The Price River — Canyon Country Paddling, Fishing & History
A 137-mile journey from the Wasatch Plateau to the Green River — with world-class brown trout, dramatic Class III–V spring whitewater, and the sandstone majesty of Castle Gate waiting at the end.
Eastern Utah's Hidden Canyon River
Most people who pass through Price, Utah are on their way somewhere else — Moab, Salt Lake City, the national parks to the south. They cross the Price River on US-6 without a second thought, watching a shallow, muddy channel meander through the valley and writing it off as just another desert wash. They are missing one of the most multifaceted river corridors in eastern Utah.
The Price River begins in the high country of the Wasatch Plateau, draining into Scofield Reservoir before resuming its 137-mile journey southeast through Carbon and Emery counties to its confluence with the Green River. Along the way, it carves through the physiographic break between the Wasatch Plateau and the Book Cliffs, creating Price Canyon — a dramatic passage of towering sandstone walls that has served as one of the few navigable corridors through this rugged country for centuries. The canyon reaches its crescendo at Castle Gate, where two massive sandstone pillars of Cretaceous-age Castlegate Sandstone flank the river's exit like the entrance to a fortress.
The Price River offers three distinct reasons to visit: exceptional spring whitewater kayaking through 23.5 miles of Class I–V canyon paddling; world-class brown trout fly fishing in the cold tailwaters below Scofield Dam; and unmatched access to one of the most archaeologically and geologically rich corridors in the American West — a region that once made the American Rivers list of top ten endangered rivers in the country due to proposed upstream damming, a distinction that speaks to both its ecological significance and the passionate community that rallied to protect it.
| Location | Carbon, Utah & Emery Counties, eastern Utah — flows into the Green River |
| Total Length | 137 miles from Scofield Reservoir to Green River confluence |
| Paddleable Section | 23.5 miles below Scofield Dam to Castle Gate |
| Whitewater Class | Class I–III (Scofield to Price Canyon); Class III–V (Price Canyon to Castle Gate) |
| Paddle Season | Late March through May during spring snowmelt |
| Fishing | World-class brown trout below Scofield Dam; fish regularly exceed 10 lbs |
| Permit | No permit required for recreational paddling or fishing |
| Guided Tours | Self-guided only — no commercial outfitters currently operate on Price River |
| Gateway City | Price, UT — Carbon County seat, full services |
| Nearest Guided Rafting | Moab, UT (~90 miles south) — Colorado & Green River guided tours |
From Ancient Fremont to Coal & Canyon Country
"The canyon of the Price River is a physiographic break between the Wasatch Plateau and the Book Cliffs — one of the few navigable corridors through an otherwise impenetrable barrier of geology."
— Utah Geological SurveyThe river's original name was the White River — a name still carried by one of its tributaries — until the summer of 1869, when LDS Bishop William Price of Goshen, Utah, explored the region and lent his name to the waterway. The town of Price, established later as a railroad and coal-mining hub, took its name from the river in turn. That coal-mining heritage runs deep through this corridor. The nearby town of Helper — named for the "helper" steam engines that pushed coal trains up the steep grade over Soldier's Summit — was built entirely around the canyon's role as a passageway through the mountains.
Long before Bishop Price or the railroad, the Fremont people inhabited this canyon country between roughly 400 AD and 1350 AD. Their legacy survives in extraordinary density in the nearby landscape: Nine Mile Canyon, just east of Price, holds over 1,000 documented petroglyph sites across 46 miles — a collection so vast it earned the designation of "the World's Longest Art Gallery." The Hunt Panel at Nine Mile's far end, featuring a bighorn sheep hunt scene recognized by National Geographic as one of the finest examples of Fremont rock art ever recorded, draws visitors from around the world. The Price River corridor was not merely a water source for these ancient people — it was the artery of a civilization.
Downstream from Price, the river passes through country where the geology tells its own story. The Book Cliffs — a shale and sandstone escarpment stretching 200 miles from Price Canyon into Colorado — form a dramatic backdrop to the entire lower corridor. The Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry, 32 miles south of Price, has produced more Allosaurus specimens than any other site on earth, a reminder that the Morrison Formation underlying this landscape was once a Jurassic floodplain teeming with life. The USU Eastern Prehistoric Museum in downtown Price brings these threads together — paleontology, geology, and ancient human culture — in one of the finest small natural history museums in the interior West.
Price River Paddling Sections
The Price River's paddleable stretch runs 23.5 miles from the base of Scofield Dam down through Price Canyon to Castle Gate. The two sections are dramatically different in character — the upper run suits intermediate paddlers comfortable on Class I–III water, while the Price Canyon section is expert-only territory requiring scouting, precise boat control, and willingness to portage. Both sections are seasonal, running only on spring snowmelt from roughly late March through May.
- Put-In: Below Scofield Dam, Carbon County
- Take-Out: Picnic area above Price Canyon
- Character: Open canyon, railroad parallels much of route
- Camping: Possible in places — self-reliant camping only
- Best For: Intermediate paddlers; Class II experience recommended
- Put-In: Picnic area above Price Canyon (off US-6)
- Take-Out: Castle Gate historic site
- Key Hazards: Class IV–V rapids; scouting essential
- Portaging: Required on some rapids at certain flows
- Best For: Expert kayakers with Class IV+ river experience
Price River Highlights
Price River Season Guide
The Price River's character changes radically with the seasons. In spring, snowmelt from the Wasatch Plateau surges into Scofield Reservoir and, when the dam releases flow downstream, transforms the normally shallow river into a genuine paddling destination. Peak flows typically arrive in late March through April; in high-snowpack years, good paddling conditions can persist into May.
By June, irrigation diversions and summer evaporation reduce the river to a shallow channel again, and it remains unnavigable by paddle craft until the following spring. This makes the Price River a true seasonal adventure — worth planning your visit around the snowpack forecast rather than the calendar.
For anglers, the season is broader. The trophy brown trout fishery below Scofield Dam fishes well from early spring through late fall, with cooler temperatures producing more active fish. The cold tailwater maintains temperature better than the open river downstream, making the Scofield tailwater section fishable even in midsummer when the lower river is too warm and shallow for productive trout fishing.
What's Nearby the Price River
The Price River sits at the center of one of eastern Utah's richest and least-visited multi-destination regions. A single trip to paddle the Price River can be paired with any combination of the following:
For paddlers looking to extend their trip into guided territory, the Green River — which receives the Price River at its confluence in Emery County — offers outstanding guided multi-day trips through Desolation Canyon and Gray Canyon from outfitters based in Moab and Green River, Utah. These guided sections of the Green River are widely considered among the finest multi-day desert river trips in the American West, and combine beautifully with a Price River visit as part of an extended eastern Utah itinerary.
How to Reach the Price River
Price, Utah, is the gateway city for the Price River and sits at the junction of US-6 and US-191 in Carbon County. The city offers a full range of services including hotels, dining, fuel, and the USU Eastern Prehistoric Museum. From Price, paddlers drive north on US-6 into Price Canyon to reach the various put-in and take-out points along the river.
For the upper section put-in at Scofield Dam, take UT-96 northwest from the Helper area approximately 20 miles to Scofield Reservoir. The dam release point below the reservoir serves as the starting point for the full 23.5-mile run. The Castle Gate take-out is along US-6 where the canyon opens up at the Castle Gate historic marker, with a small parking area adjacent to the river.
Price River FAQ
- When can you kayak or raft the Price River?
- The Price River is only paddleable during spring snowmelt, typically late March through May. Outside of this window, the river is normally too shallow to navigate by paddle craft. Check the USGS streamflow gauge for the Price River near Helper before planning your trip — minimum recommended flows are approximately 200 cfs for the upper section. In low-snowpack years, the river may not reach paddleable levels at all.
- How difficult is the Price River to kayak?
- The Price River offers two very different experiences. The upper 15-mile section from Scofield Dam to the picnic area above Price Canyon is Class I–III and suits paddlers with basic to intermediate experience. The 8.5-mile Price Canyon section from the picnic area to Castle Gate is Class III–V and is appropriate only for expert kayakers. Scouting is required in the canyon section, and some rapids may require portaging at higher flows.
- Are there guided rafting tours on the Price River?
- No commercial outfitters currently run guided trips on the Price River — all paddling is self-supported. If you're looking for a guided whitewater experience in eastern Utah, the Green River offers outstanding guided multi-day trips through Desolation Canyon departing from Green River, Utah, and Moab-based outfitters also run the Colorado River through world-famous sections including Westwater Canyon and the Moab Daily.
- Is the Price River good for fly fishing?
- Exceptionally so — the cold tailwaters immediately below Scofield Reservoir are one of central Utah's premier brown trout fisheries. The river through this section is stocked annually and regularly produces fish exceeding 10 pounds. A valid Utah fishing license is required. The fishing season here is much longer than the paddling season, with good trout fishing from early spring through late fall.
- What is Castle Gate?
- Castle Gate is the dramatic geological landmark at the downstream end of Price Canyon where two massive pillars of Cretaceous Castlegate Sandstone flank the Price River's exit from the canyon. The formation is named for these very pillars and is one of the most iconic geological features in eastern Utah. It serves as the take-out point for the Price Canyon whitewater section and is easily accessed from US-6 near Helper.
- How does the Price River compare to the Green River or Colorado River for paddlers?
- The Price River is a seasonal, self-guided, low-volume river that appeals to paddlers looking for a technical spring adventure and canyon country exploration beyond the mainstream. It lacks the grand scale of the Green or Colorado rivers but offers a uniquely intimate canyon experience with rich geological and historical context. For guided, multi-day canyon river trips with full outfitter support, the Green River and Colorado River tours from Moab deliver the definitive eastern Utah river experience.
Guided River Adventures Near the Price River
The Price River is self-guided only — but it empties into the Green River, one of the premier guided rafting destinations in the entire American West. Green River, Utah (about an hour south of Price) and Moab (about 90 miles south) are both launching points for guided multi-day trips through Desolation Canyon — 84 miles of Class II–III whitewater through some of the most remote canyon scenery anywhere in the lower 48. For paddlers who want professional guide support, gear handling, and camp cooking in this landscape, Desolation Canyon is the natural next chapter after exploring the Price River.
For day-trip or half-day guided whitewater, Moab's Colorado River section offers everything from the family-friendly Moab Daily float to the Class III–IV expert rapids of Westwater Canyon. Whatever your experience level, Moab-based outfitters can put you on moving water with a licensed guide within hours of wrapping up your Price River adventure.
Book a Guided Canyon River Adventure Near the Price River
The Price River is a self-guided adventure — but the Green and Colorado rivers, both accessible from Moab just 90 miles south, offer expert-guided multi-day and day trips through some of the most spectacular canyon scenery on the planet. All experience levels welcome.