
Brand-new gear, expert staff, and climbing-focused fitness in Incline Village
High Altitude Fitness at 880 Northwood Blvd, Incline Village, NV 89451, USA, is a gym and climbing hub. Guests praise clean, brand-new equipment and attentive staff, including Trisha and Eric, with Kaela guiding tours and setup for climbers. The bouldering area impresses, though the space can feel small and some reviewers cite pass-price concerns.
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Access to our dedicated climbing and bouldering area, including a Tension Board, for climbers of all levels.
Challenging and fun group classes led by expert instructors, such as those by Trisha, to boost your workout.
State-of-the-art, brand-new fitness equipment in a clean and well-maintained environment for all your training needs.
One-on-one sessions with staff like Eric to get set up with climbing or customized fitness plans.
Special 6-month deals for high school and college students to make fitness accessible.
Membership options for families, though note policies for chaperones and young climbers may apply.
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Overall rating
Bethany Weisberg
I’m so happy this gym exists in Incline Village! The gym is clean and the equipment is brand new. The staff here are excellent and attentive - shoutout to Trisha for her challenging and fun classes (and incredible personality!) and to Eric for getting me set up with climbing.
Chandler Renner
the bouldering is absolutely amazing and a ton of fun. definitely will be coming back again. Kaela let me take a tour/let me look at the rocking climbing before i paid and helped me through the process of getting set up. she greeted me as i came in and was super respectful.
gina montecallo
Every time I try to come here the fees get more expensive and the pass options get worse with the fine print and rules. My friend has an annual membership to which it’s advertised that he receives a free guest pass every month. Well, today I found out that the guest pass can only be used for someone who hasn’t been to the gym before. I live out of town and would happily buy a punch pass but they don’t offer that either. The facilities don’t justify the cost and it seems like they don’t care to do anything to keep members around. This was my last time giving them my business.
Cooper James
Staff is very nice. Climbing is decent and it's nice to have it in town, but it is quite small. I can't speak about the fitness side as we only go so my 5 year old daughter can climb. Pass options are terrible for young kids, no punch passes anymore, 3-month minimum with a $75 initiation fee that is recurring if your membership lapses, or buy a week at a time. They have a decent 6-month deal for students that applies to high school and college kids, but not for 5 year olds. Did I mention I need a pass too as a chaperone that isn't climbing? So everytime my 5 year old daughter wants to climb it's $57. I have taken her climbing at six different gyms now and this is the only one that charges full price for a non-climbing guardian. Most are free and the others were less than $10. Update after today's visit: Today I got my daughter and I the monthly because they were running a holiday deal that waves the initiation fee, and I should be available enough to make it worth it. Problem is, if I'm not available someone would still need to chaperone, which means my wife and her grandparents each need their own membership too, or my daughter can't climb. For the monthly membership they advertise an individual adult rate, a family of two rate, and an 'add a kid' rate, but it only applies to kids if there are already two adults on the membership, so now not only do I need a full membership to chaperone, but my 5 year old is considered an adult, and we get to pay $160 a month for her to climb. Tough luck to any single parents out there. In speaking with the staff in the past about how ridiculous this policy is with regards to young kids they all agreed and said they hear it all the time. However, today I was speaking with a manager about it and he thought it was the norm, but said he would bring it up to the owner. The owner has an opportunity to create lifelong customers by getting kids into climbing, but they're blowing it by making it unaffordable. Non-climbing parents do not expect to pay full-price to spectate, nor do they expect to pay full price for almost anything that's for a young child. Your gym is almost always empty, you would be wise to cut some deals for the local kids. Just sell a punch pass and charge a reasonable fee for non-climbing parents. Or sell a monthly that doesn't have a three month minimum and exorbitant initiation fee. Or just give all local kids the same deal that you offer to any high school or college student. It's really not that hard.
Matt Arigo
Overall nice gym with a few flaws, but it’s pretty quiet which is a huge plus. When it does get busy the small parking area fills up very quick, but the gym atmosphere still feels mostly calm and controlled. The climbing area is a little cramped on busy nights, but for the most part you will have it to yourself, give or take a few other friendly climbers. The Tension Board is now working, a huge plus! The bouldering wall in this gym is reset VERY rarely, which becomes a bummer for frequent visitors looking to try new problems. Hoping this review will spark a change for more route setting at the Incline location!