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An expert climber sending V7+ boulders or 5.12+ routes trains with periodization, has refined technique, and knows exactly what their gear needs to do. The picks at this level are uncompromising: comp-level aggressive shoes built for steep power, a wood fingerboard whose holds would injure a lesser climber, a flagship sport rack and projecting rope, and the skincare and data tools that separate climbers who train from climbers who guess. Every pick is stocked at Austin’s Crux Climbing Center or, where it isn’t sold on Amazon, linked direct.

How we pick these gifts

  • Climbing specialty retail first: Picks are stocked at Crux Climbing Center, Austin Bouldering Project’s pro shop, or REI — with one expert tool linked direct from the maker.
  • Expert training consensus: Cross-referenced against r/climbharder, StrengthClimbing.com, Hooper’s Beta, and OutdoorGearLab.
  • Uncompromising performance: Comp shoes, expert-only fingerboards, flagship racks, and data-driven training tools.
  • Budget range: from a skincare kit to a flagship rope and a full sport rack.

Comp-Level Shoes

Two soft, downturned specialists for steep power — sensitivity an expert’s footwork can exploit and a lesser climber’s can’t.

La Sportiva Solution Comp
Pick #1

La Sportiva Solution Comp

$209.00

The reference aggressive comp shoe for climbers sending V7+ steep boulders — soft, downturned, with a rubber-coated toe box for hooking and a P3 platform that holds shape under power. Stocked across Crux Climbing Center’s performance wall and a recurring ‘one shoe for hard bouldering’ pick in r/climbharder.

Pros

  • Vibram XS Grip2 with full toe-hook rubber coverage for overhanging problems
  • Lock-Harness fast-lacing gives a precise, repeatable performance fit for projecting
Cons

  • Soft, aggressively downturned last is fatiguing and overkill on slabs or long trad days
⚠️ Skip if: They mostly climb vertical or slab terrain and want an all-day shoe.

Check price on Amazon →

Scarpa Drago
Pick #2

Scarpa Drago

$209.00

The maximally sensitive, soft slipper-style counterpoint to the Solution Comp — the forum-favorite for climbers who want to feel every micro-edge and toe-hook on hard problems. A perennial r/climbharder recommendation for experts with strong feet who can convert sensitivity into precision.

Pros

  • Extremely sensitive thin midsole for delicate footwork and powerful smearing
  • Vibram XS Grip2 with extensive toe-box rubber for aggressive toe-hooking
Cons

  • Very soft build offers little edging support and wears through quickly under heavy use
⚠️ Skip if: They want edging support or durability over raw sensitivity, or have wide feet.

Check price on Amazon →

Serious Finger Training

The expert-only fingerboard and the portable data tool that turns training from guesswork into measurement.

Beastmaker 2000 Hangboard
Pick #3

Beastmaker 2000 Hangboard

$135.00

The canonical advanced wood fingerboard — designed for strong climbers, with deliberately harder slopers, micro-edges, and mono pockets the 1000 series lacks. The most-cited serious-training board in r/climbharder, pairing with the Beastmaker app protocols for periodized finger work. Expert-only: the holds are punishing for anyone below solid V7 finger strength.

Pros

  • Radiused wood holds are skin-friendly and reduce tweak risk versus textured resin
  • Hold set targets slopers, deep/shallow pockets, and monos for weakness-specific training
Cons

  • Holds are too small/hard for sub-expert climbers and invite injury if loaded prematurely
⚠️ Skip if: They aren’t yet doing structured, deloaded finger training — a Beastmaker 1000 is safer.

Check price on Amazon →

Pick #8

Tindeq Progressor 200 Climbing Dynamometer

~$199 (direct)

The underrated, forum-darling tool that separates climbers who train from climbers who guess — a Bluetooth force gauge that measures max finger force, rate of force development, and Critical Force so an expert can run truly periodized, data-driven training. The most-recommended portable strength tool in r/climbharder and StrengthClimbing. Not sold on Amazon — it ships direct from Tindeq.

Pros

  • Quantifies max force, RFD, and Critical Force so training cycles target measured weaknesses
  • Pairs with no-hang protocols for a lower-injury-risk alternative to max hangs
Cons

  • Not sold on Amazon (specialty/direct only)
  • Only valuable if the climber structures training around the data
⚠️ Skip if: They train by feel and won’t engage with app-based measurement and protocols.

View at Tindeq →

The Sport Rack and Rope

A flagship draw to standardize a rack on, and the workhorse rope that survives a season of redpoint burns.

Petzl Spirit Express Quickdraw
Pick #4

Petzl Spirit Express Quickdraw

$29.95

The near-universal ‘best sport draw’ consensus pick — the keylock noses and smooth bent-gate bottom carabiner make clipping on a pumpy 5.12 redpoint as frictionless as it gets. Tops OutdoorGearLab’s quickdraw rankings. Buy six-plus to standardize a full rack.

Pros

  • Keylock noses on both carabiners eliminate snag on clip and unclip
  • Smooth, wide-clearance bent gate makes hard clips from poor stances far easier
Cons

  • Premium price per draw adds up across a full rack; sold individually
⚠️ Skip if: They primarily boulder or trad climb and don’t need a dedicated sport rack.

Check price on Amazon →

Sterling Evolution Velocity 9.8mm Rope (DryCore)
Pick #5

Sterling Evolution Velocity 9.8mm Rope (DryCore)

$209.95

Sterling’s flagship all-rounder and a workhorse projecting rope — thick enough to survive repeated redpoint whippers and top-rope laps on a 5.12 project, with DryCore treatment for grit and damp resistance. A default forum recommendation for a do-everything sport line.

Pros

  • 9.8mm sheath handles repeated falls and lowering abrasion better than skinny redpoint cords
  • DryCore treatment slows core contamination from chalk, grit, and moisture
Cons

  • Heavier than a 9.2-9.5 send rope — not ideal as a hard-redpoint weight-saver
⚠️ Skip if: They want the lightest possible rope for a near-limit redpoint and prioritize grams over longevity.

Check price on Amazon →

Outdoor Landings and Skin Care

The pad experts buy in multiples and the skincare that keeps limit-level fingers in the game.

Metolius Session II Crash Pad
Pick #6

Metolius Session II Crash Pad

$199.00

The proven mid-size pad experts buy in multiples to build a landing zone under highball or bad-landing V7+ problems. Its angled hinge lays flat without the gap that swallows ankles — the detail experts actually care about.

Pros

  • Angled-hinge bifold lays flat and closes the dead-spot gap that causes ankle rolls
  • Mid-size footprint is light enough to carry multiples for stacking on real landings
Cons

  • A single mid-size pad isn’t enough coverage alone for highballs — experts run two or more
⚠️ Skip if: They only climb in a gym and never project outdoor boulders.

Check price on Amazon →

Rhino Skin Starter Kit
Pick #7

Rhino Skin Starter Kit

$60.00

Skin is the limiting factor for experts grinding limit-level crimps, and Rhino Skin is the brand climbing-skincare conversations revolve around — the kit pairs the toughening antiperspirant for splits and sweat with the repair balm for overnight recovery. A low-cost, high-utility gift an advanced climber uses every session.

Pros

  • Bundles both the toughening (pre-session) and repair (recovery) products experts use in tandem
  • Aluminum-free antiperspirant directly targets sweaty-tip slippage on hard crimps
Cons

  • Travel-size quantities go quickly for a daily user
⚠️ Skip if: They already have a dialed skincare routine and full-size Rhino products on hand.

Check price on Amazon →

What to skip

Skip the Beastmaker 2000 for anyone not already doing structured, deloaded finger training — its holds injure climbers who load them prematurely. Skip comp shoes for a slab or trad focus. Skip a single crash pad for highballs; experts stack multiples. And remember the best training tool here, the Tindeq, isn’t on Amazon — order it direct from tindeq.com.

For an expert chasing the next grade, the highest-impact gifts are the training tools: a Beastmaker 2000 and a Tindeq Progressor turn effort into measured progress. For the climber outfitting outdoors, the Spirit Express rack and Velocity rope are the flagships they’ll keep for years. And never underestimate the Rhino Skin kit — at this level, skin is often the only thing between a climber and the send.