Booking a rafting day in Koprulu Canyon should feel simple, yet the biggest surprises tend to be about what is and is not in the price. Here is an honest, practical guide to exactly what a standard Antalya rafting tour includes, and where the extras hide.
Where your rafting day takes place
The classic run is on the Koprucay river as it carves through Koprulu Canyon National Park near Beskonak, around 50 km and roughly an hour inland from the Side and Manavgat coast. The main route is around 14 km of grade II-III water, with a shorter family option of around 12 km. The rapids are beginner-friendly, livelier in the spring snowmelt of April and May and gentler through high summer. One thing worth knowing before you go: the water is cold snowmelt even in July and August, so the fun comes with a genuine chill.
What is included as standard
Most reputable operators, including the tours we run rafting from Side, bundle the essentials into one price. A standard package typically covers the following.
- Free hotel pickup and drop-off by minibus. Transfer from the Side, Manavgat, Belek, Kemer and Alanya areas is normally part of the deal, so you do not pay separately to reach the river.
- A trained rafting guide in every raft. You are never left to read the rapids alone; a guide rides with your crew, calls the paddling and handles the tricky sections.
- Safety equipment. A helmet and life jacket are provided for everyone, and a paddle of course. On the water your guide gives a full safety briefing before you set off.
- The rafting run itself, either the full route or the shorter family route, depending on the tour you book and the age of your group.
- Lunch, where the tour lists it. Many full-day packages include a riverside lunch at a restaurant in the canyon. Always check the specific tour, as some shorter or budget options do not.
The family route usually welcomes children from around age six or seven, which makes rafting here one of the more accessible adventures on the coast. You do not need any experience.
What usually costs extra
This is where honesty matters most. The following are commonly not in the headline price and are worth budgeting for.
- Photos and video. On-river photographers capture the action, but the images and footage are almost always sold separately at the end of the day. There is no obligation to buy.
- Combo activities. Rafting is often paired with add-ons such as a zipline, buggy or quad safari, canyoning or a jeep tour. Each combo raises the price, so a rafting-plus-zipline day costs more than rafting alone.
- Drinks and personal spending. Lunch may be included, but soft drinks, alcohol, tea, coffee and snacks at the restaurant are usually paid on the spot.
- Waterproof gear and specials. A change of dry clothes and water shoes are your responsibility. Some operators rent water shoes or offer a small locker.
What drives the final price
Rather than quote a figure that may be out of date, it helps to understand what moves the number. The main factors are the route length (full versus family), whether you book a shared group or a private raft, any combo add-ons, the cost of photos and video, and your transfer distance - a pickup from Alanya or Kemer covers more road than one from Side. Booking direct with the operator is usually cheaper than buying through a hotel representative, who adds a commission. For the live, current price, always check the booking page rather than trusting a number you saw elsewhere.
How to avoid surprises
Before you pay, confirm three things: whether lunch is included, whether transfer from your specific resort is covered, and what the total is with any combo you want. A good operator will answer all three clearly. You can compare options across our full range on the tours page and pick the format that suits your group.
Ready to hit the water with everything clearly laid out and no hidden extras? Explore our rafting tours from Side and book direct for the best value.