REVIEW · CHARLESTON
Charleston: Folly Beach Kayak Dolphin Safari
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Charleston SUP Safaris · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Folly Beach kayaking turns wildlife into the main event. This 2-hour introductory paddle on the calm flatwater of the Folly River is built for beginners and pairs real kayaking instruction with the chance to see bottlenose dolphins up close. I especially like that the experience is guided end-to-end, and you finish with a group photo to mark the moment. One consideration: this is not a super long outing, so if you want hours of solo paddling, you may feel a bit rushed.
Two things really make it worth your $50: you learn proper strokes right away, and you do it with modern, well-suited kayak gear plus a knowledgeable instructor. Guides such as Prudence and John are highlighted for being patient, instructive, and quick to point out local flora and fauna. The other consideration is practical: you’ll be on the water in open conditions, so bring sun protection and footwear you’re comfortable getting wet.
If you’re curious about paddling, love wildlife, and want an easy first step near Charleston, this is a smart way to spend your time. Just note it is not suitable for children under 8 or for people with mobility impairments, and you’ll want to plan for a hands-on lesson rather than a casual drift.
In This Review
- Quick Takeaways
- Where You Start at Sea Monkeys (and How to Find It Fast)
- Your Intro Kayak Lesson on Flatwater (What You’ll Actually Learn)
- Why the Folly River Dolphin Safari Feels Different Than a Tour Hunt
- Wildlife Spotting Beyond Dolphins: Shorebirds and Native Plants
- Gear and Instructor Support: What’s Provided and What You Control
- Timing: Morning, Afternoon, or Sunset
- What to Bring: Footwear, Water, Sun, and Simple Comfort
- Price and Value: Is $50 a Good Deal?
- Who Should Book This Dolphin Kayak Safari (and Who Should Skip)
- Good to Know Before You Go (So You Stay Relaxed)
- Should You Book This Charleston Dolphin Kayak Safari?
- FAQ
- How long is the Folly Beach Kayak Dolphin Safari?
- What is included in the price?
- Where do I meet for the tour?
- What should I bring?
- What kind of tour is it for beginners?
- Are children allowed?
- Can I request a tandem kayak?
- What is the language of the instructor?
- What about cancellation and flexible booking?
Quick Takeaways

- Beginner-focused kayaking basics with guidance on proper paddle strokes
- Dolphins in the mix while you paddle the Folly River’s calm flatwater
- Pro equipment provided, including kayak, paddle, and a personal flotation device
- Wildlife spotting with an instructor’s eye, including native shorebirds and local plant life
- A simple meet-up point at Sea Monkeys Surf And Skate, past the large pink Hotel Folly building
- Group photo at the end, a nice souvenir for a shared moment on the water
Where You Start at Sea Monkeys (and How to Find It Fast)

Your day begins at Sea Monkeys Surf And Skate, and the directions matter because you’re meeting near a popular beach corridor. The shop is located in the second building after you get off the Folly Beach bridge. You’ll pass a very large pink building called Hotel Folly, and the meeting spot is just beyond it.
Plan to arrive with enough time to get checked in and fitted before you head out. A good first paddle depends on comfort from the start: correct fit of your personal flotation device and getting your water shoes or flip-flops sorted. If you’re late, you’ll lose the calm pace that makes an intro tour feel manageable.
The tour ends back at the same meeting point, which keeps logistics easy. You don’t have to think about shuttles, car drops, or where to meet again. That also means you can keep your day flexible in the rest of Charleston.
If you're still narrowing it down, here are other tours in Charleston we've reviewed
Your Intro Kayak Lesson on Flatwater (What You’ll Actually Learn)

The core of this experience is a 2-hour introductory lesson on calm flatwater in and around the Folly River. The point isn’t to throw you into strong currents and hope for the best. The goal is to help you get comfortable with paddling fundamentals while still enjoying the wildlife around you.
You’ll learn proper paddle strokes and basic technique as part of the guided outing. Expect your instructor to work with you in a practical way: how to hold the paddle, how your motion should feel, and how to keep your kayak moving efficiently. This is especially important if you’ve never paddled before, or if you’ve only tried a casual rental without real feedback.
I like that the tour uses “go with the flow” thinking tied to natural conditions. Your instructor follows the tides and wind direction to help you paddle in a way that makes sense for beginners. Translation: you’re more likely to have a smooth, confidence-building experience instead of fighting the water.
At the end, there’s a group photo. It’s a small detail, but it turns the tour from a solo moment into a shared memory. If you’re going with friends or family, it’s also a nice way to prove to each other that you really did it.
Why the Folly River Dolphin Safari Feels Different Than a Tour Hunt

This isn’t a distant sightseeing cruise with a “look over there” approach. The dolphin chance is built into your paddle route on the Folly River, so wildlife is something you experience while you’re actively moving, not something you wait for like a bus schedule.
Your best wildlife viewing comes when you slow down and stay present. Since you’re learning strokes and staying aware of instructor directions, you naturally paddle at an attentive pace. That’s exactly what tends to work for animal encounters in water: fewer sudden movements and more steady observation.
Bottlenose dolphins are a named highlight here, and guides are known for getting people close enough to make it feel real. I’d treat the dolphin part as a serious bonus rather than a guarantee. Still, the format makes it more than a checkbox, because you’re on the water long enough to have a proper chance and you’re moving through the same ecosystem where shorebirds and other native wildlife live.
The bonus wildlife theme matters too. The tour includes plenty of time for flora and fauna spotting, which helps even if dolphins take a quiet day. You’re not stuck focusing on just one outcome.
Wildlife Spotting Beyond Dolphins: Shorebirds and Native Plants

Dolphins grab the headlines, but you’ll also learn to notice the smaller stuff. Your instructor points out interesting features in the area as you paddle, including native shorebirds and the plant life around the water.
This is where an experienced guide adds real value. Instead of you just seeing water and guessing what you’re looking at, you get a guided way to scan the shoreline. The result is that even a brief sighting becomes a story you can understand.
Guides such as John are noted for being a wealth of information about local flora and fauna. That matters because wildlife tours can turn into the same three phrases. Here, the instruction angle makes it more educational and less repetitive, so you walk away with more than photos.
If you love birds, this style of paddling is a treat. Calm water and guided observation tend to be better for spotting shorebirds than busy beach viewpoints. You also get a different scale—these animals feel closer to your world when you’re level with the water.
Gear and Instructor Support: What’s Provided and What You Control

You’ll get kayak, paddle, and a personal flotation device. That’s a big deal for value and convenience. You’re not stuck renting awkward equipment or trying to make do with gear that’s the wrong size.
It also helps with confidence. When the gear fits and the instructor shows you how to use it, the learning curve gets shorter. Intro kayaking can be frustrating if you spend half the time wrestling a paddle or fighting poor setup. With proper instruction plus the right equipment, you get to focus on technique.
You’ll also get an instructor-led guided tour, with an English-speaking guide. That language detail sounds basic, but it actually matters when you’re learning strokes and safety basics. You want clear coaching so you can correct mistakes while they’re still easy to fix.
One more practical point: you can choose morning, afternoon, or sunset tour options. That choice affects light for photos and the feel of the day, especially if you’re sensitive to sun or prefer cooler conditions.
Other dolphin watching tours in Charleston
Timing: Morning, Afternoon, or Sunset

The tour offers morning, afternoon, and sunset options. That gives you room to match the paddle to your day in Charleston.
Morning tends to feel fresh and calmer for many people. Afternoon can be warm and bright, so sun protection becomes more important. Sunset often gives a softer light for photos and can feel more relaxed, though you still need to bring the same essentials like water and sunscreen.
Because your instructor follows wind and tide, the timing also ties into how smoothly your paddle goes. You’re not just picking based on vibes. You’re choosing a window that can make beginner paddling feel easier and more comfortable.
What to Bring: Footwear, Water, Sun, and Simple Comfort

This is a water-based activity, so bring what keeps you comfortable and safe. Plan on bringing:
- Towel
- Sunscreen
- Water
- Flip-flops or water shoes
For footwear, water shoes are usually the safest bet, especially if the launch area is rocky or you expect a lot of splashing. Flip-flops can work for some people, but water shoes tend to help you feel more stable when you’re moving on uneven surfaces.
Bring a towel even if the day looks calm. Even mild paddling can mean you get sprayed. A quick dry helps you enjoy the rest of your day afterward rather than feeling sticky and cold.
Also bring your positive attitude. That sounds like a generic line, but for beginners it’s a real factor. If you’re relaxed and willing to adjust your technique, the lesson clicks faster.
Price and Value: Is $50 a Good Deal?

At $50 per person for a 2-hour tour, you’re paying for more than time on the water. You’re paying for instruction, guided wildlife spotting, and included equipment (kayak, paddle, and flotation device). For many people, that combination is where the value shows up immediately.
Here’s why $50 can be a fair price: beginner lessons usually fail when you don’t get coaching. You end up repeating the same mistakes and feeling frustrated. This tour is built to teach proper strokes as you go, so you’re likely to leave with real skills, not just a few photos.
You also get a guided experience with an instructor who points out flora and fauna and helps you paddle with the tides and wind. That’s not something you’d replicate easily if you only rented equipment and tried to figure it out alone.
If you’re comparing to other water activities in the Charleston area, this stands out as a “learn and see wildlife” format without requiring hours of commitment. It’s short enough to fit your schedule, but structured enough to feel like an actual lesson.
Who Should Book This Dolphin Kayak Safari (and Who Should Skip)

This is best for beginners and people who want a guided intro rather than a DIY paddle. If you’re comfortable following directions and you want to learn basic strokes, you’ll likely get a lot out of it.
It’s also a great choice if you love wildlife encounters and want your paddling to double as wildlife viewing on the Folly River. The mix of dolphins, shorebirds, and local plant life makes it appealing even when dolphins don’t show up instantly.
A few groups should consider skipping:
- Children under 8 (not suitable)
- People with mobility impairments (not suitable)
If you’re traveling as a family or bringing kids, pay attention to tandem kayak notes. If you want to book a tandem kayak, you should book two singles and note tandem in the height and weight section. Also, any child under 13 must be accompanied by an adult while in a tandem kayak. If you have questions, call the shop.
Good to Know Before You Go (So You Stay Relaxed)
The tour runs with an English-speaking instructor, and you’re out for 2 hours total. That time frame is long enough to learn basics and scan for wildlife, but short enough to avoid turning the experience into a major production.
You also get a group photo at the end. That’s helpful if you’re the type who always ends up behind the camera. Ask where they place you and how quickly you’ll wrap up so you can be ready.
Finally, set expectations for the wildlife side. Dolphins are the big highlight, but you’re still on a natural system. The most satisfying approach is to treat this as a guided wildlife paddle with dolphin potential, not a guaranteed dolphin sighting at any exact moment.
Should You Book This Charleston Dolphin Kayak Safari?
You should book if you want an easy, beginner-friendly way to try kayaking near Charleston while also chasing wildlife sightings on the Folly River. The included gear and real instruction make it feel like an experience, not just a rental. I’d also book if you value helpful guides who focus on both technique and spotting local life, the kind of coaching that makes dolphins and shorebirds feel more meaningful.
Skip it if you need a long, independent paddle with no lesson component, or if your group includes children under 8. If you or a travel partner has mobility limitations, this one isn’t the right fit based on suitability notes.
If your goal is to learn paddling basics, get on the water with guidance, and have a strong shot at memorable wildlife moments, this is a solid choice for a 2-hour slot.
FAQ
How long is the Folly Beach Kayak Dolphin Safari?
It lasts 2 hours.
What is included in the price?
The tour includes a kayak, paddle, personal flotation device, a lesson on proper strokes, and a guided tour.
Where do I meet for the tour?
You meet at Sea Monkeys Surf And Skate, in the second building after getting off the Folly Beach bridge, right past a large pink building called Hotel Folly.
What should I bring?
Bring a towel, sunscreen, water, and flip-flops or water shoes.
What kind of tour is it for beginners?
It is an introductory kayaking tour that teaches basic paddling strokes on calm flatwater.
Are children allowed?
It is not suitable for children under 8 years old. For tandem kayaking, any child under 13 must be accompanied by an adult.
Can I request a tandem kayak?
If you want a tandem kayak, book 2 singles and note tandem in the height and weight section. If you have questions, call the shop.
What is the language of the instructor?
The instructor speaks English.
What about cancellation and flexible booking?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. There is also an option to reserve now and pay later.






























