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Exciting Class III rapids perfect for adventure enthusiasts.
Offering the perfect blend of thrilling whitewater and family-friendly adventures through iconic Browns Canyon. Ideal for rafters looking for excitement, spectacular scenery, and riverside relaxation.
Home to Colorado’s most exhilarating rapids beneath towering canyon walls, delivering bucket-list whitewater experiences. A must-visit for thrill-seekers craving legendary adventure.
Exciting Class III rapids perfect for adventure enthusiasts.
Offering the perfect blend of thrilling whitewater and family-friendly adventures through iconic Browns Canyon. Ideal for rafters looking for excitement, spectacular scenery, and riverside relaxation.
Home to Colorado’s most exhilarating rapids beneath towering canyon walls, delivering bucket-list whitewater experiences. A must-visit for thrill-seekers craving legendary adventure.
Clear Creek is closer. The Arkansas River is better. We’re a 2-hour drive south on US-285 — Colorado’s most-rafted river, trips that range from family floats to The Numbers, and Browns Canyon National Monument scenery you won’t get anywhere on the Front Range. Operating on this stretch of water since 1972.
★★★★★ 4.9 / 1,800+ Google Reviews · Operating Since 1972 · Free Reschedule Within 48 Hours
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This is the question every Denver searcher is actually asking. Worth answering directly.
Clear Creek is 35 minutes from downtown Denver and runs Class III–IV through a tight roadside canyon. It’s a fine option if you want a one-hour shot of whitewater between errands.
The Arkansas River is two hours south and runs through Browns Canyon National Monument — designated by the federal government in 2015 to protect 21,586 acres of granite walls, alpine forest, and one of the most ecologically intact canyon systems in Colorado. The water is bigger, the canyon is wider, the trips are longer, and the scenery doesn’t share the riverbank with I-70.
Class III(IV) on Browns Canyon means continuous wave trains, named rapids you’ll talk about later (Zoom Flume, Pinball, Big Drop), and pool sections where you actually catch your breath and look up. The canyon walls run 600 feet straight up in places. Bighorn sheep work the cliffs. You won’t see a road for the entire run.
130 miles. About 2 hours of driving. The route is US-285 South — the back-door way out of Denver that skips I-70 ski traffic entirely.
Once you clear C-470, you’re climbing through Conifer and Bailey within forty minutes. Kenosha Pass tops out at 10,000 feet with a long view across South Park — the actual basin, not the show. From there it’s a straight shot across the high plains to Trout Creek Pass, then a fast descent into the Arkansas River valley with the Collegiate Peaks (Mounts Princeton, Yale, Harvard, Columbia, and Oxford) lined up across the western horizon.
For a 10:00 AM Browns Canyon check-in, leave Denver by 7:00 AM. That gives you a buffer for coffee, the bathroom, and the slow stretch through Bailey. Cutthroat Cafe in Bailey is a solid first-stop. Brown Burro Cafe in Fairplay is the classic second-stop diner if you’ve got time.
The drive itself is part of why people come back. You’re not fighting traffic to a parking lot; you’re crossing into mountain country, and you arrive in a real downtown — not a strip — before lunch.
Pick based on your group.
A mellow Class II stretch with no real rapids — scenic floating with paddle splashes for the kids. Ages 3 and up. Two hours on the water plus a short shuttle. Good for families with younger kids, grandparents joining the trip, or anyone who wants the river without the rapids.
Three hours on the water through the National Monument. Class III(IV) rapids — Zoom Flume, Pinball, Big Drop. Check in at 10:00 AM, on the river by 10:30, off by 1:30, lunch at The Beach, back in Denver by dinner. The most-booked trip from this outpost, and the one we recommend by default for Denver day trips.
The most continuous Class IV(V) commercial run in Colorado. Seven numbered rapids back-to-back, no flat water between them, technical reads required. Ages 14+. This is the trip experienced paddlers come for. A common Denver itinerary: drive down Friday night, run The Numbers Saturday, knock out Browns Canyon Half-Day Sunday morning before heading home.
A half-day Browns Canyon trip is genuinely doable as a one-day round trip from Denver. Here’s how the day usually runs.
Leave Denver. US-285 South.
Coffee stop in Bailey or Fairplay.
Arrive Buena Vista. Drop in at the outpost or grab a quick second coffee in town.
Check in at the Browns Canyon Outpost. Sign waivers, gear up — wetsuits, splash jackets, helmets, PFDs. We provide everything.
On the water. Three hours through the National Monument.
Off the river. Walk five steps to The Beach — riverside grill, full bar, the kind of post-river meal that hits hard after three hours of paddling.
Head north. Optional 15-minute detour to Mount Princeton Hot Springs to soak before the drive home.
Back in Denver.
Total time on the river: 3 hours. Total round trip from Denver: 11 hours. The river time is what people remember.
If you’re driving 2 hours each way, there’s a reasonable case for staying overnight. Buena Vista has a real downtown and a full slate of things worth pairing with a rafting trip.
15 minutes south of the outpost. Multiple soaking pools including a creek-side natural pool. Best after a half-day on the water — and the best argument for staying a second night.
The same canyon you rafted has rim trails. Ruby Mountain trail offers a top-down view of the river you just ran. Gold Medal trout fishing on the Arkansas if you brought a rod.
Eddyline Brewery is the hometown anchor. Deerhammer Distilling, Simple Eatery, House Rock Kitchen, and the Asian Palate round out the short list.
Cabins, hotels, vacation rentals, and tent or RV camping along the river are all within fifteen minutes of the outpost. The Surf Hotel anchors downtown BV; Mount Princeton’s resort sits at the south end of the spectrum.
The Arkansas is the most commercially rafted river in the United States — it has been for decades. The water comes from snowmelt off the Collegiate Peaks (a string of 14ers along the western edge of Chaffee County) and gets released from Twin Lakes Reservoir on a managed schedule that supports rafting flows from late May through Labor Day. That’s the Voluntary Flow Management Program — it’s why the season runs so long here while other Colorado rivers fade by mid-July.
Browns Canyon was designated a National Monument in 2015. 21,586 acres of granite spires, ponderosa pine, and one of the most ecologically intact canyon systems on the Front Range. Bighorn sheep work the canyon walls. Bald eagles fish the deeper pools. Mountain bluebirds nest in the cliff bands. You’ll see them — bring sunglasses with a strap so you don’t lose them craning your neck.
The river’s character changes through the season: bigger and pushier in early June at peak runoff, more technical and rock-strewn by August. Both versions are good. They’re just different days on the river, and your guide will brief you on what to expect for the conditions on your trip.
We were the first commercial whitewater outfitter on the Arkansas River. We’ve been guiding it since 1972. That history matters for two reasons: it means our guides have institutional knowledge of every rapid at every flow, and it means the infrastructure was built river-first instead of bolted onto an office park.
At the Browns Canyon Outpost — no shuttle delay, no shared boat ramp. You walk from check-in to the water in five minutes.
On the riverside — full menu, full bar, live music in summer. Most outfitters end your day in a parking lot.
Swiftwater Rescue, Wilderness First Aid, and CPR certifications on every guide. Pre-season training runs the specific rapids guides will be working — not generic industry training.
Most outfitters round up to 4.7 and call it a day. We don't.
Credentials your insurance company cares about, that we care about, and that we hold ourselves to without being asked.
Yes — if you want a real day on the water rather than a one-hour adrenaline hit. Browns Canyon offers more class range, longer trips, and National Monument scenery you won’t get on Clear Creek. For a half-day trip, the round-trip math from Denver is roughly 11 hours total, with 3 of those hours on the river.
About 2 hours, 130 miles, via US-285 South. The route avoids I-70 entirely and passes through Bailey, Kenosha Pass, and South Park before dropping into the Arkansas River valley.
Yes. A half-day Browns Canyon trip with a 10:00 AM check-in works as a one-day round trip if you leave Denver by 7:00 AM. You’ll be back in town by dinner. Full-day trips and The Numbers are doable as day trips but tighter — most guests booking those stay a night in BV.
No. Clear Creek is the closest, but the Arkansas River (~2 hours), Colorado River (~1.5–2 hours), and Blue River (~1 hour) are all viable. The Arkansas is the most commercially rafted river in the country and offers the widest range of trip difficulty in the state.
Late May through Labor Day on the Arkansas River. Peak flows happen late May through mid-June from snowmelt; warmer, more predictable conditions hold from late June into August; flows mellow by late August. Trips run rain or shine — mountain weather shifts fast and our guides adjust the run to match what the river is doing that day.
Wear quick-drying synthetic layers (skip cotton — it stays wet and cold) and swimwear underneath. Bring secure footwear with a heel strap — water sandals or old sneakers work. We provide wetsuits, splash jackets, helmets, and PFDs. Bring sunscreen, sunglasses with a strap, and a change of clothes for after the trip.
Family Float (Class II): age 3+. Browns Canyon (Class III): age 6+. Happy Hour (Class III): age 12+. The Numbers (Class IV-V): age 14+. Every guide carries Swiftwater Rescue and Wilderness First Aid certifications, and the pre-trip safety talk covers paddle technique, swim position, and what to do if you end up out of the boat.
The Browns Canyon Outpost is at 24070 County Road 301, Buena Vista, CO 81211 — six miles south of downtown BV on the Arkansas River. Free on-site parking. Plan to arrive 45 minutes before your scheduled departure for check-in and gear fitting.
Trips run in light rain. We’ll cancel for lightning, dangerously high flows, or other genuine safety reasons — and you’ll get a full refund or free reschedule if we cancel. We don’t cancel for overcast skies.
You’ll be in moving water with intermittent splashes the whole trip. Most guests leave phones in the car. We have professional photographers shooting most trips, and you can buy the photo package after.
Yes — group rates apply for parties of 8+. Bachelor and bachelorette parties, corporate groups, scout groups, and family reunions are all common from the Denver market. Contact us directly for group bookings.
Free reschedule within 48 hours of your trip. Outside of that window, our standard cancellation policy applies — see your booking confirmation for specifics. If we cancel for weather or river conditions, you get a full refund or free reschedule.
Have a question we didn’t answer? Contact us or check the full FAQ.
Pick a date, pick a trip, we’ll handle the rest from check-in to The Beach.
Or call us at (800) 723-8987 — we're happy to help you pick the right trip for your group, especially if you're trying to match different ability levels in one booking.