REVIEW · ANTALYA PROVINCE
Super Combo: Rafting, Quad or Buggy Ride, Zipline, Jeep Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Fam Tour · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Köprülü Canyon packs a lot into one day. This super combo strings together rafting, an off-road quad or buggy, a zipline, and a Jeep safari so you’re not just watching the countryside. You get a guided flow from Antalya-area hotels straight into the action around Köprülü Canyon in Turkey’s Antalya Province.
I especially like the practical pacing: you’re driven out (about 70 km), briefed with the right safety gear, then moved activity to activity. I also like the variety of effort, from paddling and rafting to riding the river area on a quad or buggy, then switching gears to history on the Jeep safari to ancient Roman bridges. One watch-out: it’s a long 9–10 hour day, and you’ll want proper footwear since sandals/flip flops aren’t allowed.
If you’re after a fast, outdoorsy day with multiple hits of adrenaline and minimal planning on your side, this combo fits well. If you prefer a slower schedule, or you’re not comfortable getting wet and active for hours, you may find it a bit much.
In This Review
- Key things that make this combo tour worth your time
- From Antalya to Köprülü Canyon: why the drive is part of the value
- Your morning setup: safety briefing, gear, and getting ready to get wet
- Jeep safari and ancient Roman bridges: the break that keeps the day interesting
- Quad or buggy ride: choosing the way you want to play
- Rafting in Köprülü Canyon: the main event plus guided support
- Zipline over the canyon: the aerial moment you’ll actually remember
- Riverside lunch: how the meal fits a long day
- What I like about the overall value at about $74 per person
- Who this tour suits best (and who should skip it)
- What to wear and bring so the day stays fun
- The small things that make or break a combo day
- Should you book the Super Combo for Köprülü Canyon?
- FAQ
- What activities are included in this Super Combo?
- How long is the tour?
- Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
- What rafting gear is provided?
- How much does it cost?
- What languages are the instructors available in?
- Is this tour suitable for everyone?
- What items are not allowed?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key things that make this combo tour worth your time

- Five activities in one day: rafting, quad/buggy, zipline, and Jeep safari, all tied together with transfers
- Gear and a skilled rafting guide: helmet, life vest, and paddles included, with instruction before you hit the water
- Riverside lunch: you get a meal as part of the day’s rhythm, not as an awkward stop you have to plan
- Ancient Roman bridges by Jeep: you get a history beat between adrenaline moments
- You choose quad or buggy: the day can match how you like to ride (fast and direct or more side-by-side style)
- Trip insurance included: a small detail that adds peace of mind for a physical day out
From Antalya to Köprülü Canyon: why the drive is part of the value

This tour is designed like a smooth relay. You start with hotel pickup and drop-off, then you’re transferred by vehicle for the scenic run to Köprülü Canyon. The drive is listed as about 70 km, which matters because it removes the biggest hassle of canyon days in this region: getting there, getting gear sorted, and coordinating transport between activities.
That “transport handled for you” is part of the value of a combo like this. For the price, you’re not just paying for one activity. You’re paying for the whole day’s logistics: pickup, transfers, guide time, and the sequencing of rafting plus the off-road ride and zipline.
The tone is practical. Expect team leaders who give essential information before you start, and then a handoff from one activity to the next. It’s not a sit-and-stare experience, so if you like moving, you’ll appreciate the flow.
Other jeep safari tours we've reviewed in Antalya Province
Your morning setup: safety briefing, gear, and getting ready to get wet

Once you arrive at Köprülü Canyon, the tour gets you geared up. Equipment provided includes a life vest, helmet, and paddles for the rafting portion. There are team leaders with instruction, and the tour lists instructors speaking multiple languages including English, German, Russian, Arabic, Polish, Turkish, and French.
Why I think this is important for your comfort: canyon rafting days go from dry to wet quickly. If your safety briefing is clear, you’ll spend less time worrying and more time focusing on what you’re doing. A good prep stage also helps you avoid the common mistake of wearing the wrong shoes or bringing gear that turns into a problem once you’re in the water.
Also pay attention to the rules. Sandals or flip flops are not allowed, and luggage or large bags aren’t meant to come along. Alcohol and drugs are also prohibited, which is exactly what you want on a day that includes water sport and zipline.
Before you go, think in terms of “one-day outdoor uniform”: something you can move in, something that works if you get wet, and nothing you’ll regret later.
Jeep safari and ancient Roman bridges: the break that keeps the day interesting

Before the most adrenaline-heavy moments, you hop into a rugged Jeep for an exploration route connected to ancient Roman bridges. This is a smart midstream piece of the day. You’re still outdoors and moving, but it’s not yet the pounding rhythm of rafting.
The Roman bridges part matters because it changes the flavor of the tour. Instead of being only about speed and water, you get a quick history layer: relics you can actually see from a vehicle route. It also functions like a reset. If you’re nervous about rafting, this Jeep segment gives you a chance to settle in.
There’s a balancing act here. A combo day can sometimes feel like you’re constantly switching tasks. But the Jeep safari breaks up the physical load while keeping the day active. It’s the kind of interlude that makes the later zipline and off-road ride feel like part of a planned route, not random add-ons.
Quad or buggy ride: choosing the way you want to play

Next comes the off-road portion. You’ll ride either a quad or a buggy along the river with stunning nature around you. This is where the tour lets you tailor the day slightly. Not everyone wants the same driving style, and having a choice helps.
What you should keep in mind is that off-road riding adds its own kind of “getting tired.” Even if you’re not paddling, you’ll feel it in your legs and core after a while. The good news is that it’s not just one straight line. You’re on a river area route with scenery, so you’re not stuck in pure motion fatigue.
Also note the practical side: the tour name promises a combo day, but the real benefit is the variety of sensations. Quad or buggy makes the day feel like more than one single activity repeated. It’s a different perspective of the same canyon region, which is exactly what you want when you’re paying for five experiences instead of one.
Rafting in Köprülü Canyon: the main event plus guided support

Rafting is the heart of this day. You’ll get on the river after the setup and instructions, and you’ll be with a skilled raft guide for the duration of the tour. That guide support is a big deal, especially if you’re not an experienced rafter. The guide time can be the difference between you feeling in control and you feeling like you’re just along for the ride.
You also get that classic combo effect: the rafting portion isn’t only about getting down the rapids. The tour description also highlights a chance to enjoy the experience so you can either get wet in the waves or take breaks to swim and surf the rapids.
This is a key value point for most people: on a canyon rafting day, the “best memories” often come from the in-between moments. The tour is structured so you’re not only in motion. You get chances to refresh, reposition, and enjoy the water in a way that feels fun rather than purely intense.
If you’re the type who loves the water itself, this is likely your favorite part. Even in mixed ratings, rafting tends to show up as the most memorable element because it’s hands-on and guided.
Other rafting tours we've reviewed in Antalya Province
Zipline over the canyon: the aerial moment you’ll actually remember

Halfway through the action, you get a break during rafting and experience a zipline over the canyon. This is the “wow” factor that makes the combo feel like more than a standard rafting trip.
Why it’s such a smart add-on: rafting is kinetic and close-range. Zipline is the opposite. It gives you a view angle where you can understand the canyon space—height, curves, and the scale of the cliffs—without needing to be an expert photographer or explorer.
It also fits the day’s pacing. The tour doesn’t stack every high-adrenaline moment back-to-back with no recovery. You’re on the water, you get a shift in activity, then you return to the day with a new energy level.
If you’re worried the day will feel too repetitive, this aerial segment is the antidote. It adds a totally different kind of adrenaline.
Riverside lunch: how the meal fits a long day

You’ll have a riverside lunch included. This matters because it’s timed into the day you’re already committing to. Instead of breaking the rhythm to find food, you get a meal built into the schedule.
On a day with wet activities and an off-road ride, you want food that keeps you fueled but doesn’t force you into planning. A riverside lunch also matches the setting. The whole tour is outdoors, so this isn’t a random restaurant stop where you feel cut off from the experience.
One practical tip: even with lunch included, drinks are not. So if you’re a heavy sweater or you know you get thirsty fast, plan your day with that in mind.
What I like about the overall value at about $74 per person

At around $74 per person for a 9–10 hour day, you’re paying for a bundle: transfers (hotel pickup and drop-off), riverside lunch, rafting with a guide and safety gear, a Jeep safari, quad or buggy time, and zipline. That’s a lot of “guided time” stacked into one package.
The value is especially strong because you’re not just buying entry to one location. You’re buying coordination. The tour handles equipment (at least for rafting), the guiding, the routing from activity to activity, and the insurance.
Now for the reality check: combo tours are packed by design. You’re doing a lot, so you won’t have the same leisurely pace as a slower self-guided day. For some people, that’s exactly what they want. For others, it can feel like too much, which lines up with the sort of balanced feedback you may see when people describe it as cool but not mind-blowing.
In other words, you’re not paying for luxury. You’re paying for variety, motion, and a full outdoors day with less effort on your end.
Who this tour suits best (and who should skip it)

This is best for you if you:
- want multiple outdoor adrenaline activities in one day
- like being actively involved rather than just watching
- don’t mind a schedule that keeps you moving for most of the day
- enjoy water sports and outdoor scenery
It’s not suitable for you if you:
- are pregnant
- have mobility impairments
- have heart problems
That’s not small-print. It’s central to the safety assumptions behind rafting, zipline, and off-road riding. If any of those apply, it’s worth looking for a different style of tour with lower physical demands.
What to wear and bring so the day stays fun
The tour explicitly bans sandals or flip flops, and it also discourages luggage or large bags. That tells you the priority: keep things simple and safe, and assume you’ll deal with water.
Here’s the practical approach I recommend:
- Wear closed-toe footwear you’re comfortable getting wet
- Bring a small dry bag or waterproof pouch if you have one (so you’re not constantly worrying about your phone or documents)
- Wear clothes you don’t mind drying later
- Keep extra items minimal since you won’t want bulky luggage
Since drinks aren’t included, plan how you’ll stay hydrated during the long day.
The small things that make or break a combo day
Combo tours can either feel smooth or exhausting depending on how you handle the day. Here’s what to watch for, based on the way this experience is set up:
1) Timing and length matter.
Nine to ten hours is a full day, not a quick excursion. If you’re the type who needs frequent downtime, build that into your expectations.
2) Your attitude affects the experience.
Some people go in hunting for the most extreme version of each activity. Others go in to have fun across variety. This tour is built for the latter: it’s a run of different activities, not one staged “extreme event.”
3) Guides and team support are the safety net.
The raft guide and multilingual team leaders are part of why people feel confident once they’re in gear. If you listen during the briefing, you’ll have a much smoother time.
Should you book the Super Combo for Köprülü Canyon?
Book it if you want a single, organized day that hits multiple adventure styles: river time with rafting, off-road fun on quad or buggy, a canyon aerial moment with zipline, and a Jeep segment tied to ancient Roman bridges. The mix keeps the day interesting, and the inclusion of transfers, riverside lunch, rafting gear, and a skilled raft guide makes it strong value for the time you’re spending.
Skip it if you’re looking for a slow, scenic day with minimal physical effort. Also skip if you fall into the stated unsuitability categories like pregnancy, mobility impairments, or heart problems.
If you’re generally healthy, you don’t mind getting wet, and you like your vacations with a bit of adrenaline, this combo is a solid choice in Antalya Province. It’s the kind of day where you come home tired in a good way, with a zipline view and a raft memory that sticks.
FAQ
What activities are included in this Super Combo?
It includes rafting, a Jeep safari, a quad or buggy ride, and a zipline experience, along with a riverside lunch.
How long is the tour?
The duration is listed as 9 to 10 hours. You’ll need to check availability to see the starting times.
Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
Yes. Transfers with hotel pick-up and drop-off from hotels are included.
What rafting gear is provided?
You get equipment for rafting, including a helmet, life vest, and paddles.
How much does it cost?
The price is $74 per person.
What languages are the instructors available in?
The tour lists English, German, Russian, Arabic, Polish, Turkish, and French.
Is this tour suitable for everyone?
It is not suitable for pregnant women, people with mobility impairments, or people with heart problems.
What items are not allowed?
Sandals or flip flops are not allowed, and you can’t bring luggage or large bags. Alcohol and drugs are also prohibited.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.














