 m over rocks, with sections of snow and ice or mixed ground.
  • 2A - Ascent of more than 500 m on a peak between 2000-6000 m or traverses at this height on rocks, snow or ice with rock pitches of up to II, and/or snow and ice sections of up to 100 m of II.
  • 2B - Ascent of a peak between 2000-6000 m or traverses at this height on rock, snow and ice with short sections of grade III rock or ice. Some pitons for belaying.
  • 3A - Ascent of a peak between 2500-6500 m or traverses at this height on rock, snow and ice. Route length up to 600 m with long passages of II on rock and ice.
  • 3B - Ascent (600 m or longer) on a peak between 2500-6500 m or traverses at this height on rock, snow and ice. Difficulties might include rock pitches of 20-30 m or more and snow and ice sections of 200-300 m of difficulty III, or shorter passages of IV.
  • 4A - Ascent (at least 600 m) on a peak between 2500-7000 m or traverses at this height. The route would include 20-50 m rock pitches of IV, or snow and ice sections of 200-300 m or more of IV. The route might take 6-8 hours or more and require pitons belays. Traverses of this grade would combine at least 5 routes of Grade 3B or combinations equivalent to this.
  • 4B - Ascent (at least 600 m) on a peak between 2500-7000 m or traverses at this height with rock sections of 40-80 m of IV, or short passages of V, and snow and ice sections of 300-400 m or more of IV. The route would normally take 8-10 hours or more and require the insertion of 8-10 pitons or more for belaying. Traverses would include at least 2 routes of Grade 4A.
  • 5A - Ascent (at least 600 m) on a peak between 3000-7500 m or traverses at this height. The route would have long rock sections of III-IV with some pitches of V, or snow and ice sections of 300-400 m or more of V. The route could take 10-15 hours or more and would require the insertion of 20-40 pitons or more for belaying. Traverses combine at least two routes of Grade 4B and 1 route of Grade 4A.
  • 5B - Ascent (at least 700 m) on a peak between 3000-7500 m or traverses at this height. The route would have long sections of III-IV with pitches of up to 50 m of V and short sections of VI, or snow and ice sections of 600-800 m or more of V. The route would take 15-20 hours and require the insertion of 30-50 pitons or more for belaying. Traverses combine at least 2 routes of Grade 5A.
  • 6A - Ascent (at least 800 m) on a peak over 3600 m or traverses at this height on rocks or mixed ground. Sustained difficulty with an average grade of IV-V and pitches of 20 m or more of VI. The route would take 40-50 hours and require the insertion of 100-150 pitons or more for belaying. Traverses combine at least 3 routes of Grade 5B.
  • 6B - Ascent of at least 1000 m on a peak over 4500 m or traverses of this height. Sustained difficulty of pitches at or over grade V. The route would take more than 48 hours to complete. Insertion of more than 250 belaying points. Usually this grade is reserved for the highest and most difficult peaks or desperate routes on lower peaks. Extremely hard routes on peaks below 4500 m can sometimes qualify for 6B.


Junior is a person who is not 18 years old.


Olympic Champions:

Elite, International Master of Sports, Master of Sports

National Champions:

Master of Sports, Candidate Master of Sports, First Class Sportsman

City-Level Champions:

First Class Sportsman, Second Class Sportsman, Third Class Sportsman, Youth First Class Sportsman

Keep in mind that these comparisons are only intended to serve as a general reference and do not provide an exact equivalence between the different ranking systems.