Alex Honnold

Birthday August 17, 1985

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Sacramento, California, U.S.

Age 38 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.8 m

#3768 Most Popular

1951

Honnold was born in Sacramento, California, the son of community college professor Dierdre Wolownick (b. 1951) and Charles Honnold (1949–2004).

His paternal roots are German, and his maternal roots are Polish.

He started climbing in a climbing gym at the age of 5 and was climbing "many times a week" by age 10.

He participated in many national and international youth climbing championships as a teenager.

"I was never, like, a bad climber [as a kid], but I had never been a great climber, either," he says.

"There were a lot of other climbers who were much, much stronger than me, who started as kids and were, like, instantly freakishly strong – like they just have a natural gift. And that was never me. I just loved climbing, and I've been climbing all the time ever since, so I've naturally gotten better at it, but I've never been gifted."

1985

Alex Honnold (born August 17, 1985) is an American rock climber best known for his free solo ascents of big walls.

2003

After graduating from Mira Loma High School as part of the International Baccalaureate Programme in 2003, he enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley, to study civil engineering.

His maternal grandfather died, his parents divorced during his first year of college, and Honnold skipped many of his classes to boulder by himself at Indian Rock.

Honnold dropped out of Berkeley and spent time living at home and driving around California to go climbing.

"I'd wound up with my mom's old minivan, and that was my base," he said.

"I'd use it to drive to Joshua Tree to climb or I'd drive to LA to see my girlfriend. I destroyed that van fairly quickly; it died on Me One day, and for the next year, I lived just on my bicycle and in a tent."

2006

"In the mind of the climbing world, Honnold emerged from the goo fully formed. In 2006 nobody had heard of him. In 2007 he free soloed Yosemite's Astroman and the Rostrum in a day, matching Peter Croft's legendary 1987 feat, and suddenly Honnold was pretty well-known. A year later, he free soloed the 1,200-foot (366m), 5.12d finger crack that splits Zion's Moonlight Buttress. The ascent was reported on April 1. For days, people thought the news was a joke. Five months afterward, Honnold took the unprecedented step of free soloing the 2,000-foot (610m), glacially bulldozed Regular Northwest Face of Half Dome. Croft called this climb the most impressive ropeless ascent ever done."

2007

In 2007, he bought a 2002 Ford Econoline E150 van, which allowed him to focus on climbing and following the weather.

2008

He gained mainstream recognition after his 2008 free solo of the Regular Northwest Face of Half Dome was featured in the film Alone on the Wall and a subsequent 60 Minutes interview.

2010

At the time the record stood at 2:36:45, as set by Dean Potter & Sean Leary in November 2010.

2011

According to a 2011 Alpinist profile:

In November 2011, Honnold and Hans Florine missed setting the speed climbing record on the famous Nose big wall climbing route on Yosemite's El Capitan by 45 seconds.

2012

On June 17, 2012, Honnold and Florine set a new record of 2:23:46 (or 2:23:51 ) on that same route.

2014

In November 2014, Clif Bar announced that they would no longer sponsor Honnold, along with Dean Potter, Steph Davis, Timmy O'Neill and Cedar Wright.

"We concluded that these forms of the sport are pushing boundaries and taking the element of risk to a place where we as a company are no longer willing to go," the company wrote in an open letter.

2015

In 2015, he won a Piolet d'Or in alpine climbing with Tommy Caldwell for their completion of the enchainment (known as the Fitz Traverse) of the Cerro Chaltén Group (or Fitzroy Group) in Patagonia over 5 days.

Honnold is the author (with David Roberts) of the memoir Alone on the Wall (2015) and the subject of the 2018 biographical documentary Free Solo, which won a BAFTA and an Academy Award.

2016

In 2016, he was subjected to functional magnetic resonance imaging scans that revealed that, unlike other high sensation seekers, his amygdala barely activates when watching disturbing images.

He however confesses feeling fear occasionally.

Through imagination and practice, he has desensitized himself to most fearful situations.

2017

Honnold rose to worldwide fame in June 2017 when he became the first person to free solo a route on El Capitan in Yosemite National Park (via the 2,900-foot route Freerider at 5.13a, the first-ever at that grade), a climb described in The New York Times as "one of the great athletic feats of any kind, ever."

Honnold also holds the record for the fastest ascent of the "Yosemite Triple Crown", an 18-hour, 50-minute link-up of Mount Watkins, The Nose, and the Regular Northwest Face of Half Dome.

On June 3, 2017, he made the first-ever free solo ascent of El Capitan by completing Alex Huber's 2,900-foot (884m) big wall route, Freerider (5.13a VI), in 3 hours and 56 minutes.

The climb, described as "one of the great athletic feats of any kind, ever," was documented by climber and photographer Jimmy Chin and documentary filmmaker E. Chai Vasarhelyi, as the subject of the documentary Free Solo.

In 2017, Honnold bought a home in the Las Vegas area.

2018

Among other awards, the film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature (2018).

On June 6, 2018, Honnold teamed up with Tommy Caldwell to break the Nose on El Capitan speed record in Yosemite.

They completed the approximately 3,000-foot (914m) route in 1:58:07, becoming the first climbers to complete it in under two hours.

In 2021, National Geographic signed Honnold for an original docuseries about his quest to climb across the peaks of Greenland.

Also in 2021, Honnold started a podcast about climbing called Climbing Gold.

Honnold lived in a van for over a decade.

"I don't think 'van life' is particularly appealing," he says.

"It's not like I love living in a car, but I love living in all these places. I love being in Yosemite; I love being basically wherever the weather is good; I love being able to follow good conditions all over. And be relatively comfortable as I do it. And so that pretty much necessitates living in a car ... If I could, like, miraculously teleport a house from place to place, I'd prefer to live in a nice comfortable house. Though, honestly, the van is kind of nice. I like having everything within arm's reach. When I stay in a hotel room – like, sometimes you get put up in a really classy hotel room, and it's really big, and you have to walk quite a ways to the bathroom, and you're like, 'Man, I wish I had my [pee] bottle.' Who wants to walk all the ways to the bathroom in the middle of the night when you could just lean over and grab your bottle and go?"

The van he lived in was custom-outfitted with a kitchenette and cabinets.