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Bali

Travel articles and guides tagged with "Bali" — practical advice for curious travellers.

4 articles

Where to Stay in Bali: Honest Area-by-Area Guide

3 March 2026

bali

Where to Stay in Bali: Honest Area-by-Area Guide

Bali has no single centre. Six distinct towns spread across a 5,600 km² island — each with different energy, price, and practical constraints. Where you base yourself determines how much time you spend in taxis and what you actually see. The wrong location means costly transport friction and wasted days.

Henrik Vinter

Bali vs Lombok: Which Indonesian Island Should You Choose

14 February 2026

bali

Bali vs Lombok: Which Indonesian Island Should You Choose

Bali delivers reliable infrastructure, abundant restaurants, and consistent beginner-friendly waves. Lombok offers fewer crowds, better advanced surf breaks, and genuine quiet beaches — at the cost of patchy transport and fewer amenities. The choice depends on whether you want maximum options or minimum tourists.

Henrik Vinter

Best Time to Visit Bali: Month-by-Month Guide

9 January 2026

bali

Best Time to Visit Bali: Month-by-Month Guide

Bali offers warm weather and activities year-round, but timing your visit around the seasonal climate, religious festivals, and crowd patterns will significantly affect your experience. Unlike destinations with extreme seasonal swings, Bali's two broad seasons—dry and wet—overlap considerably with tourism cycles, making some months vastly better than others depending on what you want to do.

Henrik Vinter

Ubud, Bali: What to Know Before You Visit

8 January 2026

bali

Ubud, Bali: What to Know Before You Visit

Ubud is not a yoga retreat town that happens to sit in Bali. It is a working Balinese town of about 80,000 people where rice farming, arts markets, and family-run restaurants exist alongside Instagram cafés and wellness studios. You'll see fruit vendors next to coffee shops charging 85,000 IDR for flat whites. You'll hear gamelan music rehearsals from temples mixed with English accents in the streets. The reputation draws people seeking spiritual transformation and digital nomad infrastructure; the reality is a place where local economy and tourist economy exist in direct, sometimes awkward proximity.

Henrik Vinter