One of the most common questions before a rafting day is simple: how many people share a boat? On the Koprucay river through Koprulu Canyon, a raft usually seats around six to eight guests plus one trained guide who steers from the back and calls the paddling.
How many people fit in a raft?
A standard inflatable raft on the Koprucay carries roughly six to eight paddlers, arranged in pairs down each side, with the guide seated at the stern. That number is not arbitrary. It gives every seat enough paddling power to move the boat through the grade II-III rapids while leaving room to shift your weight and brace in the livelier sections.
The exact count on the day depends on the size of the guests, the water level and how many people are booked onto that departure. Smaller children and lighter loads may mean a slightly fuller boat; a raft of tall adults may run with fewer seats. The guide makes the final call at the base camp near Beskonak, because a well-balanced boat is a safer, faster boat.
How are groups and families split?
When you arrive at the riverside base, the team divides everyone into boat-sized groups after the safety briefing. Families and friends who booked together are kept together wherever the numbers allow, so you are almost never separated from your own party without warning.
Larger groups are simply spread across two or more rafts that travel the canyon in convoy, within sight of one another. If you are a family of four or five, you will usually share a boat and pick up a couple of other paddlers to fill the remaining seats. Everyone on the water follows the same guide calls, so even split parties feel like one crew.
Can you request to stay together?
Yes. If staying in the same raft matters to you, tell the base team when you check in and they will do their best to seat your group in one boat. It helps to mention children, nervous first-timers or anyone who wants to sit beside a specific person. The guides would rather sort this out on dry land than reshuffle at the water's edge.
What about very young children?
The family route is a gentler run with calmer pools between the rapids, and no swimming ability is needed because the compulsory life jacket floats you. Younger children are usually placed on the shorter, lower-energy stretch and seated near the guide. Always check the live booking details for the current minimum age before you travel.
Solo travellers and small numbers
Rafting is very welcoming to solo joiners. If you book on your own or as a pair, you will simply share a raft with other guests on the same departure, which is part of the fun of a big shared-adventure day. You paddle together, hit the mid-river swim and float stop together, and cheer through the rapids together.
Because so many people head up the canyon from the coast each day, there is almost always a boat forming that has a couple of free seats. Solo travellers rarely wait long and never need a full group of their own to go.
What a shared boat looks like in practice
- Around 6-8 guests plus one trained guide per raft.
- Paired seating down each side, guide at the stern calling paddle commands.
- Families kept together where seat numbers allow, larger groups split across boats in convoy.
- Solo and pairs share with other friendly paddlers on the same run.
- Helmet and life jacket provided and compulsory for everyone aboard.
Whichever raft you end up in, the experience is the same: a roughly 12-14 km paddle through the national park, calmer floating pools between the whitewater, and a mid-river stop to swim in the cold, clear snowmelt. A typical day includes free hotel pickup, the drive of around an hour inland, the kit and safety briefing, the paddle, lunch at the riverside restaurant and the drive back by late afternoon or early evening.
You can see the full range of departures on our tours page, and if you are staying on the coast, our rafting from Side trips make the boat-sharing simple with pickup, transfer and a friendly crew all sorted for you.
Ready to grab your seat in the boat? Check availability and book your rafting adventure from Side today.