Why Bali Remains the World's Top Nomad Destination
Despite rising costs, Bali continues to attract more digital nomads than any other single city on earth. The combination of tropical climate, spiritual culture, extraordinary food, and a mature nomad infrastructure makes it uniquely magnetic.
In 2026, Indonesia's Digital Nomad Visa (the "Second Home" visa) offers a 5–10 year stay for those who can demonstrate passive income or employment abroad. Here's everything you need to know before you go.
Monthly Budget Breakdown
| Expense | Budget ($) | Mid-range ($) | Comfort ($) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (villa/apartment) | 400–600 | 700–1,200 | 1,500–3,000 |
| Food (eating out + market) | 200–300 | 350–500 | 600–900 |
| Scooter rental | 60–80 | 80–120 | car 400–600 |
| Co-working | 80–120 | 150–200 | 250+ |
| Health insurance | 50–80 | 100–150 | 200+ |
| Total | ~$900 | ~$1,500 | ~$2,800 |
Best Neighborhoods in Bali
Canggu
Best for Social Nomads & Surfers
Canggu is the heartbeat of Bali's nomad scene. Streets are lined with cafes offering 50–100 Mbps wifi, co-working spaces charge $100–150/month, and the social scene runs 24/7. Rent for a furnished 1BR villa: $600–1,000/month.
Ubud
Best for Focus & Wellness
Ubud is Bali's cultural and spiritual center. The pace is slower, rice paddies surround you, and yoga studios outnumber bars. If you need to ship product and stay healthy, Ubud is often better than chaotic Canggu.
Seminyak
Best for Couples & Comfort
Seminyak is Bali's upscale beach strip — great restaurants, boutique hotels, and a quieter vibe than Canggu. Less nomad-forward but very comfortable for longer stays. Rent: $800–1,500/month.
Visa Options for 2026
- Visa-on-Arrival (30 days): Most nationalities get 30 days free, extendable once to 60 days. Good for short stints.
- B211A Social/Cultural Visa: 60 days, extendable up to 180 days total. The classic "nomad hack" — costs about $150 in extensions.
- Indonesia Second Home Visa: 5–10 year visa requiring $130,000 in a local bank account OR proof of a qualifying investment. High bar, but worth it for long-term residents.
Practical Tips
- Get a local SIM (Telkomsel or XL) — unlimited data for $10–15/month
- Download Grab and Gojek for transport
- Keep a VPN active — some services are geo-blocked
- Bali has no piped drinking water — budget $5–10/month for water delivery
- The best time to visit: April–October (dry season)