Climbing is hard to quantify. Points make it measurable.
Sendsville converts climbing grades, style, and height into points. Compare sessions across bouldering, top rope, and lead. Track weekly goals. Measure progress over time.
How climbing points work
Like distance, elevation, and time for runners, or watts for cyclists, points give climbers a consistent way to measure effort across styles and sessions.
Log climbs by grade and height
Record each route or boulder with its grade and length. Works for indoor gyms and outdoor crags.
Points based on difficulty Ć distance
Each climb converts to points using grade and height. A V5 boulder and a 5.11c route can now be compared.
Compare sessions and track trends
See weekly totals, set point goals, and watch your climbing training add up over time.
Strava posts that actually show your climbing
Sync sessions to Strava and get a clean activity title plus a categorized breakdown. No more vague "Climbing" entries.
Strava sync is optional
What you get in your climbing training log
Compare sessions across styles
A bouldering session and a top rope session now have a common language. See which day you worked harder.
Weekly climbing goals
Set point targets for the week. Track progress toward your climbing training goals.
Progress over time, not just sends
Focus on consistency. See how your weekly points trend over months, not just personal bests.
Indoor and outdoor climbing logbook
Track gym sessions and outdoor days in one place. All climbs count toward your totals.
Visualize your session breakdown by grade and style. The meters view highlights how top rope routes accumulate distance while bouldering focuses on difficulty.
Grade Distribution
A climbing tracker for consistent training
Climbers who want measurable progress beyond grades
Anyone mixing bouldering, top rope, and lead climbing
People who train at gyms and climb outdoors
Climbers who want structure without spreadsheets
Prefer recording with your watch to capture heart rate and accurate time? That works too. Import unlinked activities from Strava, log what you climbed to calculate your points, then optionally sync back to Strava to enrich your activity details. Your watch handles the metrics; Sendsville handles the climbing-specific tracking.
Strava Sync
NewNew Strava activities available
Frequently asked questions
How do climbing points work?
Points convert climbing grades and height into a single number. A V3 boulder might be 10 points. A 5.11a route might be 23 points. Higher grades and longer climbs earn more points. The system lets you compare a bouldering session to a rope climbing session.
Can I track both bouldering and rope climbing?
Yes. Sendsville tracks top rope, lead, and bouldering. You can mix them in one session or log separate sessions. Points make all styles comparable in your climbing logbook.
Is this a climbing logbook for indoor or outdoor climbing?
Both. Track indoor gym sessions and outdoor crag days. Log any climb by grade and height. Your training log combines everything into one place.
Do I need Strava to track climbing progress?
No. Strava sync is optional. Sendsville works as a standalone climbing tracker. Sync to Strava if you want climbing activities to appear in your Strava feed with formatted summaries.
Is this good for tracking climbing training?
Yes. Points show training volume and intensity over time. Set weekly goals. See trends. Focus on consistency, not just personal best grades. Works for beginners and experienced climbers.
How does this compare to a climbing logbook app?
Most climbing logbooks just record what you climbed. Sendsville adds points so sessions become comparable and progress becomes measurable. It's the difference between listing routes and actually measuring training.