You will see rafting sold as a "half day trip", and on the water that is roughly true. Off the water, once you count the transfers, it is honestly closer to a full day out.
So, half day or full day?
Here is the plain answer: the actual paddling on the Koprucay river runs for a few hours, but the whole experience takes most of a day from the moment your minibus arrives to the moment it drops you back. The rafting is the short, exciting core of a longer, easygoing day out in Koprulu Canyon National Park.
The reason is simple geography. The base camp near Beskonak sits around an hour inland from the Side and Manavgat coast, up through pine forest to the canyon. That drive happens twice, there and back, and it bookends everything else.
What actually fills the day
A typical Koprulu Canyon rafting day looks like this, in order:
- Free hotel pickup in the morning by minibus from your hotel or a nearby meeting point.
- The scenic drive up to the canyon, around an hour depending on where you stay.
- Kit and safety briefing at the riverside base camp, where you collect your helmet and life jacket and your guide explains the paddling commands.
- The paddle itself, covering roughly 14 km of grade II-III water (a shorter family route of about 12 km is available), with calmer pools between the rapids and usually a mid-river swim or float stop.
- Lunch at the base camp restaurant beside the river, plus time to change and dry off.
- The drive back to your hotel.
Add those together and you are typically out from mid-morning until late afternoon or early evening. We never quote an exact clock time, because pickup depends entirely on where your hotel sits along the coast; you'll be collected in the morning and back in the later part of the day.
Time on the water vs time out of the hotel
This is the distinction that catches people out. Time on the water is short and punchy, perhaps a couple of hours of active paddling once you factor in the swim stop and the drift through the calmer stretches. Time out of your hotel is much longer, because of the two transfers and the lunch. Both are true at once, which is why "is it a half day or a full day" gets a slightly annoying "both" as its honest answer.
Why it is worth the full day
The canyon does not rush you, and that is the point. Between the lively grade II-III rapids there are long, glassy pools where you drift under towering pine-clad walls, cool your feet in the cold snowmelt water, and simply take in the national park. Fitting all that into a genuine half day would mean cutting the swim stop or the lunch, and those are the parts people remember most.
How to plan around it
- Keep the day free. Don't book a dinner reservation or another excursion for the same afternoon; give yourself a relaxed evening instead.
- Eat a proper breakfast. Lunch comes after the paddle, so you'll want fuel for the morning.
- Bring the small stuff: a towel, a change of clothes, secured sandals or trainers, sun cream and a little cash for drinks or photos. The base camp has changing rooms and toilets.
- Expect cold water. It is snowmelt even in high summer, which is refreshing rather than a problem, but worth knowing.
- Come early in the season for a livelier ride. Spring snowmelt makes the rapids friskier; late summer runs gentler and warmer.
No swimming ability is needed for the family route, as your compulsory life jacket floats you, and each raft carries a trained guide who steers and calls every stroke. It is genuinely family-friendly, not a white-knuckle test.
If you are staying on the coast, our rafting from Side page explains pickup and the journey up to the canyon in detail, and you can compare it with our other Antalya tours to see how a rafting day fits into your holiday.
Ready to give your day out to the canyon? Check live availability and prices on our rafting from Side page and book your seat on the Koprucay.