This method is used for removing gear from a sport anchor, with a subsequent lowering of the lead climber. An alternative is to abseil from an anchor. For routes with no fixed protection at the anchor point (trad), you have either to leave some gear behind, or where it is appropriate and reasonably safe, use for example abseil with an equivocation hitch.
Lowering from a pre-built sport anchor
Steps:
Freeing the rope end without loosing the rope (temporary tie-in)
Threading the rope through the anchor and retying to its end
Removing the temporary tie-in, safety check, cleaning up
Freeing the rope end without loosing the rope (temporary tie-in)
Removing the temporary tie-in, safety checks, cleaning up
File:Prebuilt lowering quick step4.pngRemove the carabiner at your harness (4,5), untie the Figure 8 on a bight (6), remove the toprope carabiners (7) and ask your belayer for a block while lifting yourself slightly towards the anchor (8)
File:Prebuilt lowering quick step9.pngBefore committing to the system, check that you really can hang in the rope (your personal anchor should be loose and the rope tight) and visually inspect both the tie in and the threading through the rappel ring (9)
Lowering from a pre-built sport anchor - quick method
This method can be used if the anchor is equipped by a rappel ring, or if the bolts or maillons are big enough. This method have two variations - either you get lowered on a Figure 8 clipped through the carabiner as depicted below,[1] or you re-tie to the end of the rope in similar fashion as described in the chapter above. If you decide to leave a long slack, be mindful of its placement. Either wrap it around the rope just in front of the Figure 8, or put it over one shoulder, or clip it to your harness. Having a slack around your neck leads to a risk of a potentially fatal injury.[2]
Steps:
Pulling a bite of the rope through the anchor, and tying into it
Safety check, freeing the rope end, cleaning-up
Pulling a bite of the rope through the anchor, and tying into it
Grab a bight of the rope and pull approximately two meters of slack through the rappel ring (1)
Completely untie the Figure 8 which is directly at your harness (5)
Remove the toprope carabiners (6) and pull the loose rope strand out of the rappel ring (7)
To test the system, ask your belayer for a block (8)
Before committing to the system, check once more that you are truly hanging in the rope which is threaded through the rappel ring (9,10)
After you inspected and tested that the setup is safe, you can remove the rest of the gear from the anchor (11,12)
And you are safe to get lowered (13)
Lowering from bolts with maillons
Lowering from maillons is analogous to the lowering from a pre-built sport anchor, except that you thread the rope through the maillons instead of the rappel ring. To ensure redundancy, you must thread the rope through both maillons, as there is no chain connecting the bolts. The quick method can be used only if the maillons are big enough, othewise it quickly becomes cumbersome.
Thread the rope through the maillons. Both maillons should be threaded in the same way - either in->out, or out->in
This method is forbidden by climbing associations in some countries and places.[3] The ban is due to an increased bolts and fixed rings abrasion which leads to unnecessary and undesired shortening of the material replacement cycles. For example at traditional sandstone routes which are (due to a tradition) almost exclusively equipped with fixed rings, it would mean additional drilling into a rock which is often protected by a law due to nature preservation for further generations.[4] In addition, this method cannot be used for lowering directly from hanger plates as the friction over the plates edges would severely damage the rope.
The method is very similar to the method with maillons, only the rope is in this case threaded directly through the bolts.
Thread the rope through the bolts in a way that it wont get easily tangled during lowering.
File:Prebuilt lowering detailed step8.pngYou will get lowered on this knot, so inspect that its properly tied and that the loop goes through both of the harness tie-in loops (9)
Removing the temporary tie-in, safety check, cleaning up
File:Prebuilt lowering detailed step9.pngUnscrew the carabiner (10), detach it from your haness (11) and untie the Figure 8 on a bight (12), excessive extra slack will slide out (13)
↑For example the czech mountaineering association allows abseiling exclusively. For toprope, it explicitly orders to place carabiners into the fixed protection (Article 3, number 4): Výkonný výbor ČHS (June 12, 2020). "Pravidla lezení ve skalních oblastech ČR"(PDF). horosvaz.cz. Český horolezecký svaz. Retrieved 1 November 2025.
↑Kublák, Tomáš. "Horní jištění". Horolezeckametodika.cz. HOROLEZECKÁ METODIKA. Archived from the original on 5 March 2024. Retrieved 1 November 2025.