Cotopaxi · 5,897 m · Ecuador

Climbing Cotopaxi

A guided multi-day ascent of the world's most iconic equatorial glacier. Non-technical, but a serious summit — and we build the days in so your body is ready for it.

2–5 daysGlacier · non-technicalASEGUIM guides
Summit elevation5,897 m / 19,347 ft
Mountain refugeJosé Ribas, 4,800 m
Trip length2–5 days (multi-day)
DifficultyChallenging · non-technical
Guide ratio2 climbers : 1 guide (by law)
Best seasonDec–Jan & Jun–Aug
Success rate60–80% (higher acclimatized)
CertificationASEGUIM mountain guides

Is climbing Cotopaxi for you?

Cotopaxi is the highest active volcano many people will ever stand on — a perfect glaciated cone rising to 5,897 m (19,347 ft) above the Andes. The climb is non-technical: there's no rock climbing, just a long, roped glacier ascent on crampons. What makes the Cotopaxi summit hard is altitude and endurance. Near the top there is roughly half the oxygen of sea level, and you'll be moving for six to eight hours through the night to get there.

That's good news and a warning at once. Fit hikers with no previous mountaineering experience summit Cotopaxi all the time — we teach the glacier skills during the program. But the mountain rewards preparation and punishes shortcuts. Which brings us to the one thing most operators won't tell you.

The honest truth about the "2-day" climb

Most companies sell Cotopaxi as a quick 2-day climb straight from Quito. It can work — but a cold attempt with no acclimatization has a noticeably lower success rate and is harder on your body. If you've spent days at altitude first, your odds of a safe summit go up sharply. We'll always recommend the multi-day acclimatized program over a rushed dash, even when the shorter trip is easier to sell.

The climb, day by day

Your itinerary

The classic 2-day summit

Day 1
Approach & glacier training

Drive south down the Avenue of the Volcanoes, gear fitting and a hike to the José Ribas refuge (4,800 m). Afternoon glacier-skills session — crampons, ice axe, roped travel and self-arrest. Early dinner, sleep by 7 pm.

Day 2
Summit night & descent

Wake near midnight, rope up and climb by headlamp. A 6–8 hour glacier ascent brings you to the 5,897 m summit around sunrise — crater views, then a 2–3 hour descent and the drive back to Quito.

Recommended: the 5-day acclimatized program

Days 1–2
Acclimatization hikes

Warm-up summits like Pasochoa (4,200 m) and Rumiñahui (4,721 m) to let your body build red blood cells before the big day.

Day 3
Illiniza Norte (5,126 m)

A higher acclimatization peak and a real taste of altitude and scrambling — the single best predictor of a Cotopaxi summit.

Day 4
Refuge & training

Move to the José Ribas refuge, review glacier technique and rest for the summit push.

Day 5
Cotopaxi summit

Midnight start, summit at dawn, descend and return. With days of acclimatization behind you, success rates climb well above a cold 2-day attempt.

Cotopaxi elevation & altitude

Acclimatization is the whole game. At the Cotopaxi summit (5,897 m) you breathe about half the oxygen you do at sea level, so we stage your altitude carefully:

2,850 mQuito base
4,200 mPasochoa
5,126 mIlliniza Norte
4,800 mJosé Ribas refuge
5,897 mSummit

What's included

Included

  • ASEGUIM-certified mountain guide (2:1 ratio)
  • Technical gear: boots, crampons, ice axe, harness, helmet, rope
  • Refuge night + acclimatization lodging
  • All park fees and private transport from Quito
  • Meals on the mountain

Not included

  • International flights and Quito hotels
  • Travel & mountain rescue insurance (required)
  • Personal clothing layers and sleeping bag
  • Guide gratuities

Gear & equipment

We provide

  • Double mountaineering boots
  • Crampons & ice axe
  • Climbing harness & helmet
  • Ropes and technical hardware

You bring

  • Warm layers & waterproof shell
  • Headlamp + spare batteries
  • Gloves (liner + insulated)
  • Sunglasses & glacier sunscreen
  • Sleeping bag (or rent from us)

Guides & safety

  • ASEGUIM / IFMGA-certified guides
  • Maximum 2 climbers per guide, by Ecuadorian law
  • Guides hold turn-around authority — safety over summit
  • Wilderness first-aid & rescue protocols

Before you climb

Cotopaxi climbing FAQ

How hard is it to climb Cotopaxi?

Cotopaxi is challenging but non-technical: there is no rock climbing, just a long glacier ascent on crampons. The real difficulty is altitude and endurance — you'll climb for 6–8 hours through the night to reach 5,897 m, where there is roughly half the oxygen of sea level. Fit hikers with the right acclimatization regularly summit.

How many days does it take to climb Cotopaxi?

The summit itself is a 2-day trip (refuge night plus a midnight summit push). But we strongly recommend a 4–5 day program that adds acclimatization peaks first — it dramatically raises your summit success and is far safer than a cold attempt straight from Quito.

Can you climb Cotopaxi without a guide?

No. Ecuadorian law requires a licensed mountain guide for peaks above 5,000 m, at a maximum ratio of two climbers per guide. This is a glaciated, crevassed mountain — a certified ASEGUIM guide is both legally required and genuinely keeps you safe.

Do I need mountaineering experience to climb Cotopaxi?

No prior glacier experience is required — we teach crampon, ice-axe and rope skills during the program. You do need solid hiking fitness and the willingness to train. Cotopaxi is a fantastic first big glaciated summit.

What is the best time to climb Cotopaxi?

The driest, most stable windows are December–January and June–August. Cotopaxi can be climbed year-round, but summit success drops in the wetter months when high winds and fresh snow are more common.

What is the success rate on Cotopaxi?

Honestly, around 60–80%. A rushed 2-day climb sits at the lower end; climbers who follow a multi-day acclimatization program reach the higher end. A good guide will always turn you around safely rather than push a risky summit.

Is Cotopaxi open for climbing?

Yes. Cotopaxi National Park reopened to climbers in February 2024 after periods of closure linked to volcanic activity. We monitor the official status continuously and tell you the current conditions before you book.

How fit do I need to be?

You should be able to hike 6–8 hours uphill carrying a light pack. We recommend 4–6 weeks of cardio plus weighted uphill walks before the trip. If you can comfortably do a long, steep day hike, you can train for Cotopaxi.

Plan your ascent

Ready to stand on Cotopaxi?

Tell us your dates and hiking background. We'll build an honestly-paced, properly-acclimatized climb and give you a real shot at the summit — guided by people who grew up under this volcano.