Clove hitch
| Clove hitch | |
|---|---|
| Use(s) | Anchor building, (self-)attaching climber to an anchor, belay station offsetting and more |
| Pros | Fast, simple, robust, easily adjustable |
| Cons | In specific cases the hitch might get stuck, it is prone slip slightly under higher loads. Due to the chance of slippage, it is strongly recommended to back it up in critical applications. |
| Category | Hitch |
| Strength | polyamid ~50-60%, 6mm aramid ~35%, slips lower in some cases[1] |
Clove hitch is an essential knot used for its adjustability and reliability. It is employed for instance in anchor building, offsetting a belay station for belay of the second climber and for self-attaching of the lead climber with a rope to the anchor point.
Tying
Easy method
This method is very robust. Suitable for learning how to tie the hitch.

Take two bights of a rope next to each other (1) 
Form loops out of them by rotating them counterclockwise (2) 
Form a hitch by placing the right loop over the left one (3) 
Pull a carabiner through the loops (4) 
Seat the knot by sequentially pulling the rope ends (5,6) and lock the gate (7) 
Inspect the knot and the carabiner gate (8)
When tying and inspect the knot, make sure that the rope ends come out of the knot in the opposite directions and that they are surrounded by a section of the rope from between the loops.
One-hand method
Non-crucial, but handy once you have only one hand free. Always use the hand at the same side as the gate is facing.

Start with a rope through a carabiner with the gate pointing towards right 
Grab the rear rope strand from the left side by your right hand, thumb pointing down 
Rotate the hand into a thumb-up position, making a loop (1) 
Open the gate by pulling the rope through it (2), the rope is oriented in a way that the end coming from the top of your hand goes from the front towards the back of the carabiner 
After pulling the rope through, the gate closes itself automatically (3) 
Seat the knot by sequentially pulling the rope ends (4,5), and lock the gate (6) 
Inspect the knot and the carabiner gate (8)
Quick repositioning
One of the strongest points of the clove hitch is that it can be quickly repositioned without cancelling the setup, or opening the carabiner on which it is tied-on.[2]
Slippage
| Material | Force (kN) |
|---|---|
| 7.9 mm 1/2 rope | 6.5 |
| 8.9 mm triple-rated rope | 7.8 |
| 8 mm Dyneema® | 3.0 |
| 11 mm Dyneema® | 5.1 |
| 19 mm polyamid | 10.1* |
| 6 mm accessory cord | 6.9 |
The clove hitch generally does not slip below 6 kN of force if you use a dynamic rope on a carabiner. Chance of the slipping is higher if the clove hitch is tied with a static rope, and/or around a big-diameter object (tree, smooth stone). There is a report of slow slippage already at 3 kN of force applied in case that an 8mm dyneema sling was tied on a carabiner. Therefore in critical applications such as anchor building, the clove hitch should be backed-up, otherwise it might slip off.
For detailed list of values, see the table on the right.[1]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 EDELRID Team (20 October 2020). "Strength reduction of textile materials by knots". edelrid. EDELRID GmbH & Co. KG. Retrieved 10 August 2025.
- ↑ Clove hitch repositioning starts at 7 minutes 10 seconds: Kerr, Alice (19 July 2022). Learning to Trad Climb: Part 3 - How to build a belay. DMM Wales. Retrieved 28 September 2025.


