All activities / Mountaineering / Summits
Mountaineering / Summits in September
5 destinations in season, cheapest first.
Arequipa
PEArequipa sits at 2,335m beneath three volcanoes: El Misti (5,822m), Chachani (6,057m), and Pichu Pichu (5,664m). Chachani is widely regarded as one of the most accessible 6,000m peaks in the world: no technical skills required, well-established route, a genuine high-altitude summit that most fit people with 2-3 days of acclimatization can reach. For climbers who want to break the 6,000m barrier without committing to a three-week expedition, this is the right objective. El Misti involves more scrambling and a two-day approach. The city itself is one of Peru's most compelling, built from white volcanic stone with a UNESCO World Heritage colonial centre.
Why here →Mojstrana
SIEvery Slovene is supposed to climb Triglav once, and Mojstrana is where the serious routes start. Three valleys, Vrata, Kot and Krma, run from the village toward the 2,864-meter summit, including the walk past Triglav's north face, a kilometer-high wall that anchors the country's entire alpine tradition. The standard two-day guided ascent climbs to the Kredarica hut and finishes the summit ridge on protected via ferrata cables, which puts Slovenia's highest point within reach of fit hikers who have never roped up. The village itself keeps the culture honest: the Slovenian Alpine Museum sits here, local IFMGA guides run the mountain, and the hut network means you sleep at 2,515 meters with the summit an hour away at dawn. It is a first 'real summit' with none of the expedition overhead.
Why here →Moshi
TZKilimanjaro is the highest freestanding mountain on earth and one of the Seven Summits, but it requires no technical climbing on the standard routes. This is the distinction that makes it useful for RTG: Kilimanjaro is the right objective for someone who wants a genuine high-altitude summit experience, including acclimatization management, multi-day expedition logistics, and the physical reality of 5,895m, without needing ropes, crampons, or a climbing background. The Machame Route (6 days) and the Lemosho Route (7-8 days) are the two recommended routes for proper acclimatization. Moshi is a pleasant base town with good infrastructure and a helpful local guide community.
Why here →Chamonix
FRChamonix is mountaineering's spiritual address. Mont Blanc (4,808m), the Aiguilles Rouges, and the Haute Route all depart from here. IFMGA-certified guides are embedded in the town's fabric — this is where serious alpinists train and progress.
Why here →Zermatt
CHThe Matterhorn is the obvious draw, but Zermatt's value for mountaineers goes beyond a single peak. The area has 38 peaks above 4,000m within reach, and the guided route infrastructure is among the most developed in the Alps. The Matterhorn Hornli Ridge is the standard route: it involves serious mixed scrambling above 3,000m of elevation and is guide-mandatory for most visitors. Outside of the Matterhorn, Monte Rosa, Breithorn, and Pollux are achievable objectives at different skill levels. Zermatt works as a serious climbing destination across a wide range of experience, from first alpine season to career-level alpinism.
Why here →