World's Deepest Canyon Rafting
World's Deepest Canyon Rafting World's Deepest Canyon Rafting
FREE CANCELLATION UP TO 30 DAYS BEFORE DEPARTURE. FULL TERMS APPLY.

World's Deepest Canyon Rafting

JOURNEY FROM
$2,500.00
Number of Travelers
1

Journey Snapshot

Duration
10 Days
Best Season
Spring
Max Altitude
1,300m (4,265ft)
Experience Level
Moderate


Full payment at booking secures your permits, private guides, and all logistics before your departure date.

Licensed Sherpa Guides
Licensed Sherpa Guides
Permits & Logistics Included
Permits & Logistics Included
Private Journeys Available
Private Journeys Available
Altitude Safety Expertise
Altitude Safety Expertise

The deepest gorge on earth. Running through it by raft.

The Kali Gandaki carves the deepest gorge on the planet. The measurement is not a matter of debate: the canyon between Annapurna I at 8,091 meters and Dhaulagiri at 8,167 meters drops over 5,500 meters from the surrounding peaks to the river below. The Grand Canyon, by comparison, is just over 1,600 meters deep. The Kali Gandaki is in a category of its own.

The river has been a sacred highway for millennia. Hindu pilgrims walk its banks to reach the temples of Muktinath. The black ammonite fossils called Shaligrams, carried down from the ancient Tethys Sea floor and found on the riverbanks, are worshipped as physical manifestations of Lord Vishnu and have been collected here for over 3,000 years. The Magar and Chhetri communities along the banks have lived beside this water longer than most civilizations have existed.

This ten-day journey puts you on the water at Kushma and takes you through five days of Class III and IV rapids, remote jungle camps, white sand beaches, and gorges where the walls close in so tight above you that the sky becomes a narrow strip of light. It ends in Pokhara, beneath the reflection of Machhapuchhre in Phewa Lake. The contrast between where you started and where you finish is part of what makes this trip work.

10 Days on Nepal's Most Sacred River

Days 1 to 2  |  Arrival and Kathmandu

Land in Kathmandu and spend two days in the valley. The Kathmandu Valley is the cultural and spiritual foundation of Nepal and the right place to begin a river that has been a pilgrimage route for thousands of years. UNESCO heritage sites, medieval Newari architecture, sacred stupas. Our team finalizes the Gandaki region permits while you explore.

Days 3 to 5  |  Into the Deepest Gorge

Drive from Kathmandu to the put-in at Kushma and begin the descent. The Kali Gandaki drops immediately into Class III and IV water. The gorge walls rise on both sides as the river cuts between the two highest mountains in its reach. Big Brother and Small Brother are the first named rapids, high-volume stretches that set the tone for everything that follows. Five nights camped on riverside beaches.

Days 6 to 8  |  The Wilderness Run

The gorge deepens. The rapids get technical. Refund is the stretch that earns its name. The jungle closes in on the banks between the gorge sections and the beaches here are white sand, wide, and completely without road access. Afternoons on the beach turn up Shaligram fossils in the black rocks along the waterline, sacred objects that pilgrims have been gathering from these banks for over 3,000 years. Wildlife in the riparian forest: langur monkeys, hornbills, river eagles.

Day 9  |  Pokhara

Complete the final rapids at the Mirmi dam and transfer by private vehicle to Pokhara. Nepal's lakeside city sits at the base of the Annapurna range, with Machhapuchhre, the sacred Fish Tail peak, reflected in Phewa Lake on clear evenings. First hot shower in five days. Celebratory dinner on the lake.

Day 10  |  Return and Departure

Morning in Pokhara before the scenic drive back to Kathmandu along the Trisuli River valley. Final night in the city or direct transfer to Tribhuvan International Airport for your departure.

Day by Day

Days 1 to 2  Arrival and Kathmandu

Arrive at Tribhuvan International Airport at 1,360 meters and transfer to your hotel with a traditional welcome. The Kathmandu Valley is the right place to begin this journey: a basin that has been inhabited for over 1,500 years, ringed by hills, containing more UNESCO World Heritage Sites per square kilometer than almost anywhere on earth. Day Two is a proper introduction. Pashupatinath Temple on the Bagmati River, the most sacred Hindu site in Nepal. Boudhanath, the great white stupa at the center of the Tibetan Buddhist community. The medieval Durbar Squares of Kathmandu and Patan, with their woodcarved temples, stone sculpture, and palace courtyards built by Malla kings over four centuries. The Kali Gandaki is a pilgrim's river. Walking through these sites before you reach it is not coincidence.

Stay: Kathmandu Hotel

Days 3 to 5  Into the Deepest Gorge  The White Water Begins

Depart Kathmandu for the drive west to Kushma, the put-in point for the Kali Gandaki descent. The drive passes through terraced hillsides, small market towns, and the first views of the river from the road above. At the bank: full safety briefing, gear check, and introductions to the paddle team and safety kayakers. Then the first rapid, which on the Kali Gandaki is not gentle. The river drops quickly and the gorge walls begin to rise on both sides almost immediately after launch.

Big Brother and Small Brother are the first rapids with names and histories: high-volume stretches of Class III and IV water where the current concentrates through narrow channels and the hydraulics require precise paddling. Between the rapids the river opens into calmer stretches that allow time to look up at what is around you. The gorge between Annapurna I and Dhaulagiri is not something that is easy to process from inside a raft. The scale is simply too large. Guests tend to go quiet the first time the walls really close in. Camp each night on remote riverside beaches, often with no road within several kilometers. The sound of the river is the only sound.

Stay: Tented Beach Camps

Days 6 to 8  The Wilderness Run  Gorges and Wildlife

The middle section of the Kali Gandaki is the most remote. The jungle thickens on the banks between gorge sections, and the beaches here are pristine white sand with no sign of roads or settlements for long stretches. This is where the river's wildlife is most visible: langur monkeys in the riparian forest canopy, grey-headed fish eagles working the water, pied kingfishers, hornbills, and occasionally the larger raptors that nest in the cliff faces.

Refund is the rapid on this section that gets discussed most by guides. The name is not ironic. It earns it through a combination of volume, drop, and a technical line that requires reading the river correctly from well upstream. Class IV at standard levels, Class IV plus in high water. Run cleanly it is one of the most satisfying stretches of the entire descent.

The Shaligrams appear on the beaches in the afternoon. These are black ammonite fossils, formed from marine creatures that lived in the ancient Tethys Sea when the rock that would become the Himalayas lay beneath an ocean. The Kali Gandaki has been eroding through that fossil-bearing stratum for millions of years. Hindus have been collecting the fossils as sacred objects since at least the first millennium BC, worshipping them as physical manifestations of Lord Vishnu. The fossils are found on the same white sand beaches where you pitch your tent. Both things are true at once.

Stay: Remote Riverside Camps

Day 9  Lakeside Serenity  The Reach to Pokhara

Complete the final rapids at the Mirmi dam, where the river is tamed by infrastructure and the descent formally ends. Pack the gear and transfer by private vehicle to Pokhara, a 30-minute drive to a city that feels like a different country from the gorge you have spent the past five days inside. Pokhara sits at 827 meters beside Phewa Lake, with the Annapurna massif and Machhapuchhre, the sacred Fish Tail peak, rising directly above the water. On a clear evening the mountains are reflected in the lake from the shoreline restaurants. The hot shower after five days of river camping is a specific kind of luxury that a hotel with a pool cannot replicate. Dinner on the lakefront, with whatever you need after nine days of moving.

Stay: Pokhara Premium Hotel

Day 10  Urban Reflection and Departure

A slow morning in Pokhara. The lakeside is good for coffee and for doing nothing in particular, which is the correct activity for the last morning of a river expedition. Then the scenic drive back to Kathmandu along the Trisuli River valley, following the river road through the hills for roughly five hours. Final night in Kathmandu or direct transfer to Tribhuvan International Airport for your departure. Ten days. The deepest gorge on earth, run by raft, from inside.

Stay: Kathmandu Hotel or International Departure

The Sherpa Standard

Every SherpaHolidays journey is fully supported. Here is what that covers for this trip.

Accommodation and Meals

  • Kathmandu and Pokhara: Premium hotel accommodations in both cities on a bed and breakfast basis.
  • River Camps: Five nights of tented beach camping with high-quality sleeping mats and full camp setup by the support crew.
  • River Meals: All meals during the rafting days: breakfast, riverside lunch, and dinner at camp, freshly prepared on site.
  • Airport Welcome: Traditional welcome garlands and full expedition briefing on arrival.

Leadership and Logistics

  • River Lead: Certified English-speaking lead guide with international safety training and extensive Kali Gandaki experience.
  • Paddle Guides: Professional guides in every raft throughout all river sections.
  • Safety Kayakers: Dedicated safety kayakers following every raft on all Class III and IV stretches.
  • Cultural Guides: Local interpretation of the Shaligram fossils, riverside temples, and Magar and Chhetri communities along the route.
  • Support Crew: Full team for camp management, river cooking, and equipment transport.

Transport and Logistics

  • Private Transfers: All overland travel in private vehicles: Kathmandu to Kushma, and Pokhara return to Kathmandu.
  • Permits and Fees: All river permits, national park fees, and sightseeing entrance fees covered.
  • River Gear: International-standard self-bailing rafts, lifejackets, helmets, and waterproof dry bags.


What Is Not Included

  • International airfare to and from Kathmandu
  • Nepal entry visa fees
  • Personal meals in Kathmandu and Pokhara
  • Personal swimwear, river footwear, and medications
  • Travel and emergency evacuation insurance. We can recommend providers.
  • Tips for river guides, safety kayakers, and support crew

Five Things That Define This Trip

The World's Deepest Canyon

The Kali Gandaki runs through the deepest gorge on earth, carved between Annapurna I at 8,091 meters and Dhaulagiri at 8,167 meters. The canyon drops over 5,500 meters from the surrounding peaks to the river below. Running through it by raft, with the walls rising on both sides and the sky reduced to a strip of light overhead, is an experience that has no real equivalent anywhere else in the world.

Sacred Shaligram Fossils

The black ammonite fossils called Shaligrams are found on the white sand beaches of the Kali Gandaki, eroded from the ancient Tethys Sea rock that the river has been cutting through for millions of years. Hindus have revered them as physical manifestations of Lord Vishnu for over 3,000 years. Pilgrims still walk these banks to collect them. You find them in the afternoon on the same beaches where you camp for the night.

Class IV Rapids with Names

Big Brother, Small Brother, and Refund are the three rapids on this route that guides discuss by name because they have earned the distinction. All three are serious water requiring proper technique and a team that has been briefed and is paying attention. Running them well is genuinely satisfying. Running them in high water is something else.

Five Nights on Remote Beaches

The camps on this trip are on private beaches with no road access, often miles from the nearest settlement. The support crew has everything set up before the rafts arrive. Fire, food, the sound of the Kali Gandaki in the darkness. After a day of Class IV rapids in one of the world's deepest gorges, this is exactly the right place to be.

Pokhara as the Ending

The trip concludes in Nepal's most beautiful city, beside a lake that reflects the Annapurna massif and Machhapuchhre on clear evenings. After five days inside a gorge, the openness of Pokhara is disorienting in the best way. A hot shower, dinner on the lakefront, and the mountains above you visible for the first time since you started. It is the right ending for this journey.

Things Guests Ask Before Booking

Real questions, answered by people who have actually made these crossings.
  • Yes, and they vary by country. Nepal's visa is available on arrival for most nationalities. Tibet requires a special Tibet Travel Permit, arranged through us it cannot be obtained independently through us. Bhutan requires a Bhutan visa, which we handle as part of the booking process. India requires a tourist visa applied for in advance. We
    walk every guest through exactly what's needed for their specific journey, well before departure.

  • Every Beyond Nepal journey we offer can be adjusted in duration, pace, accommodation tier, specific sites, and rest days. If none of our fixed routes match what you have in mind, we can build a multi-country itinerary from scratch. That's not an upsell, it's actually how most of our returning guests book.

  • Flights from your home country to Kathmandu are not included, as these vary
    significantly by departure city, and we want you to book what works for your schedule and budget. All regional flights within the journey, Kathmandu to Lhasa, Kathmandu to Paro, and so on, are included unless your itinerary specifies otherwise. We'll confirm every included and excluded flight clearly before you book.

  • Autumn (September to November) and spring (March to May) are the strongest
    windows for most multi-country journeys. That said, each destination has its own rhythm. Tibet is best visited before the summer rains, Bhutan has a spring festival season worth planning around, and India's north is at its finest from October through February. When you book with us, we advise on the exact timing based on where you're going and what you want to see.

  • In Nepal, your journey is led entirely by our Sherpa team. In Bhutan, Tibet, and India, we work with trusted local guides who meet our standard people we've partnered with for years, who know their regions the way our Sherpas know the Himalayas. You will always have someone beside you who actually knows where they are.

  • We handle everything: permits, accommodations, inter-country transfers, regional flights, border crossings, and on-the-ground coordination in each country. The only thing you arrange independently is your international flight to Kathmandu. From the moment you land, it's ours to manage.

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