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Climbing Sydney's Peak: What to Expect When the Australian Bouldering Finals Hit Manly Next Month

As the sport's elite converge on the Northern Beaches for the season climax, the local climbing community braces for a watershed moment in Australian competition.

By Sydney Sport Desk · Published 29 June 2026, 11:49 pm

2 min read

Climbing Sydney's Peak: What to Expect When the Australian Bouldering Finals Hit Manly Next Month
Photo: Photo by Federico Abis on Pexels

Sydney's outdoor climbing scene is about to reach its crescendo. On July 27th and 28th, Manly will host the Australian Bouldering Championships finals—a two-day spectacle that will draw competitors from every state and cement the city's reputation as the country's climbing capital.

The event, sanctioned by Climbing Australia, marks the culmination of a season that has seen unprecedented participation across the sport. Indoor climbing gyms across Greater Sydney—from Climb Central in Thornleigh to Vertical Limits in Marrickville—have reported membership increases of up to 34 percent since 2024, a surge reflecting growing mainstream appetite for the discipline ahead of its Olympic debut in Los Angeles.

Manly Scenic World, perched above the iconic beachside suburb, offers competitors and spectators a dramatic natural amphitheatre for the finals. The venue's sandstone formations provide authentic outdoor conditions that distinguish bouldering from its gymnasium cousins, and the coastal setting has already attracted international media interest. Organisers expect over 800 spectators across the weekend, with entry priced at $25 per day.

What makes this year's championship distinctive is the breadth of talent emerging from Sydney's climbing clubs. The Eastern Suburbs Climbing Club, based near Coogee, and the Blue Mountains Outdoor Climbing Association—now with satellite training grounds at Wentworth Falls—have produced a generation of athletes capable of competing internationally. Several finalists have recently returned from qualifying competitions in Europe and Asia.

The women's category, in particular, reflects climbing's demographic shift. Female competitors now represent 42 percent of entries, a notable change from five years ago. Training facilities have expanded accordingly, with dedicated women's coaching programs now available at facilities spanning from Paddington to Parramatta.

Beyond the podium finishes, the finals represent something subtler: the mainstreaming of what was once a niche pursuit. Street Press coverage, corporate sponsorships from outdoor brands, and livestreaming partnerships with climbing media platforms have transformed the narrative. A decade ago, bouldering in Sydney meant a handful of devotees at Grose Valley. Today it's accessible, celebrated, and increasingly aspirational.

For casual climbers curious about the sport's competitive edge, the Manly event offers rare insight into elite performance. Watching athletes navigate problems graded V15 and beyond—sequences that demand months of dedicated training—provides humbling perspective on what separates recreation from mastery.

Tickets are available through Climbing Australia's official website. Whether you're a climber sizing up the competition or a curious outsider keen to understand why Sydney's outdoor adventure culture is booming, the championships offer a genuine window into the sport's future.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

Topic:#Sport

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