# Rock climbing in Chiang Mai: limestone, caves and first climbs

> Rock climbing near Chiang Mai: Crazy Horse Buttress routes and caves, guided intro days, indoor gyms, the best season and honest safety advice.

Krabi gets the climbing postcards, but northern Thailand has limestone of its own — and some of the friendliest sport climbing in the country sits **about 40 minutes east** of Chiang Mai. Crazy Horse Buttress, a wall of golden karst above the Mae On valley, has been drawing climbers for more than two decades, and it remains one of the best day trips you can do from the city with a harness on. Here's what to expect, whether you've climbed for years or never touched real rock.

## A crag shaped like a horse's head

Crazy Horse takes its name from a pinnacle at the top of the cliff that, from the right angle, looks unmistakably like a rearing horse's head. Climbers first developed the crag in the late 1990s, next door to Tham Muang On, a show cave you can visit on the same trip, and a short drive from the San Kamphaeng hot springs. The setting is classic Mae On: rice fields, orchards and forested karst that belongs to the same limestone belt that rears up so dramatically at [Chiang Dao](/blog/chiang-dao) further north. It's a genuinely lovely place to spend a day even before anyone leaves the ground.

![Climbers ascending a limestone cliff riddled with cave mouths, ropes hanging from bolted anchors](/blog/rock-climbing-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## What the climbing is actually like

Depending on who's counting, there are **somewhere between 150 and 300 bolted routes** spread across roughly twenty sectors, from single-pitch slabs to short multi-pitch outings. The grade spread is unusually kind: plenty of French 5s for first-timers, a deep stock of 6s for improving climbers, and a modest set of 7s topping out around 8a for the strong. The signature experience, though, is the caves. In the sector known as Anxiety State Crisis, you can abseil into a sinkhole and climb back out past stalactites while swifts and the odd bat wheel around you — airy, atmospheric climbing you won't find at many crags anywhere.

## Guides, gear and who looks after the crag

For most of its life, Crazy Horse was developed and stewarded by Chiang Mai Rock Climbing Adventures (CMRCA), the local company that bolted routes, trained guides and maintained trails. Access has had its wobbles: the crag has closed more than once while local authorities and the Mae On community worked out how the land should be managed, and stewardship has been shifting towards the community itself. At the time of writing climbing is permitted again, but the honest advice is to **book through a local operator and check the latest status** before you ride out. Guided intro days — with private guiding from roughly 3,000 baht — include all the gear, and climbing shoes, harnesses and ropes can be rented in town.

## What a first day looks like

A typical beginner day starts with a morning pickup in the city and a drive east past San Kamphaeng. The crag sits just minutes from the parking area, so there's no epic approach — a relief if you've read our [hiking and trekking guide](/blog/hiking-trekking-chiang-mai) and were bracing for hours uphill. After a safety briefing, guides rig top-ropes on easy, well-featured slabs, and you spend the morning learning to trust your feet. Lunch is a picnic at the base of the wall — sticky rice and northern sausage tend to feature — then the afternoon brings slightly steeper walls, or an abseil into the cave if the group is keen. You're back in the city by early evening, forearms humming.

## Climbing walls in town

Chiang Mai's indoor scene has quietly grown into a proper little community. Main Wall, in the Old City, offers bouldering, top-rope and lead climbing across two floors; No Gravity, a longer-standing gym outside the centre, mixes rope climbing with bouldering at very gentle day-pass prices; and smaller bouldering rooms come and go, so it's worth asking around. The gyms are ideal for wet-season training, for testing whether you enjoy climbing before committing to a crag day, and for meeting partners — climbers are a chatty bunch, and the noticeboards do real work here.

![Boulderers on a colourful indoor climbing wall, one climber reaching for a hold while friends watch from the mats](/blog/rock-climbing-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## When to go

The prime window is **November to February**, when cool, dry air makes for perfect friction and comfortable belays. March and April bring serious heat and smoky skies, so climbers start early and chase shaded sectors. In the rainy season, roughly June to October, limestone seeps and stays greasy after storms — some steeper walls dry quickly, but plan flexibly and keep a gym day in reserve. It's also the season when [white-water rafting](/blog/rafting-kayaking-chiang-mai) is at its best, so many people simply swap sports for a few months.

## Climb it safely

Climbing is one of the safer adventure sports when it's done properly, and one of the least forgiving when it isn't. As a beginner, go with certified guides, never climb or belay without instruction, and never climb alone. Wear a helmet at all times — limestone sheds pebbles, and the cave sectors have their own overhead surprises. Check that rental gear looks well maintained, make sure your travel insurance actually covers climbing, and respect any access signs at the crag. Treat it with that small dose of seriousness and it slots beautifully into the wider menu of [adventure activities](/blog/adventure-activities-chiang-mai) the mountains around Chiang Mai serve up.
