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Camille Rousseau
Chile  ·  43.19°S 71.87°W

Rafting the Futaleufú

Written by Camille Rousseau  ·  25 June 2026

One of the world's fiercest whitewater rivers by day, a wood-fired hot tub under the Andes by night. Rafting the turquoise Futaleufú, and recovering at Peuma Lodge.


I have rafted rivers I was nervous about. The Futaleufú is the first one I felt I had to negotiate with. This turquoise torrent in Chilean Patagonia is ranked among the best and hardest whitewater on earth, a run of Class V rapids with names like Terminator and Inferno Canyon, and at the end of a day that genuinely frightened me, it set me down at a wood-fired hot tub under snow peaks. The river takes you apart; the valley puts you back together. That trade is the whole reason to go.

A kayaker in the huge turquoise whitewater of the Terminator rapid on the Futaleufu river
Terminator, one of the river's named Class V dropsWarren Williams / Wikimedia, CC BY-SA 3.0

What sets it apart is the water itself. The Futaleufú runs an electric glacial turquoise, coloured by rock flour ground fine under old ice, through a granite gorge beneath the Andes. It is big, warm-season whitewater, Class IV to V, with house-sized waves and holes, and yet it is rafted commercially behind one of the most serious safety setups in the sport: safety kayakers in the eddies, a rescue cataraft running below, a swim test before they let you near the hard water. You do not have to be an expert. You do have to respect it, and watching the river move on the first morning, I understood why.

It nearly vanished, which I had not known until I got there. The name is Mapudungun for "big river," and it does something rare, crossing the Andes the wrong way, rising in Argentina and running west into Chile before it empties into Lago Yelcho. For twenty years the Spanish utility Endesa held the rights to dam it and drown its best rapids, until a long fight by the town and the Futaleufú Riverkeeper forced the company to give those rights up; in 2025 Chile declared the river's flow protected for good. You raft it knowing it was fought for.

A Patagonian car ferry crossing a still fjord between forested mountains on the way south to Futaleufu
The ferry south, down a coast of green islands and grey waterPhotograph by Camille Rousseau

Getting there is the price of admission, and I took the long way in. I flew to Puerto Montt and boarded the ferry south, a slow day down a coast of green islands and grey water, then drove the gravel Carretera Austral into the valley near the Argentine border. It is longer and far more beautiful than the alternative, which is to fly to Esquel in Argentina and cross at Paso Futaleufú an hour away; if you want simple, do that. Come December to March, January and February for the warmest water and the biggest waves. Most people raft the classic Bridge to Bridge section, Class III to IV+; the legends, Inferno Canyon and rapids like Zeta and Throne Room, stay expert-only and get portaged even on serious trips. Go with an established outfitter, never alone. And stay at Peuma Lodge: a handful of dark-wood cabins above the valley, a sauna, the hot tub, chef-cooked Patagonian food, and hosts who book the river for you.

The dark-wood cabins and hexagonal great room of Peuma Lodge on a grassy hillside above the Futaleufu valley
Peuma Lodge, above the valleyPhotograph by Camille Rousseau

Is it worth the distance and the money? I think so, with your eyes open. This is a genuinely world-class river you can raft as a fit beginner under professional safety, in scenery that holds its own anywhere in Patagonia, in a valley that stays quiet precisely because it is hard to reach. What you pay for is two things you cannot fake: the safety operation that makes Class V survivable for a guest, and a lodge good enough that the evenings would have justified the trip on their own. Skip it if you want easy. Go if you want the real thing.

The turquoise Futaleufu river winding through a deep green forested gorge in Patagonia
The Futaleufú, turquoise through its gorgeIgnacio Mendía / Wikimedia, CC BY-SA 4.0

By dark I was in the wood-fired tub on Peuma's deck, hands still aching from the cold of the river, a glass of Chilean red on the rail, the Futaleufú loud somewhere below in the trees. I had spent the whole day a little afraid of that sound. Warm now, I found I was glad of it, and already working out how soon I could come back.

A wood-fired barrel hot tub on the deck of Peuma Lodge at dusk, with snow-capped mountains behind
The wood-fired tub on Peuma's deck, at duskPhotograph by Camille Rousseau
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