If you are trying to slot rafting into a packed Antalya holiday, the first thing you want to know is simple: how long does the whole day take? The short answer is that it is a full-day outing rather than a quick hour on the water - so it is best to keep the rest of that day free.
The actual paddling is only one part of it. Most of your time is spent travelling to and from the mountains, getting kitted out and enjoying lunch by the river. Below is a realistic, honest breakdown of how a rafting day on the Koprucay usually flows, without pretending to know the exact minute your minibus will arrive.
The morning: hotel pickup and the drive inland
Your day starts with a free minibus pickup from your hotel in the morning. We do not quote an exact clock time here because it depends on where you are staying and how many other guests share the transfer - your confirmation will give you a window to be ready in the lobby.
From the Side and Manavgat coast, the drive up to Beskonak and Koprulu Canyon National Park is around 50 km, roughly an hour inland. The road climbs steadily away from the resorts into pine forest and mountain scenery, so the journey itself is part of the experience. If you are prone to travel sickness on winding roads, it is worth taking something before you set off.
Where the transfer starts from
If you are booking from the Side area, our rafting from Side page explains exactly how the coastal pickup and transfer work, so you know what to expect before the minibus arrives.
At the river: briefing, kit and safety
Once you reach the rafting base beside the Koprucay, there is a settling-in period before anyone gets on the water. You will be given a helmet and a life jacket - both are compulsory and non-negotiable - and shown how to wear them correctly.
Your guide then runs a safety briefing: how to hold the paddle, the basic commands you will hear on the water, what to do if you fall in, and how the team works together. This is the part nervous first-timers find most reassuring, because a trained guide rides in every single raft and manages the boat through the rapids. You do not need to be a strong swimmer for the family route - the life jacket floats you and the guide is always in control.
On the water: around 14 km through the canyon
The classic run through Koprulu Canyon is about 14 km, with a shorter family option of around 12 km for younger children. The rapids are grade II-III, which means they are genuinely beginner- and family-friendly rather than extreme.
Expect a mix of lively splashy sections and calmer stretches where you can drift, look up at the canyon walls and cool off. The water is cold snowmelt straight from the mountains, so it stays refreshing even in the heat of July and August. In spring, especially April and May, the snowmelt makes the river livelier; by high summer it settles into a gentler, more relaxed float. The family route usually welcomes children from about age six or seven.
Lunch and the return
After the paddling, there is time to dry off and enjoy a riverside lunch at the base - a welcome pause after the excitement, and a chance to swap stories with the rest of your raft. The setting under the trees by the water is one of the nicest parts of the whole day.
From there, the minibus brings you back down to the coast. You should expect to be dropped back at your hotel in the late afternoon or early evening. Again, we avoid promising an exact time - traffic and the transfer route vary - but as a rule of thumb, treat rafting as a whole-day plan and do not book anything tight for the same evening.
How to plan around it
Because it is a full day out, rafting pairs best with a relaxed evening afterwards rather than another big excursion. If you want to fill other days too, browse our full range of Antalya tours and space out your activities so you are not rushing from one to the next.
Ready to lock in your day on the Koprucay? Check availability and the current price on our rafting from Side page and pick a date that leaves your evening free to relax.