Three rivers. Three completely different days out. And the one question we get asked more than almost anything else: which one should I book?
If you’re looking at white water rafting in Rotorua and trying to figure out where to start, you’re not alone. The Kaituna, Wairoa, and Rangitaiki all sit within an hour of Rotorua and all deliver genuine whitewater, but they feel nothing like each other.
Your fitness level, who you’re bringing, how much time you’ve got, and Wairoa’s limited release schedule all matter. Let’s break down each river so you can pick the right one and get on the water.
The iconic Rotorua rafting experience. Grade 5, year-round, 20 minutes from town. The world’s highest commercially rafted waterfall. Perfect for first-timers and repeat thrill-seekers.
New Zealand’s most intense commercially rafted river. Grade 5, continuous wall-to-wall action, only running 26 Sundays a year.
A full-day backcountry mission. Mostly Grade 3/4 with moments of real intensity. More time on the water, classic rafting with long rapids, rocks and trees. This natural, flowing river comes to life after rain and is our backup option when the Kaituna River is closed due to flooding.
| Kaituna | Wairoa | Rangitaiki | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grade | 5 | 5 | 3/4 (Grade 5 moments) |
| Time on water | 50–60 mins | ~1.5 hrs | ~2 hrs |
| Total time | ~2 hours | 1/2 Day | 5 hours |
| From Rotorua | 20 mins | 60 mins | 60 mins |
| Season | Year-round | ~26 days/year | Check availability after rain |
| Min. age | 13+ (10–12 below falls) | 13+ | 13+ |
| Weight limit | 120kg | 120kg | 120kg |
| Difficulty feel | Pool-drop, big waterfalls, recovery time between rapids | Pool drop, technical, waterfalls, relentless | Technical & continuous |
The Kaituna is the one that started it all. We’ve been running this river since 1991, and it still hits different every single time.
What makes the Kaituna work for such a wide range of people is its pool-drop rhythm. You hit a rapid, get your heart rate up, then float into a calm pool where your guide resets the crew before the next one. That rhythm gives nervous first-timers time to breathe and experienced paddlers time to stoke up for what’s coming.
Then there’s Tutea Falls. You sit at the lip, stare down 7 vertical metres, and your guide calls the stroke. That’s the moment most people describe when they talk about this trip years later.
The whole experience runs about 2 hours door-to-door. Our base is right on the riverbank at Ōkere Falls, so there are no long bus rides and no waiting around in your wetsuit.
Check out our Kaituna River rafting trips and available departure times.
When comparing Kaituna vs Wairoa rafting, the Wairoa is a completely different beast. It’s dam-controlled, flowing only when the power station opens the gates. That’s roughly 26 days a year, only on Sundays in summer with some spring and autumn releases.
Continuous Grade 5 action and is still a pool drop river, but the rapids are long and complex. The waterfalls keep coming right the way through, with calm spots for swimming and cliff jumping throughout the river’s length.
The Kaituna gives you recovery pools between rapids. The Wairoa keeps coming at you. It’s a continuous, technical Grade 5 that demands active paddling and correct body position right the way through. The action is relentless, and the paddling is technical in a way the Kaituna simply isn’t.
The river sits on State Highway 29 near Tauranga, about 60 minutes from Rotorua. You need to plan your trip around Wairoa’s schedule rather than your own, which takes a bit more effort. Most people who do it say it’s worth every bit of planning.
On Wairoa release days, you can run both rivers back-to-back. Start on the Wairoa in the morning for the intense technical mission, then hit the Kaituna in the afternoon to finish over Tutea Falls. Depart Rotorua at 8:30 am, and you’re back by around 4:30 pm. It’s a full day, and it absolutely earns it.
See what’s involved in our Wairoa River rafting experience, including release day dates.
The Rangitaiki gets overlooked because it doesn’t carry the same name recognition as the Kaituna. That’s a mistake.
The river runs mostly at Grade 3/4, so you’re still earning every rapid and still getting hit with real water. Geoff’s Joy makes it very clear that the Rangitaiki is not to be underestimated. And the scenery out in the Rangitaiki gorge is spectacular in a way that’s completely different from the tight jungle canyon most people picture when they think of rafting in Rotorua.
Who Should Choose the Rangitaiki?
Full details on our Rangitaiki River rafting trip, including what’s included and how to book.
“I’ve never been rafting, and I don’t know what to expect”: Book the Kaituna. The pool-drop rhythm, warm water, and expert guides make it the ideal entry point for Grade 5 white-water rafting in Rotorua.
“I want the most intense day on the water possible”: The Wairoa is the answer if the dates work. If not, the Kaituna + Wairoa combo on a release day is the next best thing.
“We’re a big group for a stag/hen do”: Kaituna. It’s high enough on the thrill scale that everyone feels it, and the location is perfect for a morning session before heading back into Rotorua.
“I’ve already done the Kaituna”: Try the Wairoa for intensity and more involved rafting with cliff jumping.
“Our group wants a full day out, not just a 2-hour activity”: The Kaituna + Wairoa combo on a release day.
“I’m visiting from Tauranga with flexible dates”: Check the Wairoa release schedule first. If you can make a release day work, do it.
We’ve been running all three of these rivers since 1991, longer than any other operator in the region. The Kaituna, Wairoa, and Rangitaiki all run with the same expert guides and the same commitment to getting you on the right river for the right reasons.
In our honest opinion, you can’t go wrong with any of these three.
All the rivers are genuinely world-class. For most people visiting Rotorua, the Kaituna is the natural starting point: iconic, accessible, and unforgettable. The Wairoa is for those ready to push further. And the Rangitaiki offers something neither of the others can, a full day deep in backcountry New Zealand with proper rapids and no crowds.
Pick the one that matches your crew and your appetite, then just send it.
Check availability and book online today. Spaces fill up fast, especially on Wairoa release days.
No prior experience is needed for any of our trips. The Kaituna and Rangitaiki are both well-suited to first-timers. For the Wairoa, some water confidence helps. It’s better tackled after at least one Grade 5 river under your belt. But everyone should be comfortable floating in the water, at a minimum!
Just bring a swimsuit and a towel. We provide everything else: wetsuit, helmet, life jacket, booties, fleece top, and splash jacket. Extra thermal layers are added in winter.
Absolutely. Ages 13+ are welcome for the full Kaituna, Wairoa, and Rangitaiki trips. Kids aged 10–12 can join a Kaituna half-trip starting below Tutea Falls and do the grade 3 rapids.
120 kg maximum for all three rivers.
Only on Sundays, for 26 days per year on scheduled dam-release days. Check our Wairoa River rafting page for current dates before planning your trip around it.
Yes. Kaituna Cascades runs Rotorua rafting trips rain or shine. The rivers are sheltered, the gear keeps you warm, and a bit of rain often makes the whole thing feel even more alive.