List of mountain peaks by prominence
This is a list of mountain peaks ordered by their topographic prominence.

Terminology
The prominence of a peak is the minimum height of climb to the summit on any route from a higher peak, or from sea level if there is no higher peak. The lowest point on that route is the col.
For full definitions and explanations of topographic prominence, key col, and parent, see topographic prominence. In particular, the different definitions of the parent of a peak are addressed at length in that article. Height on the other hand simply means elevation of the summit above sea level.
Regarding parents, the prominence parent of peak A can be found by dividing the island or region in question into territories, by tracing the runoff from the key col (mountain pass) of every peak that is more prominent than peak A. The parent is the peak whose territory peak A resides in.
The encirclement parent is found by tracing the contour below peak A's key col and picking the highest mountain in that region. This is easier to determine than the prominence parent; however, it tends to give non-intuitive results for peaks with very low cols such as Jabal Shams which is #110 in the list.
Either sort of parent of a typical very high-prominence peak such as Denali will lie far away from the peak itself, reflecting the independence of the peak.
Most sources (and the table below) define no parent for island and landmass highpoints; others treat Mount Everest as the parent of every such peak with the world ocean as the "key col".
Prominence table
The following table lists the Earth's 120 most topographically prominent summits. Of these, China has the most: 16. Close behind it are Indonesia, with 13, and the United States with 12.
Additional peaks
The list of peaks that follows is not complete, but the peaks are all notable. Island high points (whose prominence is equal to their elevation) can be found at the List of islands by highest point; hence most are not included below. Some well-known peaks listed here do not score highly by prominence.
All peaks with a prominence of more than 1,500 metres rank as an Ultra. For a complete listing of all 1,524 peaks with prominence greater than this level, see the lists of Ultras.
Peak | Location | Height (m) | Prominence (m) | Col (m) | Parent/ Notable for |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mount Ruapehu | ![]() |
2,797 | 2,797 | 0 | none/ HP North Island, New Zealand |
Mount Cereme | ![]() |
3,078 | 2,792 | 286 | Semeru |
Huascarán | ![]() |
6,746 | 2,776 | 3,970 | Ojos del Salado |
Mount Arfak | ![]() |
2,955 | 2,775 | 179 | |
Mount Elbert | ![]() |
4,401 | 2,772 | 1,629 | Mount Whitney |
San Gorgonio Mountain | ![]() |
3,506 | 2,528 | 978 | Olancha |
Anamudi | ![]() |
2,695 | 2,479 | 216 | Western Ghats |
Musala[2] | ![]() |
2,925 | 2,473 | 432 | Großglockner1 / Mont Blanc2[3]/ HP Southeast Europe, Balkan Peninsula and Bulgaria |
Mount Bazardüzü | ![]() ![]() |
4,466 | 2,454 | 2012 | |
Qurnat as Sawda | ![]() |
3,093 | 2,393 | 700 | |
Galdhøpiggen | ![]() |
2,469 | 2,372 | 97 | Sauyr Zhotasy1 / Everest2/ HP Scandinavia |
Gerlachovský štít | ![]() |
2,655 | 2,355 | 300 | Mont Blanc/ HP Hight Tatras and Slovakia |
Mount Olympos (Mytikas)[4] | ![]() |
2,917 | 2,353 | 564 | Großglockner1 / Mont Blanc2/ HP Greece |
Mount Taranaki | ![]() |
2,518 | 2,308 | 210 | Mount Ruapehu, North Island, New Zealand |
Mount Kosciuszko | ![]() |
2,228 | 2,228 | 0 | none/ HP mainland Australia |
Monte Rosa | ![]() |
4,634 | 2,165 | 2,469 | Mont Blanc/ HP Switzerland |
Hvannadalshnúkur | ![]() |
2,110 | 2,110 | 0 | none/ HP Iceland |
Triglav | ![]() |
2,864 | 2,052 | 812 | Marmolada / Central element of the Slovene coat of arms |
Barre des Écrins | ![]() |
4,102 | 2,045 | 2057 | Mont Blanc |
Mount Washington | ![]() |
1,917 | 1,874 | 43 | |
Hermon | ![]() ![]() |
2,814 | 1,804 | 1010 | Qurnat as Sawda'/ HP Lebanon |
Vihren[5] | ![]() |
2,914 | 1,784 | 1,131 | Musala[6]/ HP Pirin Mountain |
Zugspitze | ![]() ![]() |
2,962 | 1,746 | 1,216 | Piz Bernina1 / Mont Blanc2/ HP Germany |
Radomir/Kalabak/Kerkini[7] | ![]() ![]() |
2,031 | 1,595 | 436 | HP Belasitsa Mountain |
Botev Peak[8] | ![]() |
2,376 | 1,567 | 809 | Musala[9]/ HP Balkan Mountains |
Roman-Kosh | ![]() |
1,545 | 1,541 | 4 | HP Crimean Mountains |
Midžor[10] | ![]() ![]() |
2,169 | 1,479 | 690 | Musala[11]/ HP Serbia and Western Balkan Mountains |
Morne Diablotins | ![]() |
1,447 | 1,447 | 0 | none/ HP Dominica |
Ruen[12] | ![]() ![]() |
2,251 | 1,416 | 835 | Cherni Vrah/ Musala[13]/ HP Osogovo Mountain |
Ben Nevis | ![]() |
1,344 | 1,344 | 0 | none/ HP Scotland and United Kingdom |
Kailash | ![]() |
6,638 | 1,319 | 5,319 | Lunpo Gangri / Sacred in four religions: Bon, Buddhism, Hinduism and Jainism |
Cherni Vrah[14] | ![]() |
2,290 | 1,259 | 1031 | Musala[15]/ HP in Sofia City Province, right next to the capital of Bulgaria |
Machhapuchhare | ![]() |
6,993 | 1,233 | 5,760 | Annapurna I |
Carrauntoohil | ![]() |
1,038 | 1,038 | 0 | none/ HP Ireland |
Snowdon | ![]() |
1,085 | 1,038 | 47 | Ben Nevis |
Ama Dablam | ![]() |
6,812 | 1,041 | Tremendous height | |
Matterhorn/Monte Cervino | ![]() ![]() |
4,478 | 1,031 | 3,447 | Weisshorn (4,507 m) / Its first ascent popularised mountain climbing culture |
Eiger | ![]() |
3,967 | 362 | 3,605 | Mönch (4,099 m) / Famed for its dangerous North face climb |
Pidurutalagala | ![]() |
2,524 | 2,524 | 0 | |
Mount Pico (Azores) | ![]() |
2,351 | 2,351 | 0 | none/ HP Portugal, HP Mid-Atlantic Ridge |
Moldoveanu | ![]() |
2,544 | 2,046 | 498 | Făgăraș Mountains |
Botte Donato | ![]() |
1,928 | 1,307 | 621 | Sila National Park |
Sandia Peak | ![]() |
3,255 | 1,249 | 2146 | Sandia–Manzano_Mountains |
In the table, the prominence parent is marked "1", and the encirclement parent "2". Where a single parent is listed, the different definitions agree.
See also
- Lists of Ultras
- List of mountain lists
- List of islands by highest point
- Summit
- Topographic elevation
- Topographic isolation
- Topographic prominence
- Ultra-prominent summit
Notes
*.^ By convention, cols created by human activity are not counted. Therefore, the Suez, Panama and other canals are ignored in these calculations. Cuts that lower the natural elevations of mountain passes are also ignored.[16] Towers, monuments and similar on the peaks are also ignored.
References
- Fetched from Wikidata
- "Musala - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Key Col for Musala - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Olympus - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Vihren - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Key Col for Vihren - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Kerkini - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Botev - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Key Col for Botev - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Midžor - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Key Col for Midžor - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Ruen - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Key Col for Ruen - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Cherni Vrah - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- "Klisura - Peakbagger.com". www.peakbagger.com.
- Maizlish, Aaron. "PEAKLIST.ORG – World Top 50 Prominence". www.peaklist.org. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
External links
- World peaks with 4000 meters of prominence from peakbagger.com
- World top 50 most prominent peaks, originally compiled by David Metzler and Eberhard Jurgalski, and updated with the help of others as new elevation information, especially SRTM, has become available.
- World top 100 most prominent peaks, from the same authors as the top 50.
- Map of the top 50 by Ken Jones
- Lists and/or maps covering all peaks in the world with 1500 m+ prominence. Compiled by Aaron Maizlish. The latest estimate is that there are 1,516.