If you are picturing your child on a raft and feeling nervous, you are asking exactly the right questions. The short answer: a properly fitted child life jacket is what keeps a non-swimming child safe on a family rafting trip through Koprulu Canyon.
Why the life jacket matters more than swimming ability
Rafting on the Koprucay river near Beskonak, around one hour inland from the Side and Manavgat coast, runs through Koprulu Canyon National Park on gentle grade II-III water. It is genuinely beginner and family friendly. But the reassurance for parents does not come from the rapids being calm; it comes from the equipment.
A buoyancy aid, or life jacket, is designed to keep the wearer floating with their head above the water. On our rafting tours from Side, a life jacket is compulsory and provided free, and it does the floating for your child. That is why your child does not need to be a strong swimmer to join the family route. The jacket, not their swimming, keeps them buoyant.
How child-sized life jackets are different
An adult life jacket on a small child is worse than useless. If it is too big, the child can slip down inside it, so the jacket rides up around their ears instead of holding them up. This is why operators carry a full range of child-sized life jackets in graded sizes rather than one-size-fits-all adult vests.
A child jacket is built to the child's smaller torso and lower body weight. Key features usually include:
- A snug torso fit sized to a child's chest, not an adult's.
- Multiple adjustment points so the guide can tighten the shoulders and waist to your specific child.
- A crotch or leg strap on smaller sizes, which stops the jacket riding up over the child's head in the water.
- Bright colours so a small person is easy to spot from the raft and the bank.
How the guide checks the fit
Before you get anywhere near the water, the guide fits and checks every jacket. For your child they will fasten all the buckles, cinch the side and shoulder straps, and then do the classic test: lift gently upwards on the shoulders of the jacket. If the jacket slides up towards the ears, it is too loose and they will re-size or re-tighten it. A correctly fitted jacket stays put and moves with the child, not over them.
Every raft also carries a trained guide who rides along for the whole run, and helmets are compulsory and provided alongside the life jacket. Your child is never alone on the water.
What age can children start?
The family route usually welcomes children from around age 6 or 7, though this is the single most important thing to confirm directly with the operator when you book, as minimum ages can vary by season and water level. The river runs on cold snowmelt even in July and August, and it is livelier in the spring (April to May) than in high summer, so the right route and age depend a little on the time of year. If your child has any health condition, please check with both the operator and your doctor before booking.
Simple things parents can do
- Tell the operator your child's age and rough weight when booking, so the right jacket size is ready.
- On the day, let the guide do the final fit check rather than adjusting the jacket yourself afterwards.
- Dress your child in quick-drying clothes; the water is cold, so a warm layer for afterwards helps.
- Reassure your child that the jacket floats them, so there is nothing to fear about the water.
Free hotel pickup by minibus means you can travel together with your gear, and you will be collected in the morning and back late afternoon or early evening. You can compare the family run with our other options on the full tours page.
Family rafting in Koprulu Canyon is one of those rare days out where the safety kit really does earn its place. Ready to book with confidence? Explore our rafting tours from Side and check the live price and age details on the booking page.