There’s something to be said about a low-key, middle-of-the-road rock shoe that doesn’t demand too much in terms of foot strength and pain tolerance but also delivers enough performance to make it a good warmup, training, mileage, and sub-limit redpointing boot.
At a current price point of just $116 (down from $155), the Black Diamond Method is hard to beat in that niche. It’s also a hardy, well-built shoe that feels like it will withstand a few resoles and still hold its last.
I climbed in the Black Diamond Method for 3 months, and fellow tester Dean slogged in them for 4 months. We trained on plastic, redpointed limestone and granite, and ran laps on routes we had wired. The Method proved to fill an important role in a rock climber’s progression, bridging from beginner to more advanced climbing and foot techniques.
In short: We found the Black Diamond Method was comfy and fun to climb in up through the 5.12+/V5 range. I was able to push them harder once I wore down the surprisingly thick outsole. They ticked all the boxes they are meant to tick and are a good value for your dollar, especially in this era of $200-plus rock shoes.
Shopping for climbing shoes? Check out GearJunkie’s guide to the best climbing shoes.
Black Diamond Climbing Shoes
Black Diamond is a relative newcomer to the rock shoe market, having launched the flat-lasted, beginner-friendly Momentum in 2017. The brand followed up quickly with the Zone, the Focus, the Aspect, and the Shadow.
While each had individual strong points, they didn’t, at least in my testing, qualify as home runs. A shoe might have one or two standout features — such as the precision toebox on the Focus or the epic sensitivity of the Shadow — eclipsed by shortcomings like an amorphous last or sloppy heel.
With the Method and other upcoming models like the bouldering-focused Method S and the high-end trad shoe the Aspect Pro, Black Diamond is edging (yes, pun intended) toward holistically better-realized rock shoes. It seems as if they’re learning from their mistakes.
Black Diamond Method: Review

The Method comes in both men’s and women’s versions and is a straightforward Velcro rock shoe — not too many bells and whistles here. They have mild asymmetry and a barely perceptible downturn.
Black Diamond prescribed a forefoot-only Soft Flex midsole and a split woven tongue with microsuede lining. The shoes flex a Kermit the Frog-green microsuede upper and a 3D molded heel cup. Finally, a double Velcro-strap closure and the aforementioned 4mm Black Label Fuse rubber outsole (3.25 mm on the women’s version) round out the affordable rock shoe.
They aren’t talons or banana shoes, neither ostentatious nor flashy. But out of the box, they looked like the most well-designed, ergonomically shaped, full-service rock shoes I’d seen thus far from Black Diamond. The Method looked promising, and Dean thought so, too.
Limestone, Sandstone, Granite, and ‘Gymstone’
We tested on vertical, technical limestone at Shelf Road, Colo., on steeps and semi-steeps on the Fountain sandstone of the Flatirons, Colo. (grippy, like the Red River Gorge, but with more pebbles), and on granite. We also scaled plastic — gym routes and boulders and a smattering of 40-degree MoonBoarding.
We both wore our street-shoe size in the Method, which is a medium-volume shoe. However, even with my high-volume feet, I bet I could have come down a half size for better precision and still had a yielding fit.
The mild downturn, which let our feet sit in an almost neutral position, and soft microsuede uppers made for an instantly cozy feel. The Velcro straps are thick and well-situated but didn’t have a ton of play, so don’t look to them too much to refine sizing.
“I felt the sizing was true,” said Dean. “As with any shoe, there was a break-in period for the Methods, but overall they felt comfortable and secure around my foot.”
For me, it took a night stretching the shoes out on the couch and a few days in the gym to get the conformity I wanted, which is about standard for the genre.
Testing
Downsides
Where We’d Use Them

Black Diamond Method Shoes: Conclusion
- Comfort: 7/10
- Grabbing: 6/10
- Edging: 6/10
- Smearing: 6/10
- Hooking: 8/10
- Scumming: 6/10
- Jamming: 8/10
- Precision: 5/10
- Sensitivity: 5/10
- Aesthetics: 5/10