You have one free day and two very different ideas: a splashy resort waterpark or white-water rafting through a real canyon. Both are wet, both are fun, but they are not the same kind of day out.
The waterpark day: easy, predictable, close to your sunbed
Let us be fair to the waterpark first, because it earns its place. Many resorts near Side, Belek and Antalya have their own aquapark or one a short shuttle away, so there is no long journey. You can wander in when you like, the little ones are catered for with shallow pools, and there is food, shade and a towel from your room within reach.
For families with toddlers or grandparents who want a relaxed, low-commitment day, that convenience is genuinely valuable. The trade-off is that it is a manufactured experience: chlorinated water, queues at the popular slides, and scenery that is mostly concrete and painted fibreglass. Once your teenagers have done every slide twice by lunchtime, the afternoon can drag.
The rafting day: a real river, a real canyon, a real adventure
Rafting on the Koprucay river runs through Koprulu Canyon National Park near Beskonak, around an hour inland from the Side and Manavgat coast. This is not a themed attraction; it is cold, clear snowmelt flowing through pine-covered gorge walls, with a classic run of roughly 14 kilometres over grade II-III rapids.
That grade matters: it is lively enough to thrill teenagers and confident older kids, with proper splashy rapids and calmer stretches to catch your breath, yet family friendly and safe. Every raft has a trained guide steering and calling the paddling, and all the gear (helmet, life jacket, paddle) is provided. You will get soaked, you will laugh, and you will remember it long after a slide has blurred into every other slide.
The scenery you simply cannot fake
The biggest gap is what surrounds you. A waterpark gives you slides; the canyon gives you a UNESCO-tier landscape, an ancient Roman bridge arching over the gorge, kingfishers, and water so clear you can see the riverbed. For older kids and teens who are chasing something to post and something to actually feel, that contrast is decisive.
Cost: which gives you more for your money?
People assume the waterpark is the cheaper option, but do the maths for a family. Park entry, sunbeds, lockers, drinks and snacks add up fast, and you are back where you started by evening. A rafting day usually includes free hotel pickup and drop-off, all equipment, a guide and often lunch by the river, so it is closer to an all-in price.
One honest tip on booking rafting: book direct with the operator rather than through a hotel rep or an OTA such as Viator or GetYourGuide. Those middlemen add a commission on top, so a direct booking is typically better value. We will not quote a euro figure here because prices shift with season and group size, so always check the live price, but the principle holds. You can see current options on our rafting from Side page or across all our tours.
Who each day really suits
- Choose the waterpark if you have young children, want zero travel, or simply fancy a lazy day near the pool with slides on tap.
- Choose rafting if you have older kids or teenagers, want a genuine adventure and canyon scenery, and would rather come home with a story than a wristband.
- Mixed-age family? Many parents do the waterpark one day and rafting another; the rafting day is the one everyone talks about afterwards.
What a rafting day looks like
Pickup is in the morning from your hotel; the drive inland is part of the fun as the coast gives way to mountains and pine forest. You will raft the canyon, break for lunch by the water, and be back at your hotel by late afternoon or early evening. The season runs roughly April to October, and because the water is cold snowmelt, that refreshing chill is part of the thrill on a hot day.
A waterpark is a fine, easy day. But if you want the kind of adventure your teens will still be talking about at the airport, the river wins. Book your rafting trip from Side direct with us for the best live price, free hotel pickup and a guide in every raft.