Dubai Xtreme Club Conquers Jebel Jais as Team Eyes International Recognition
The climbing collective is redefining the UAE's extreme sports landscape with record-breaking ascents and a surge in competitive momentum.
The climbing collective is redefining the UAE's extreme sports landscape with record-breaking ascents and a surge in competitive momentum.

Dubai Xtreme Club has emerged as the emirate's most dynamic force in outdoor adventure climbing, with the collective recently completing a landmark team ascent of Jebel Jais's northern face that has set a new pace for competitive climbing in the region. The group, based primarily in Al Barari and operating across multiple climbing sites throughout the UAE, has shifted perception of what local athletes can achieve in the vertical sports arena.
The club's momentum gained significant traction following their June performance on Jebel Jais, the UAE's highest peak at 1,934 metres. The team's coordinated ascent using mixed climbing techniques—combining rock, ice, and rope work—was completed in under eight hours, a substantial improvement on previous timings. With membership now exceeding 180 active climbers, ranging from intermediate to professional-level athletes, the organisation has structured itself around both recreational pursuits and elite competitive training.
What distinguishes Dubai Xtreme Club from other adventure sports collectives operating in the Emirates is their infrastructure investment. The team has secured training partnerships with facilities in Jebel Ali and maintains regular coaching sessions at the Dubai Rock Climbing Centre in Mirdif, where members refine technical skills on indoor walls before tackling natural formations. Monthly membership runs between AED 350 and AED 850, depending on access level, with additional expedition fees covering logistics for Jebel Jais and other mountain sites.
The club's visibility has accelerated within international climbing networks, with three members recently competing in the Asian Climbing Championships held in Southeast Asia. Their performances—while not medal-placing—demonstrated technical proficiency that earlier generations of UAE climbers rarely achieved on such platforms. Local sponsors, including several premium outdoor equipment retailers on Sheikh Zayed Road, have begun backing the collective.
Beyond individual ascents, Dubai Xtreme Club has catalysed broader engagement with climbing across demographic lines. Women now comprise approximately 35 per cent of the active membership, a ratio significantly higher than typical climbing populations. The club has also initiated community outreach through schools in Downtown Dubai and Marina, introducing younger residents to the sport through beginner workshops.
Moving forward, the club is positioning itself to host a regional climbing event in early 2027, potentially bringing international competitors to Jebel Jais. This ambition reflects a wider shift within Dubai's sports culture—one increasingly focused on adventure disciplines that leverage natural geography and push athletic boundaries beyond conventional frameworks. For a city known for indoor climate control and architectural spectacle, Dubai Xtreme Club represents an emerging cohort determined to find glory in the raw, unmediated challenge of vertical terrain.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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