Not All Bali Beaches Are Created Equal, Hereâs How to Tell the Difference
Baliâs beaches are not interchangeable. Drive twenty minutes in any direction and the whole character of the coast changes: the color of the sand, the size of the waves, even the kind of crowd. Weâve had honeymooners ask us for âthe best beach in Baliâ as if thereâs one correct answer, and our honest reply is always the same, yes! it depends where youâre staying, and what youâre actually after.
As a general rule, the south west coast like the Uluwatu and Bukit Peninsula, is where youâll find Baliâs most dramatic scenery like towering limestone cliffs, big surf, and beaches you reach by descending a long staircase cut into the rock. Move east and north and everything calms down considerably. Thatâs where you head for swimming, snorkelling, and lazy afternoons actually in the water, not just watching it from the sand.
Weâve put this guide together region by region, roughly following the route most couples take around the island, so you can match a beach to wherever you happen to be that day. And if you want to pair your beach time with the right spot for sundowners, donât miss our beach clubs guide.
South Bali, The Best Beaches for Epic Sunset
Uluwatu & The Bukit Peninsula: Dramatic Limestone Cliffs & Pro Surfer Barrels
This is where Bali earns its postcard reputation. The Bukit Peninsula is a plateau of limestone that drops sharply into the Indian Ocean on almost every side, which means clifftop views that stop you mid-sentence, and beaches you almost always reach via a staircase carved into the rock. Honestly the effort is, without exception its already worth it. We cover the whole area in depth in our Uluwatu honeymoon guide, but here is every beach worth knowing about.
Padang Padang Beach, Uluwatu
Padang Padang is one of those beaches that earns its reputation every single day, white sand tucked between two sheer limestone walls, accessed through a literal crack in the cliff face and a short staircase down to the cove. Made famous internationally by the film Eat Pray Love, it also hosts the annual Rip Curl Cup, one of the most prestigious surf competitions in Asia, which tells you everything about the quality of the break further out. Weâve been here more times than we can count, and the one thing we always tell people: come before 9am and youâll have something close to the place to yourselves, arrive after mid-morning and youâre sharing it with a crowd. Mid-tide is the sweet spot for swimming, at high tide the sand shrinks dramatically and the cove feels claustrophobic, at low tide the reef surfaces. Get the timing right and itâs genuinely one of those Bali moments youâll talk about for years.
The good stuff:
- Open daily 7amâ7pm, affordable entrance tickets.
- Board rentals available right on the beach if either of you wants to try the surf
- Showers and changing rooms on site, honestly a pleasant surprise for an Uluwatu beach
- Does get crowded.
Worth knowing before you go:
- Cash only for entrance and parking and donât arrive without local curency.
- No snorkeling here, the surf and current make it unsuitable
- Family friendly in spirit, but the stairs and tight cove need extra care with young kids
Nyang Nayang Beach, Uluwatu
This is the wild one, and we mean that affectionately. Nyang Nyang sits at the far southwestern tip of the Bukit Peninsula, the last beach before the cliffs wrap around past Uluwatu Temple and it shows. A long, dramatic stretch of white sand framed by towering green cliffs and the open Indian Ocean, almost entirely untouched. Weâve watched couples go quiet the moment they reach the bottom of the trail, and that reaction never gets old. The famous marooned wooden boat against the cliff backdrop is every bit as photogenic in person as it is on Instagram, and the beach is long enough that finding a private stretch of sand is never an issue. Come during the dry season (AprilâOctober) for calm water and clear skies, and aim for early morning or late afternoon to avoid the midday heat. Free entry, though parking costs a small fee.
The good stuff:
- No entrance fee, one of the few truly free beaches in Uluwatu
- 10â15 minute walk down from the parking area well its manageable for most
- Powerful surf break that draws experienced surfers; beautiful to watch even if you donât paddle out
Worth knowing before you go:
- Strong currents make open swimming genuinely risky
- Bring everything: water, snacks, shade because the facilities are almost nonexistent
- Trails get muddy and slippery in wet season (NovemberâMarch) and dry season visits only
Melasti Beach, Uluwatu
Melasti is the beach that finally got the beach clubs it deserved and Certified CHSE. The cliff scenery here is spectacular and best enjoyed from a daybed at White Rock, Tropical Temptation, or The Warung Beach Club. What makes Melasti genuinely different is that itâs more than just a coastline, managed by the traditional village of Ungasan under the Balinese concept of Tri Hita Karana, the area also offers the iconic Twin Hills cliffs, a traditional Kori Agung gate, local food stalls, and regular Kecak dance performances at sunset. All of that, just 30 minutes from Ngurah Rai Airport. Plan around the tide though: high tide is when it actually looks like the photos and the reef shelf makes it awkward at low tide.
The good stuff:
- Entrance fee is very affordable per person, extraordinary value for one of Baliâs most beautiful beaches
- Over 1km of sand across three distinct sections, east rockpools, central swimming area, west sunset viewpoint
- The Kecak dance here is less crowded than Uluwatu Temple its mean, its easier to get great photos and a more intimate experience
- Some beach clubs offer complimentary kayaks and paddleboards for guests
Worth knowing before you go:
- Grab and Gojek can drop you off but cannot pick you up from the main parking area, better arrange your driver in advance
- No surfing here, currents and wave quality make it unsuitable unlike other Uluwatu beaches
- Beach gets noticeably busy after 11am, especially with large Indonesian tour groups, suggest to arrive early for a quieter experience
Green Bowl Beach, Uluwatu
Green Bowl earns its hidden-gem reputation the old-fashioned way: you have to truly want it together! Getting down means roughly 300 steep concrete steps descending a 75-metre cliff, which is exactly why it stays quieter than anywhere else on this list. On most days there are fewer than 25 people on the beach, let that sink in, in Bali. Whatâs waiting at the bottom is a small cove of white sand tucked between dramatic cliff faces, with two large limestone caves you can duck into for shade, rock pools teeming with tiny fish and crabs to explore at low tide, and a shallow coral bowl that gives the beach its name. Mid-tide is the sweet spot for swimming and coral exposed at low, sand swallowed at high. At low tide, walk past the stairs into the quieter inner cove where the reef clears and the water calms. We love this one for couples who want something that genuinely feels like a discovery, because it still is.
Required warning: keep your bag close on the staircase because the monkeys here have figured out that tourists carry food.
The good stuff:
- Entrance fee is very affordable for a least crowded beaches in Uluwatu
- Two real limestone caves to explore its natural shade, eerily beautiful, and completely unique to this part of Bali
- Bring your own snorkelling gear, the crystal clear water and reef make it surprisingly rewarding
- Sunset from down here lights up the Bukit Peninsula sky in a way thatâs hard to forget
Worth knowing before you go:
- No lifeguards, no rentals, no bins and better bring water, snacks, sunscreen, and carry your rubbish back up
- Avoid midday, the climb back up in peak heat is genuinely punishing; early morning or late afternoon is far better
- Wear grippy sandals or shoes cause the stairs can be uneven and slippery, especially after rain
- Grab and Gojek donât reliably service the area
Thomas Beach, Uluwatu
Thomas Beach sits between the busier Bingin and Padang Padang Beach, and the contrast is striking. Itâs longer than either of its neighbours, the water runs noticeably cleaner thanks to better circulation, and the vibe is genuinely calm and the most popular things search in here is the natural pool.The descent involves around 150 to 175 steps, although going down is fairly easy albeit a bit slippery but the climb back up is truly exhausting in the scorching afternoon heat. Basic warungs and loungers wait at the bottom, so you can settle in for a long morning without carrying a bag full of supplies.
The good stuff:
- Completely free entry, no parking fee, sunbed and umbrella rental around IDR 100k for two
- 200 metre stretch of soft white sand, its longer and more spacious than most Uluwatu beaches
- Surfboard rentals available on the northern end of the beach ( the price is on budge for 2 hours even for the local is affordable), great for beginners and intermediate surfers
- Snorkelling gear available to hire on the beach at mid-to-high tide, the water clarity here rewards it
Worth knowing before you go:
- At high tide the water reaches the warung foundations cause virtually no sand left; always check a tide chart before descending
- No signage on the main road, look for Suka Espresso cafĂŠ on Jl. Labuansait, the beach entrance is directly opposite
- Cars fit only a handful at the top better arrive before 10am or park on the main road and walk in
- Some cases of theft reported (helmets, valuables left unattended), we suggest you to use a dry bag and keep belongings with you
đ¨ Staying nearby? We recommends The Ungasan Clifftop Resort and perched above its own private beach with Sundays Beach Club right on the sand below. Rated â 9.7, and one of our top picks for a romantic clifftop honeymoon in Uluwatu.
Dreamland Beach, Uluwatu
Despite the name, Dreamland has lost a bit of its mystique, now sits within the Pecatu Indah Resort complex with easy flat access and no stairs. What that buys you is a genuine 400 metre stretch of pale gold sand, one of the longest on the Bukit Peninsula, with a full south west facing sunset that hits the cliffs unobstructed, the kind that turns the whole sky pink and makes you both go quiet. Walk to the southern end and youâll find a grassy clifftop where you can sit above it all, free, no minimum spend, and just enjoy the view.
The good stuff:
- Grassy clifftop on the southern end, a free natural viewpoint above the ocean, perfect for sunset without the beach club bill
- Sand bottom break its more forgiving than reef; board rentals for 2 hours on the beach is no need a expensive budget
- Showers, restrooms, and sunbeds on site, well its rare for Uluwatu
Worth knowing before you go:
- Waves are deceptively powerful, check the tide forecast and stay close to shore if either of you isnât a confident swimmer
- Car park entrance changed in late 2025, enter via Pecatu Indah Resort main gate, not the northern headland road
- Entrance technically free but sometimes collected at the gate, remember to bring small cash
Bingin Beach, Uluwatu
Bingin used to be the kind of beach that people built their entire Bali trip around, cliffside warungs with tables literally over the water, surf schools, sunset cocktails, that specific energy of a place thatâs been discovered but not yet ruined. In July 2025, 48 structures were demolished by Indonesian authorities for sitting on protected coastal land without valid permits, and nearly a year on, the rubble is still there. The path down now winds through debris rather than the lively alleyways it once was. A IDR 20 billion redevelopment plan has been announced like a new stairs, restrooms, cultural stage but construction isnât expected to start in earnest until late 2026 at the earliest. Whatâs left is honest and a little raw: a beautiful bay, water thatâs actually clearer now thanks to reduced cliff runoff, and a surf break that hasnât moved an inch.
The good stuff:
- The famous left-hand reef break is completely intact, still one of the most consistent waves on the Bukit Peninsula, best at mid-to-high tide
- Water clarity has visibly improved since the demolition, less commercial runoff from the cliff means cleaner, more turquoise water
- One surf school still operating with board rentals and lessons, the surf culture hasnât gone anywhere
- Quieter and more spacious than itâs been in a decade and if you want the break without the crowd, this is actually the moment
Worth knowing before you go:
- Path down winds through active demolition debris better wear proper shoes, not flip flops, and go slow
- During or after heavy rain, debris has fallen onto the sand and check conditions before descending
- No toilets, no restaurants, no showers and we suggest umbrella rental for a day and a couple of drink sellers are all that remain
- Grab and Gojek can drop off and pick up at cliff top parking is scooter and paying cash only
Nusa Dua, Benoa & Jimbaran : Luxury Enclaves, Calm Waters & Seafood Sunsets
Nusa Dua Beach
Nusa Dua is the kind of beach that does exactly what it promises and nothing it doesnât. Calm, protected water. Wide white sand. Manicured to within an inch of its life. Itâs built entirely around its beachfront resorts, and if youâre staying at one of them, the beach is a genuine pleasure is clean, easy, and reliable for swimming at any time of day. Donât come here for spontaneity or seclusion. Come because you want a beach thatâs stress-free and beautiful, and thatâs exactly what youâll get.
The good stuff:
- Faces east, one of the best sunrise beaches in Bali; worth an early morning walk along the 3km beachfront promenade before the heat hits
- Water Blow is a 10 minute walk away, waves exploding through a limestone reef crack on Peninsula Island, completely free and one of Nusa Duaâs most genuinely spectacular natural sights
Worth knowing before you go:
- The name literally means âTwo Islandsâ (Nusa = island, Dua = two), the two small peninsulas walkable at low tide, each with a small Hindu temple, are worth exploring beyond the main beach strip
- Sunbeds and umbrellas are managed by the adjacent hotels and non guests are welcome on the beach but will pay resort-level prices for shade
đ¨ Staying nearby? BaliHoneymoonâs top pick in Nusa Dua is The St. Regis Bali rated â 9.5, with private pool suites right on the beach. Also highly recommended:The Apurva Kempinski, home to the legendary Koral Restaurant where you dine under a real aquarium with manta rays swimming overhead.
Tanjung Benoa Beach
Benoa is a watersports beach, plain and simple. If youâve been wanting to try parasailing, jet skiing, or a banana boat, this is where you come. The setup is professional and well organised, and itâs genuinely fun if thatâs what youâre after. As a beach to simply lie on and enjoy the ocean, though, itâs not somewhere weâd go out of our way for. Think of it as a launching pad for activities rather than a destination in its own right.
The good stuff:
- Turtle Islandis a 15-min glass bottom boat ride where you can actually hold and feed green sea turtles. From a afforadble payment, one of the most unexpectedly special things to do in South Bali
- Combo packages from only a around a thousand rupiah is already cover parasailing, jet ski, banana boat and snorkelling in one go but book online or via WhatsApp first, walk in counter prices for foreigners can be 2â3x higher
Worth knowing before you go:
- By 10 am the water is full of tour boats,this is an activities beach, not a swimming beach
- Vendors here are persistent, know your price before you arrive or you will overpay
Jimbaran Beach
Jimbaran does one thing better than almost anywhere else in Bali, and it does it every single evening: sunset dinner on the sand, with freshly caught fish grilled right in front of you at one of the seafood warungs that line the beach. The white sand turns golden in the evening light, the locals food experience come out in force, and the whole scene is one of those Bali moments that stays with you. Daytime swimming is a different matter entirely with boat traffic from the nearby harbour makes the water choppy and murky during the day, and we wouldnât recommend it for a swim. Come for the evening and stay for the grilled fish.
The good stuff:
- Arrive by 4:30pm the golden hour hits the sand around 5:30â6:30pm, this is the timing that makes Jimbaran wha everyone expected
- The budget is affordable for per person at casual warungs like Menega or Teba, grilled snapper, prawns, squid, sambal, rice, feet in the sand. One of the best value dining experiences in all of Bali
- For something a touch more romantic, Hatiku Restaurant is another solid pick, call ahead and theyâll set up flower decorations on your table for a pretty (if not fully private) sunset beach dinner
Worth knowing before you go:
- Popular warungs like Menega fill up fast, arrive without a reservation before 5:45pm or book ahead, especially on weekends
- You can reserved your fine private dining here too, contact us for more !
đ¨ Staying nearby? BaliHoneymoon recommends the Raffles Bali is a private ocean front villas with a romantic private dining experience in a cave right on the cliff. It doesnât get more dramatic than that.
Seminyak & Canggu :Â Trendy Black Gold Sands, Beach Clubs & Vibrant Sunset Vibes
Seminyak Beach
Seminyakâs beach runs along a long, wide boulevard lined with bars, beach clubs, and restaurants, itâs sociable, beautiful, and easy. For couples who want a beach afternoon that flows straight into a sunset session, this is probably your spot. La Planchaâs rainbow beanbags on the sand are iconic for a reason better claim one by 4:30pm or youâll be watching from behind someone elseâs. The surf here is gentle enough for total beginners, which makes it a low-pressure option if either of you has quietly been wanting to try. Our full Seminyak guide covers everything else the area has to offer.
The good stuff:
- Free entry the entire 3km stretch from Double Six to Petitenget is public and walkable; mornings are especially beautiful and almost empty before 9am
- Sand bottom beach break forgiving for beginners; surf lessons from a affordable price for 2 hours and a board rental. Best conditions: dry season, early morning before the sea breeze picks up
- On sand massages from local massages ladies is one of the best value things you can do between a swim and sunset
Worth knowing before you go:
- Rip currents are real, always swim within the red and yellow lifeguard flags; remind each other for the best safety and keep visible for the Guard
- After heavy rain, water quality drops noticeably with runoff and debris but fine to watch from the sand with a beach club drink in hand
đ¨ Staying nearby? BaliHoneymoonâs top picks right on Seminyak beach: The Legian (â 9.5, beachfront, private dining available) and The Oberoi(â 9.5, classic thatched villas, 33m beachfront pool, Kura Kura restaurant with ocean views). Both are classics for good reason.
Canggu Beach
Cangguâs sand is black and volcanic, its doesnt mean its dirty but its surprises some honeymooners who arrive expecting the white-sand look. The energy here more than compensates. Beach clubs like Sandbar and Finns draw serious crowds, and the whole area comes alive for sunset in a way that few beaches in Bali can match. If you want to surf, the Batu Bolong end of Canggu is the spot and rental shops line the beach, the waves are genuinely manageable for beginners, and the atmosphere is encouraging rather than intimidating. One thing to take seriously: high tide is when itâs safestand at low tide, the reef underneath sits close to the surface and itâs unforgiving. Check the tide before you paddle out and our Canggu guide covers everything else.
The good stuff:
- Incredible sunset energy
- Batu Bolong is genuinely great for beginner surf at high tide
- Lively, fun, social means its a proper event rather than just a beach visit
Worth knowing before you go:
- Black volcanic sand that not the classic tropical beach look many couples picture
- Extremely crowded at peak sunset hours; arrive early or accept the chaos
- Reef at low tide is a real hazard better check tides before swimming or surfing
đ¨ Staying nearby? BaliHoneymoon recommends COMO Uma Canggu, a luxury beachfront hotel right on Echo Beach with honeymoon suites featuring a private pool overlooking the ocean. One of the best addresses in Canggu for couples.
Seseh Beach or Cangguâs Quieter Self
A short drive north of Canggu sits Seseh, and itâs one of those places we hesitate to write about because we love having it to ourselves. Same black volcanic sand, same ocean, a fraction of the people. Our favourite spot here is Warung Pantai its served cheap drinks, genuinely good local food, friendly staff, and a location about 500 metres from the nearest road, which is exactly enough to keep it off most peopleâs radar. If the Canggu vibe appeals but the Canggu crowds donât, Seseh is the answer we always give.
The good stuff:
- At low tide, dramatic black sand tide pools appear along the shore its genuinely stunning and completely empty. The kind of photo you canât get at any other beach near Canggu
- Warung Pantai sits 500 metres from the road provide a cheap Bintang, real local food, zero tourists. The whole point of Seseh in one warung
Worth knowing before you go:
- Swimming is not safe here, currents are strong and unpredictable even on calm looking days, unlike the swimmable beaches in Canggu
- Come at sunset or early morning or midday the beach is exposed, hot, and shadeless
Southeast Bali Beaches : Best for Calmest Sunrise Spot
Sanur
Sanur Beach
Sanur is the calmest beach on this entire list and best sunrise place to stay on, in every sense of the word. White sand, a long shaded boulevard perfect for a slow morning walk, and water protected enough to actually swim in rather than just paddle at the edges. Itâs a genuine local favourite and its busy on weekends, its properly so and it doesnât pretend to be something it isnât. No beach clubs, no surf scene. Just a lovely, relaxed, reliably pleasant beach. Read our full Sanur guide if youâre thinking of staying in the area.
The good stuff:
- Sanur is Baliâs original beach townawarded as the first to welcome resorts back in the 1930s. Everything here feels earned rather than built for Instagram, and you feel that the moment you arrive
- The 6 km paved promenade is the longest beachfront path in Bali go rent a 1 bike and ride the whole stretch together at sunrise. Its gonna be one of those simple mornings youâll both talk about long after youâre home !
- The only east facing beach on this entire list. While everyone else is chasing sunsets on the west coast, you get Mount Agung silhouetted pink at 6am from a wooden gazebo over the water its a completely different and honestly more romantic kind of beautiful
- The offshore reef creates a calm shallow lagoon where you can snorkel just 100â200 metres from shore, no boat needed like parrotfish, clownfish, angelfish, all year round
Worth knowing before you go:
- Low tide exposes seaweed and reef patches at mid to high tide is the sweet spot for swimming; worth checking before you wade in
- Sanur is the fast-boat departure point for  Nusa Lembongan and Nusa Penida, pair a slow beach morning here with an island afternoon and youâve got one of our favourite days in all of Bali
đ¨ Staying nearby? BaliHoneymoon recommends the Andaz Bali its a beautifully designed 5-star beachfront resort rated â 9.2, right on Sanur beach. Their Fishermanâs Club restaurant is a beachfront seafood spot with tables overlooking the ocean if you ask for a window seat at sunset.
East Bali : Best for snorkelling After Sunbathing
Amed, Candidasa, Padang Bai : Volcanic Black Sands & Underwater Paradises
Padang Bai : The Bias Tugel & Blue Lagoon
These two small beaches tucked behind the Padang Bai harbour are the kind of places you stumble onto and immediately stop telling people about. Bias Tugel is named in Balinese for the way the cove is literally cut between two limestone cliffs and has some of the whitest sand in all of East Bali, a sheltered natural lagoon on the left side perfect for soaking in, and a natural water blow on the right where waves shoot through cliff gaps like a fountain. Walk over the headland and Blue Lagoon opens up a calmer, clearer, with clownfish, moray eels and the occasional reef shark visible from the surface without even putting your fins on. This two beaches in one afternoon, zero beach clubs, and a grilled fish warung lunch that will quietly become one of your favourite meals in Bali. The one thing we always warn people: the monkeys here are organised. They will unzip your bag while youâre looking the other way. We enjoy it ! đ
The good stuff:
- Bias Tugel has a inexpensive entry, Blue Lagoon free is for snorkel gear rentable on both, no boat needed
- Sunbeds at Bias Tugel IDR 50k, the warung grilled fish lunch afterwards is worth the drive alone
Worth knowing before you go:
- Withdraw cash in Padang Bai village first cause no ATMs near either beach
- Mid tide is the sweet spot because at high tide Bias Tugelâs sand disappears, and after heavy rain visibility drops fast
Candidasa : Virgin Beach â¤
This is our favourite beach on the entire island, and we mean that. Virgin Beach (Pantai Perasi) stretches 700 metres between two green headlands near Candidasa in white sand, genuinely turquoise water, coral close enough to snorkel without a boat, traditional jukung fishing canoes lined up along the shore, and a simple warung serving grilled fish with your feet in the sand. No beach clubs. No one trying to sell you anything. Just next door, Bukit Asah viewpoint sits directly above the beach and one of Baliâs best sunrise spots, almost always empty. Our Candidasa guide covers where to stay nearby.
The good stuff:
- Start with pay a fee entrance (parking included), snorkel gear rentable on the beach, no boat needed, theres a coral and fish that is visible from the surface
- Bukit Asah viewpoint 5 minutes away and Mount Agung behind you also Lombok Strait in front and its almost nobody there
Worth knowing before you go:
- Search âPantai Perasiâ on Google Maps, the roadside sign for Virgin Beach is small and easily missed
- No lifeguards, based our experience waves pick up in the afternoon; mornings are calmer
- Cash only because nearest ATM is back in Candidasa town
Amed : Amed Beach
Amed is not a beach you sunbathe on, itâs a beach you enter the water from. The shoreline is black volcanic stone, and thatâs the whole point. Just offshore, Amed has its own Japanese shipwreck sitting in shallow water, less famous than the Liberty in Tulamben but arguably better for snorkelling, with dense coral and far fewer people. Beyond the wreck, Jemeluk Bay right in Amed is one of the most reliable snorkel spots on the east coast its calm, clear, and home to turtles, reef sharks and garden eels visible from the surface. The sunsets here over Mount Agung are quietly spectacular. Read our Amed guide for dive operators and where to stay.
The good stuff:
- Japanese shipwreck just offshore is shallow, coral covered, rarely crowded ans walkable from the beach
- Jemeluk Bay snorkelling: turtles, reef sharks and garden eels, no boat needed
- Sunsets framed by Mount Agung as one of the most dramatic backdrops on the island
Worth knowing before you go:
- Black volcanic stones, not sand better bring water shoes
- No shade on the shoreline we suggest you to come early or late afternoon
- Grab and Gojek are unreliable this far east to arrange transport through your accommodation
Beyond the Mainland : Most Visited by Explorer
Baliâs beaches alone could fill an entire honeymoon, but if youâve got an extra day or two, itâs absolutely worth extending beyond the mainland. Nusa Lembongan & Ceningan are a fast boat ride from Sanur typically 30 minutes and the beaches there, including Jungutbatu and Mushroom Bay, are as beautiful as anything on this list. We could say there is quieter, less built up, and with a completely different pace. Weâve written a full guide if you want to plan it properly!
If youâre willing to go a little further, Lombok is worth the trip too, weâve got a full Lombok honeymoon guide to help you plan it. And honestly? Selong Belanak is our favorite beach in all of Indonesia, soft white sand, gentle rolling waves perfect for beginner surfers, and a laid back bay that still feels undiscovered.
How was it? Not sure which beaches fit your itinerary? Our beach clubs guide pairs perfectly with this one. And if youâd rather hand the planning to someone whoâs been to every beach on this list and thatâs exactly what our Bali honeymoon planning service is for to help you put it all together. đâ ď¸
We are Olivia & Dirk
Hi! We have put together this website with a lot of care, based on our own experiences as well as the experiences of our BaliHoneymoon.com team. As a couple, we have lived in Bali for the past 8 years, and we fell in love with the island. We have visited every corner of Bali, especially the romantic places ;-). While our articles do contain affiliate links, you can trust us to recommend only the experiences that we love.
We can help make your honeymoon perfect:
đ§Ą Check our Bali honeymoon packages for a stress-free romantic honeymoon.
đ§Ą Let us design a personalized custom honeymoon itinerary based on your interests.
đ§Ą Book unique romantic experiences with us.
Read more about BaliHoneymoon.com and our local Bali-based team.

