Honnold dropped out of Berkeley and spent time living at home and driving around California to go climbing. "I'd wound up with my mom's old minivan, and that was my base," he said. "I'd use it to drive to
Joshua Tree to climb or I'd drive to LA to see my girlfriend. I destroyed that van fairly quickly; it died on me one day, and for the next year, I lived just on my bicycle and in a tent." According to a 2011
Alpinist profile: and a subsequent
60 Minutes interview. In November 2011, Honnold and
Hans Florine missed setting the
speed climbing record on the famous
Nose big-wall
crack climbing route on Yosemite's
El Capitan by 45 seconds. At the time the record stood at 2:36:45, as set by
Dean Potter &
Sean Leary in November 2010. On June 17, 2012, Honnold and Florine set a new record of 2:23:46 (or 2:23:51) on that same route. In November 2014,
Clif Bar announced that they would no longer sponsor Honnold, along with
Dean Potter,
Steph Davis,
Timmy O'Neill and Cedar Wright. "We concluded that these forms of the sport are pushing boundaries and taking the element of risk to a place where we as a company are no longer willing to go," the company wrote in an open letter. In 2016, he was subjected to
functional magnetic resonance imaging scans that revealed that, like other
high sensation seekers, his
amygdala barely activates when watching disturbing images. He however confesses feeling fear occasionally. Through imagination and practice, he has desensitized himself to most fearful situations.
El Capitan On June 3, 2017, he made the first-ever free solo ascent of
El Capitan by completing
Alex Huber's 884m (2,900ft) big-wall
crack climbing route,
Freerider (5.13a VI), in 3 hours and 56 minutes. The climb, described as "one of the great athletic feats of any kind, ever," Among other awards, the film won the
Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature (2018). On June 6, 2018, Honnold teamed up with
Tommy Caldwell to break the Nose on El Capitan speed record in Yosemite. They completed the approximately 914m (3,000 ft) route in 1:58:07, becoming the first climbers to complete it in under two hours.
Docuseries and podcast In 2021,
National Geographic signed Honnold for an original docuseries about his quest to climb across the peaks of Greenland. Also in 2021, Honnold started a podcast about climbing called Climbing Gold. In its first season, Climbing Gold focused on telling stories of extraordinary climbers across history and featured notable climbers and ascents including
Lynn Hill,
John Gill,
Beth Rodden,
Hans Florine, and coverage of the
2020 Tokyo Olympics, which featured
competition climbing for the first time. On October 12, 2022, Honnold completed the "Honnold Ultimate Red Rock Traverse", or HURT, in
Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area. In total, the endeavor took 32 hours and 6 minutes, with Honnold covering 35 miles of running,
scrambling, and climbing, logging 24,000 feet of elevation gain, and summitting 18 out of the 23 peaks in Red Rock Canyon. Targeting the area's classic climbing routes, including
Epinephrine,
Dark Shadows, and
Olive Oil, Honnold completed 126 pitches with about 13,000 feet of technical climbing.
Taipei 101 In 2025, Honnold announced his intention to
free solo the 508 m (1,667 ft) tall
Taipei 101, a Taiwanese skyscraper and the 11th tallest building in the world. He completed the climb on January 25, 2026, while being streamed live on
Netflix in a special titled
Skyscraper Live. The upcoming climb was parodied by
Saturday Night Live in a sketch featuring
Mikey Day as Honnold, and
Finn Wolfhard from
Stranger Things. Honnold was scheduled to climb Taipei 101 on January 24, 2026, but the climb was delayed a day due to inclement weather. On January 25, 2026, after 1 hour and 36 minutes, he reached the top of the spire, becoming the second person to do so after Frenchman
Alain Robert and the first person to do it without the use of a rope. Honnold graded the route in the range. == Personal life ==