Hiking pole height should place your elbow at 90° on flat ground; shorten uphill 5–10 cm and lengthen downhill for steady support.
You came here to dial in pole length fast and get moving. The sweet spot keeps your wrists neutral, your shoulders relaxed, and your stride smooth. The basic rule is simple: stand tall on level ground with tips by your feet and handles in your hands; the grip should meet your hand where your elbow forms a right angle. From that baseline, tweak length for climbs, descents, sidehills, snow, and load.
How To Set Hiking Pole Height: Step-By-Step
Start With The 90-Degree Elbow Check
Stand on level ground wearing the shoes you hike in. Plant tips next to your feet. Unlock the lower segment and adjust until your forearm sits parallel to the ground with a gentle bend at the elbow. Lock the segment, then match the other pole. This setup works for most bodies and matches REI advice on pole length.
Use A Quick Height Formula (Optional)
If you prefer a number before you try the stance, multiply your body height in centimeters by 0.68 to get a starting length in centimeters. In inches, take your height and multiply by 0.68, then compare to the pole scale. This lands you near the same 90-degree posture and helps when shopping online or sizing fixed-length models; brand tools like the LEKI pole length advisor give a cross-check.
Confirm Range On Adjustable Poles
Make sure your target length sits in the middle of the pole’s scale so you can shorten for climbs and lengthen for descents. If you’re near the limit, consider a longer model to keep room for fine-tuning.
Baseline Sizing Table
The table below gives broad starting points. Pick the row closest to your height, then fine-tune using the stance test.
| Body Height | Suggested Pole Length | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 150–159 cm (4’11”–5’2”) | 100 cm | Short stride; keep elbows near your sides. |
| 160–169 cm (5’3”–5’6”) | 105 cm | Match both poles to the same scale mark. |
| 170–179 cm (5’7”–5’10”) | 110–115 cm | Pick 110 cm for mellow trails; 115 cm for faster tempo. |
| 180–185 cm (5’11”–6’1”) | 120 cm | Leave room to shorten on steep climbs. |
| 186–191 cm (6’2”–6’3”) | 125 cm | Check strap comfort at this reach. |
| 192–198 cm (6’4”–6’6”) | 130 cm | Confirm your model extends to this length. |
| Kids (120–149 cm) | 85–95 cm | Choose a youth pole with easy locks. |
Set Hiking Pole Height For Different Terrain: Quick Adjustments
Uphill: Shorten A Little
Shorten each pole 5–10 cm so your hands sit slightly below your elbows when the tips land beside your feet. This keeps your forearms close to your ribs and prevents overreaching with every plant. On steep grades, go higher.
Downhill: Lengthen A Little
Lengthen pole 5–10 cm so the tips reach the ground ahead of you without shrugging your shoulders. This lets the poles act like outriggers and keeps your torso stacked while you step down. With heavy packs, many hikers add a few more centimeters for extra reach.
Sidehill Traverses
Shorten the uphill pole by 5–10 cm and lengthen the downhill pole by the same amount. Swap lengths when the slope switches sides. This evens out your shoulders and reduces wrist strain.
Rocky Steps, Roots, And Ledges
On mixed terrain, keep your baseline length and choke up by gripping the shaft under the handle for a step or two. Many poles add a lower foam extension for this move. Return to the grip once you’re past the obstacle.
Snow, Mud, Or Soft Sand
Add baskets and lengthen a bit to offset sink. If the tips plunge deep, add another 5 cm until your elbows sit near that right angle again. In crusty snow, keep the length moderate so tips bite instead of skitter.
Dial In Wrist Straps And Grips
Strap Setup That Saves Your Hands
Feed your hand up through each loop from below, then settle your palm on the strap as it lays across the back of your hand. Adjust the strap so it supports your weight without a death grip. With the strap carrying load, your fingers stay relaxed and your hands fatigue less over the day.
Match Pole Type To Your Needs
Adjustable Vs. Fixed-Length
Adjustable models shine on varied terrain and when you share a set between people. Fixed-length models save a few grams and fold fast, but you must nail the size. If you buy fixed length, use the 0.68 height multiplier and the 90-degree check before you commit.
Field Checks To Keep You Honest
Match Marks
Use the printed scale to keep both shafts equal. If your poles don’t have marks, put a tiny piece of tape at your baseline. That way you can spin back to the same number after a climb or a bus ride.
Watch Your Stride
Poles set too short pull your shoulders down and make plants feel jabby. Poles set too long force you to shrug or reach. When the length is right, plants feel quiet and your steps stay even. These cues teach how to set hiking pole height by feel.
Special Cases And Smart Tweaks
Big Packs
Carrying a load shifts your center of mass. Many backpackers add 2–5 cm on descents to reach stable placements. On climbs, keep arms tucked and length closer to baseline so you’re not pushing too far in front of your hips.
Bad Knees Or Sore Hips
On downhills, a touch of extra length lets the poles share more load through the straps. Listen to your joints and adjust in small bites until stepping feels smooth. Aim for comfort first; speed comes later.
River Crossings
Lengthen a little so the tips hit bottom before your foot does. Plant both poles ahead, keep three points of contact, and shuffle across. Shorten back to baseline once you’re across.
Kids And Teens
Youth models cover shorter ranges and include softer grips. Start them near 85–95 cm and teach the 90-degree stance test. Stick a small piece of colored tape at their setting so they can reset it on their own.
Using Height Marks And Locks
Twist Locks Vs. Lever Locks
Lever locks adjust fast and give clear feedback when closed. Twist locks save a few grams and hide inside the tube. With either style, tighten until there’s no slip when you load the strap hard.
Avoid The Stop Line
Most shafts show a “stop” mark near the top of travel. Don’t extend past it. If you keep hitting the mark on descents, pick a model with a longer range next time.
Use The Graduations
Many poles print numbers in centimeters on the lower segment. Set both to the same number for flats, and memorize your uphill and downhill numbers. This saves time when the trail tips up and down all day.
Quick Reference: Terrain And Task
Keep this cheat sheet handy. Start from your flat-ground baseline and adjust from there.
| Situation | What To Do | Typical Change |
|---|---|---|
| Steady climb | Shorten both poles | −5 to −10 cm |
| Steep descent | Lengthen both poles | +5 to +10 cm |
| Sidehill traverse | Shorten uphill pole; lengthen downhill pole | ±5 to ±10 cm |
| Rock steps or ledges | Keep length; choke up on shaft | 0 cm |
| Snow or soft sand | Add baskets; lengthen slightly | +2 to +5 cm |
| River crossing | Lengthen for reach and balance | +2 to +5 cm |
| Windy ridge | Keep baseline; widen stance | 0 cm |
Set Your Hiking Pole Height In Seconds (Trail Routine)
Before You Start
Set both poles to your flat-ground number. Do the 90-degree stance test once. Check straps. Walk twenty paces and scan for shoulder shrug or wrist kink.
As The Trail Changes
Shorten for climbs, lengthen for descents, split lengths on traverses. Use the graduations so you can return to baseline fast. This habit locks in your pole length without fuss.
End Of Day
Wipe the shafts, clear grit from the locks, and collapse to the storage mark. Grit inside the tubes can cause slip later, so a quick rinse keeps adjustments crisp.
FAQ-Free Wrap: Ready For The Trail
You now know how to set hiking pole height, why the 90-degree check matters, and what numbers to use when the trail points up, down, or sideways. Keep a small piece of tape at your baseline, memorize your climb and descent settings, and let the straps carry the work. Set once, tweak as needed, and enjoy the miles.