Search for adventure near Antalya and you will keep bumping into two words: rafting and canyoning. They sound similar, they happen in the same stretch of mountains, and holiday reps often blur them together. They are not the same thing.
Here is the plain-English difference, the difficulty of each, and which one actually suits you and your group.
Where both take place
Both adventures unfold in and around Koprulu Canyon National Park, near the village of Beskonak, roughly 50 km and around an hour inland from the Side-Manavgat coast. Manavgat is the closest coastal town; Side, Kumkoy, Sorgun, Colakli and Belek are all around an hour away, Antalya about an hour and a quarter, and Alanya nearer an hour and a half to two hours. The Koprucay river runs cold and clear with snowmelt from the Taurus Mountains, and the scenery is the same postcard pine-and-limestone gorge either way.
What rafting involves
White-water rafting is a team activity in an inflatable raft. You sit on the edge, paddle on command, and a trained guide steers from the back of every boat. The classic Koprucay run is about 14 km of grade II-III water: enough splashy rapids and swirling water to get your heart going, with calm pools in between where you can float, swim and take photos.
You do not need to swim well or be especially fit. If you can follow simple paddle instructions and hold on, you can raft. It is genuinely family friendly, which is why it is the region's headline adventure. Everyone gets a helmet, life jacket and paddle, and the guide does the technical work. You provide the enthusiasm.
What canyoning involves
Canyoning (sometimes called canyon walking or aqua-trekking) is a very different beast. Instead of riding a river in a boat, you travel down through a narrower canyon on foot and in the water itself, scrambling over rocks, wading through pools, sliding down natural water chutes, and sometimes jumping from ledges or being lowered on a rope past small waterfalls.
It is more physical and more hands-on than rafting. You are climbing, balancing on slippery rock, swimming short sections and committing to jumps. There is no boat to sit in and no guide steering for you; you move your own body through the terrain with instructors coaching you along.
Difficulty and who each suits
Rafting is the easy-entry, high-fun option. It suits families with children, mixed-age groups, first-timers, nervous swimmers and anyone who wants a big adventure feeling without a fitness test. It is sociable, you are all in the raft together, and the effort level is comfortable.
Canyoning suits confident, reasonably active people who are happy getting properly stuck in - clambering, swimming and taking the plunge. If you are comfortable in water, don't mind heights on the smaller jumps, and want something that tests you a bit more, canyoning delivers. It is usually less suitable for young children and anyone unsure in deep water.
One honest point in canyoning's favour: it can feel more intense and personal because you are moving through the landscape yourself rather than being carried by it. Rafting's honest edge is accessibility - almost anyone can do it, together, on the same trip, and still come away buzzing.
Cold water, gear and season
Both run through the warmer months, roughly April to October. The snowmelt water is bracingly cold whichever you choose, so a splash of shock at the start is normal - and refreshing once you settle in. Wetsuits and safety gear are provided, and you will want a swimsuit, a towel and shoes you don't mind getting wet.
Can you do both?
Yes, and plenty of people do. Some make a day of rafting and add a canyoning section, or book each on separate days of their holiday. If you only have time for one and you are travelling as a family or mixed group, rafting is the safer bet for a great shared day. If you are an active group chasing a bigger challenge, canyoning is your call. Browse the full range on our tours page to compare what fits.
Why book direct
Whichever you pick, booking direct with the operator is usually cheaper than going through a hotel rep or an online marketplace like Viator or GetYourGuide, simply because those middlemen add their commission on top. Book with us and that margin stays in your pocket. Pickup is free from most coastal hotels in the morning, with a return in the late afternoon or early evening.
Ready to choose your adventure? Check availability and prices on our tours page and book direct for the best value on the Koprucay.