We’ve been running the Deschutes River since 1981, longer than any other outfitter in Maupin. In that time, we’ve seen every Oregon river have its moment.
We’ll say this plainly: if you want one river and one day, the Lower Deschutes offers the best whitewater rafting in Oregon.
Here’s the full picture, river by river, with nothing held back.

Oregon’s rafting rivers – compared honestly
Oregon has more whitewater than most states want to admit.
The problem isn’t finding a river. It’s knowing which one actually delivers on a given day, for your group, in the middle of summer when you’ve driven two hours and you’re not turning around empty-handed.
River | Rapids Class | Best Season | Drive from Portland | Reliable Summer Flow? | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lower Deschutes | III-IV | Apr-Oct | ~2 hrs | Yes – dam-controlled | Everyone. Day trips, families, multi-day |
Rogue (Wild Section) | III-IV | Jun-Sep | ~5 hrs | Yes | Multi-day wilderness expeditions |
Rogue (Hellgate) | II | May-Sep | ~5 hrs | Yes | Scenic floats, first-timers |
McKenzie | III | Apr-Jun | ~2 hrs | Often too low by July | Spring paddlers, forest scenery lovers |
Clackamas (Upper) | III-IV | Apr-Jun | ~45 min | Drops out by late summer | Spring thrill-seekers near Portland |
North Santiam | III | Apr-Jul | ~1.5 hrs | Short season | Salem-area locals in spring |
Only the Lower Deschutes gives you real Class III-IV whitewater, steady summer flows, and an easy drive from Portland or Bend. Every other river makes you give up one.
What the Deschutes actually has that no other Oregon river can match
Four things separate the Lower Deschutes from everything else on the Oregon rafting map. Not marketing. Actual reasons.
Dam-controlled flow – the thing nobody talks about enough
The Pelton Reregulating Dam keeps the Lower Deschutes at a consistent, paddleable level from April through October, every year. Other Oregon rivers are at the mercy of snowpack and summer heat. The Deschutes doesn’t care. Book it in August. It’ll be running.
Class III and IV rapids with actual personality
No two rapids on this stretch feel the same, and that’s what makes the 13 miles worth every minute. Wapinitia kicks things off right after putting in. Boxcar, named for a 1954 train wreck that left a steam engine in the river, which you paddle past, hits hard with big rollers and a hole on the left you don’t want.
Oak Springs is the one that makes people yell: a Class IV drop with multiple lines and a serious hole on the right channel. Elevator finishes the run with a wave train we sometimes stop and play in. That sequence doesn’t exist on most commercial rivers in the state.
A canyon that earns every photo
The scenery here isn’t background – it’s part of the trip. High desert basalt walls in ochre, black, and deep red rise hundreds of feet above the water. Bald eagles on the rims. Mule deer at the waterline. No road noise, no cell service, no development. The corridor has been a Federal Wild and Scenic River since 1988.
People float around a bend and go quiet. It happens on almost every trip.
40-plus years on the same river
Experience on a river compounds. We’re the first and longest-running outfitter in Maupin, and our guides know this river the way you know your neighborhood: every line, every eddy, every spot where the current does something unexpected. That doesn’t come from a training manual.
The rest of Oregon’s rivers – worth knowing, worth comparing
The Deschutes is not the only river in Oregon with real whitewater. The Rogue’s Wild Section is the classic choice for a week in the woods. The McKenzie is at its best in spring. The Upper Clackamas is close to Portland and packs a punch at Class III-IV.
There is always a catch. The Rogue takes five hours to reach and a week to run. The McKenzie and Clackamas are gone by midsummer. None of them hold water through August and September the way the Deschutes does. Most people only find that out after they have already booked.

Every trip we run – matched to what you’re actually looking for
- Duration: 3.5 hours
- Rapids: Class III-IV
- Price: from $70
- Ages: 6 and up
Check-in at 9am or 1:30pm in Maupin. 13 miles, all the main rapids, done by lunch or in time for dinner. The best bang-for-your-buck whitewater day in Oregon. Perfect if you’re driving from Portland or Bend and want the river without making it a full production.
- Duration: 5.5 hours
- Rapids: Class III-IV
- Price: from $95
- Ages: 6 and up
Check-in at 10:30am, back by 3:30-4pm. Same 13 miles, same rapids, plus the swimming stops, the White River rock slides, Pirate’s Cove cliff jump, and a riverside BBQ lunch.
This is the trip people are talking about when they say they rafted the Deschutes and it was the best thing they did all summer.
- Duration: 2-5 days
- Rapids: Class III+
- Price: from $415
- Ages: 6 and up
Launches from Trout Creek and covers 40 miles of the Wild and Scenic corridor: the part of the river that has no road access, no crowds, and campsites on sandy beaches where the only sound is the river.
Fully guided and catered. Custom dates and length. If you’ve ever thought about a river camping trip but backed away from the logistics, this is the version where we handle it all.
- Price: $349 per person
- Minimum: 4 people
A 45-minute charter flight from Troutdale Airport through the Columbia River Gorge, straight to Maupin, then a half-day raft trip, then back in the air. We built this with our partners at Envi Adventures for people who want to skip the drive entirely. Unusual, memorable, and genuinely worth it.
- Price: from $195 per person weekdays, $210 weekends
Morning rappelling down the basalt canyon walls with Cascade Canyon Guides, then an afternoon half-day raft trip. Two completely different ways to experience the canyon in one day.
The honest answer to “where should I go?”
If you are trying to pick a river, here is the answer. Go to the Lower Deschutes out of Maupin.
It is the right call for almost everyone. The water holds all summer. The rapids are the real thing. The canyon is worth seeing. From Portland, it is two hours. From Bend, even less.
The Rogue is a good choice if you want a five-day trip and you are ready for that kind of adventure. The Clackamas works in April. The McKenzie is worth it when the water is up.
But when people ask where to go, and they ask all the time, the answer does not change. Go to Maupin.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best river for whitewater rafting in Oregon?
The Lower Deschutes through Maupin. Dam-controlled flow keeps Class III-IV rapids running April through October, two hours from Portland and under two from Bend. Consistent, accessible, and the scenery is legitimately exceptional.
What makes the Deschutes better than other Oregon rivers in summer?
The flow is reliable. Most Oregon rivers depend on snowmelt and dry up by July. The Deschutes gets a consistent dam release all season, so you’re not gambling on water levels when you show up.
How far is the Deschutes River from Portland?
About two hours. I-84 east to The Dalles, then south on Hwy 197 into Maupin. The drive through the high desert canyon is half the experience.
Is it good for kids?
Yes, trips are open to ages 6 and up. The rapids are real, but guides know conservative lines and can dial the intensity up or down. Kids who were nervous on the drive there are usually the loudest ones asking to go again.
Can I raft if I’ve never done it before?
Yes. Most people on our trips haven’t. Your guide handles the reads and the calls: you paddle when told and hold on when it matters. Start with the half-day trip.
What’s the difference between the half-day and the full-day?
Same 13 miles, same rapids. The full-day adds swimming stops at White River’s natural rock slides, a cliff jump at Pirate’s Cove, and a riverside BBQ lunch. If you have the time, do the full day: the stops are what people remember most.