Published April 2, 2026 03:16AM
Working in the rafting industry is an all-consuming gig. It’s your working hours and your off-days. It’s your source of confidence. It’s your community. It’s your Friday potluck and your Wednesday poker night and your Thursday happy hour. During the months you spend in the boathouse, your job and your team are your everything.
The lifestyle gives a lot, but it takes a lot, too. None of the guides we spoke to for this story can afford traditional housing during the season. Some live out of their personal vehicles or in a series of broken-down buses provided as employee housing. Some live in sheds or tents. In big rafting towns, local churches sometimes put on dinners for the guides—both to show their support for their local economy, and to throw a bone to the youngsters they know aren’t making enough to feed themselves.
The work isn’t easy either. Whitewater is serious business, and injuries are surprisingly common. Sometimes it’s an elderly client who slumps into a heart attack mid-rapid. Sometimes it’s a twisted knee or ankle that gets wedged in the boat during a flip. One guide spoke to us from bed; she’s out of commission with a partially torn biceps tendon, an injury she sustained after a client grabbed her arm in a panic during a fall and dislocated her shoulder. It’s not the first injury she’s had on the job, and it likely won’t be the last. But she doesn’t plan on letting that stop her.
Because for many longtime guides, rafting truly is a dream job. It unlocks access to wild places unreachable by foot or by car. It lets you work with your hands, coiling rope, mending boats, and building an experience that most clients will never have again. It puts you face-to-face with a diverse slice of humanity—and delivers conversations and perspectives you’d never have gotten otherwise.
Rafting also gives you the chance to build an intimate familiarity with the river itself. At the end of the season, some guides report knowing the currents and eddies better than the sun-worn lines of their hands.
One veteran guide shares the path she took to get there—and how to make guiding work for the long haul.
The Gig at a Glance
Job: Raft guide
Age: Mid-30s
Years in the Business: 10
Salary: $17 per hour
What’s the Worst Day You’ve Had on the Job?
It was July 5, and we were almost done with the first trip of the day when the boat in front of me hit a rapid, and a woman popped out of the raft. I paddled over and hauled her out of the river and into my boat. At this point, she was lying on top of me, and she wasn’t moving.
It took me a minute to realize she was unconscious. By the time I got her to come to, I realized everyone else in my boat had leapt to the other side of the raft and was cowering in the corner, staring back at me in horror. I couldn’t figure out what everyone was looking at. Then I glanced down—and saw that the woman on top of me, who was only wearing bikini bottoms, had pooped her shorts.
The worst part of it was I had the only boat on the trip with a white floor—and I had to turn around and lead a second trip before I had the chance to bleach it. After that second trip, I threw my shoes straight in the dumpster.
How Much Do You Have to Work to Make Ends Meet?
Guides are paid per trip, so a lot of people work as much as they possibly can. There used to be no limits on that. I had a friend who once worked 83 days straight.
These days, you get paid by the hour, and there are more regulations. Rookies start off at $15, and the most they can work in a day is three three-hour trips. I get paid $17 per hour—$18 per hour if I’m the trip medic.
So, that comes out to $600 or $700 per week during the guiding season, which isn’t bad, especially if housing is covered. Most people have to have a different gig in the off-season, though. Ski-industry jobs—like lifties, snowmakers, or ski instructors—are pretty common.
What’s the Biggest Tip You’ve Ever Gotten?
I once got $300 for a half-day trip. But I know one guide who had his truck stolen and told the story to one of his guests. At the end of the day, the guest tipped him $2,000.
Can You Afford the Rent?
In the Colorado mountain town where I work, paying for housing on a guide’s salary is out of the question. One of my former employers took our housing fees out of our paychecks, which meant I sometimes didn’t see a cent, even after weeks of work. Another former employer provided no housing at all. We had to camp on public lands without access to running water or bathrooms. Our camp smelled like a litter box.
I know another company that rents out a double-wide trailer and puts four people in it for $300 per person per month. Other guides live in hammocks in sheds out back or sleep in their cars. Fortunately, the company I work for right now provides housing. It’s not much, but it’s free.
Does Housing Make or Break a Rafting Gig?
It can. I always recommend prospective guides look into the living situation before they take a job. If you’ve had a rough day on the river, you want to take a hot shower, especially if you’re a woman. It’s more acceptable for the dudes to look and smell like crap, or to air out shirtless on the river. But you won’t catch me rafting in a sports bra. And as a woman, you’re more likely to get good tips if you brush your hair and teeth. That’s the unfortunate truth.
Is Sexism an Issue?
The first company I worked for, it was all, “How many pull-ups can you do after you chug a beer? How much whiskey can you consume?” I didn’t like that people assumed my boating ability was tied to my ability to consume alcohol. And even if I could keep up with the boys during the parties, people would talk shit about me the next day if I couldn’t hang because I was hungover. It felt like a double standard.
It’s not the only one. I once got penalized for saying “Oh, shit,” during a training, even though the guys I worked with regularly yelled, “Paddle harder, fuckers!” at the customers. That left a nasty taste in my mouth.
These days, though, things are changing. I was in a bathroom at another guiding outfit the other day, and I saw a QR code on a sticker by the toilet. It linked to an anonymous form for women to safely report sexual harassment. That wasn’t an option when I was a rookie. Back then, you had to sack up and talk to someone in person, or you had to deal with it on your own.
Are There Other Things You Have to Watch Out For as a Woman in Rafting?
It is harder to be a smaller person. A lot of the guys I work with are above six feet tall and big enough to throw the boat around. I’m five-foot-four-inches, so I have to rely on my crew a lot more.
When you fall out of a raft, it’s also harder to get back in if your arms are shorter and you have less upper-body strength. You have to be really diligent about your technique, or you’ll struggle. I’ve had to pick up a lot of tricks, and I try to pass those on to the younger women.
How Bad Was Your Rookie Season?
I was paid $35 per trip, but I was only guaranteed two trips per week, which was exactly enough to cover my housing. All the other work I did—loading boats, cleaning boats, riding along on trips to shadow other guides—was unpaid. Anytime a trip came up, it was given to guides with more experience or more miles. The only money I took home that season was from tips. So I rode my bike a lot and tried to make ends meet, but it wasn’t enough to live on.
Is Hazing Common?
It depends on where you work. I know of one outfitter in another state where the rookies have to get naked on the bus on the way to the annual Fourth of July party, and they’re not allowed to join until they’ve done a naked lap. The other guides typically shoot bottle rockets at them as they run.
What Should New Guides Look for in an Employer?
Look for a company that has older guides—people who stick around and share their knowledge. Some also provide continuing education, like flip drills, knot practice, and lessons about the local flora and fauna. Housing is another big one, as is the provision of proper safety equipment like radios and AEDs. All these things demonstrate that a company cares about its people and is willing to invest in them.
Guides Have a Reputation for Partying Hard. Are the Rumors True?
We like to have a good time, and it’s definitely a way to decompress after a hard day. There’s also a huge social aspect to rafting. Emergencies happen on the river, and we have to help each other out. Community bonding is a big part of that. You see people at social events, and you learn their backgrounds, and then when you see them on the river, you know whether they’re a wilderness first responder (WFR) or an experienced guide—or if they’re a rookie and could use some support. You learn who you can rely on and who you should check up on, and social outlets are crucial for that.
What Keeps You Doing This Work?
I love rafting with families, because that’s how I first started rafting: going down the river with my family when I was a little girl. One of the things I like to say to my guests is that we’re each other’s captive audience for the next two hours. We’re going to find similarities between us, and we’re going to get to know each other. I get to meet people I never would have spent an afternoon with otherwise.
The other amazing thing is that these people are on vacation, and this could be their best day ever. I’m so fortunate that I get to be a facilitator for that. I’m creating experiences for people that could stick with them for the rest of their lives.
Quotes have been edited for length and clarity, as well as to preserve the source’s anonymity.
