The roar hits you before you see it. You’re paddling through warm-water canyons, native bush pressing in on both sides, and then the river just stops. Where the horizon line should be, there’s only air.
That’s Tutea Falls. Seven metres of freefall on the Kaituna River at Ōkere Falls, Rotorua. It holds the title of the highest commercially rafted waterfall on earth, and the moment you drop over it, you’ll get exactly why that record hasn’t changed.
You’ll notice the word “commercially” in that record. It matters.
Plenty of waterfalls around the world get kayaked or run by experienced paddlers on private missions. The “commercially rafted” qualifier means something pretty specific: a licensed operator, paying guests on the raft, proper safety certification, and a run that’s been opened to the public. That’s a much harder bar to clear.
The current global list of commercially rafted waterfalls looks like this:
| Waterfall | Height | River | Location | Grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tutea Falls | 7m / 23ft | Kaituna River | NZ | Class V |
| Agers Falls | 5.5m / 18ft | Bottom Moose River | New York, USA | Class III |
| Sweets Falls | 4.3m / 14ft | Gauley River | West Virginia, USA | Class V |
| Husum Falls | 3.7m / 12ft | White Salmon River | Washington, USA | Class V |
| Tunnel Falls | 3m / 10ft | Upper Colorado River | Colorado, USA | Class V |