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Bali Luxury Digital Nomad Living

Cost of Living in Bali as a Digital Nomad: The $3k–$10k/Month Reality (2027)

By Chloe Bennett · July 3, 2026

The cost of living in Bali for digital nomads in 2027 is
$3,000–$3,500/month for a genuinely comfortable single professional,
$5,000–$6,500/month for a premium lifestyle with a private pool villa
and car, and $8,000–$10,000+/month for an exceptional one — full-service
villa, driver, chef, club memberships.
The $1,200/month Bali of
backpacker blogs still exists, but it is not the Bali this site covers,
and if you earn $10k+/month remotely, optimising for it is a false
economy that costs you sleep, call quality and health.

I’ve lived here since 2021, I run my own household budget in both
rupiah and euros, and I’ve helped 200+ senior professionals plan
month-long stays. Below is what the money actually goes to, itemised, at
three tiers. All figures are per month, single person, at roughly Rp
16,300/USD (December 2026 rate — check before you budget).

The three real budgets

Tier 1 —
Comfortable professional: $3,000–$3,500/month

Line item Monthly cost
Premium coliving suite or 1BR villa (verified fibre) $1,800–$2,200
Food (good cafes, some cooking, 2 dinners out/week) $550–$700
Scooter hire + fuel $80–$100
Gym membership $60–$90
Phone/data (Telkomsel, 100GB+) $12–$18
Massage, laundry, incidentals $150–$250
Visa amortised (E33G over 12 months, incl. agent) ~$100

This is the floor at which your accommodation has work-grade
internet, your chair doesn’t wreck your back, and you’re not budgeting
your flat whites. If your accommodation number looks lower than this,
read my breakdown of what luxury coliving
actually costs per month
to see what gets cut first (spoiler: the
internet failover and the mattress).

Tier 2 — Premium:
$5,000–$6,500/month

Line item Monthly cost
Private 1–2BR pool villa with office, serviced $2,800–$3,800
Food (chef 2–3 days/week, top restaurants weekly) $900–$1,200
Car with driver, part-time + scooter $500–$700
Padel/wellness club + personal training $180–$300
Health insurance (proper international cover) $150–$350
Everything else (spa, weekend trips, gifts) $400–$600

This is the tier most of my guests land in: the villa is quiet enough
for back-to-back calls, someone else handles the pool, the laundry and
the shopping run, and your weekend costs are choices rather than
compromises. The month-long serviced villa layer is the anchor — I keep
a curated, speed-tested list on the month-long luxury stays pillar,
with pricing bands by area.

Tier 3 — Exceptional:
$8,000–$10,000+/month

Three-plus bedroom architectural villa in Pererenan or Uluwatu
($5,000–$7,000), full-time driver, daily chef, weekly spa at home,
business-class weekend hops to Singapore. Bali delivers this tier at
perhaps 40% of what it costs in comparable climates — this is where the
island is genuinely, quantifiably underpriced. Families budget
differently again; see my guide to moving to Bali as a digital
nomad family
.

Where Bali is cheap, and
where it isn’t

Disproportionately cheap for the quality:
housekeeping and staff ($250–$400/month full-time), massage and wellness
($8–$25/session), driver services, local food, tailoring, most services
involving skilled labour.

Not cheap at all: imported wine and cheese (2–3×
European prices — a drinkable bottle starts around $18 in a shop),
quality electronics, international health insurance, international
schooling, and premium villas in the top three or four villages, where
demand from exactly the readers of this site has pushed pricing up
10–15% year-on-year since 2024.

The tourist tax and small print: Bali charges a
one-off Rp 150,000 (~$9) provincial tourism levy on arrival
(lovebali.baliprov.go.id), and restaurants add 15–21% service and tax to
menu prices — factor that into any food budget you read online.

The visa line item, done
properly

If you’re staying a month, a visa-on-arrival extension covers you
cheaply. For the multi-month stays this site is built around, the E33G
remote-worker KITAS is the clean route: Indonesia’s Directorate General
of Immigration lists it as a one-year permit for foreign workers
employed by companies outside Indonesia, with a proof-of-income
requirement of US$60,000/year (evisa.imigrasi.go.id). Budgeted honestly
— government fees plus a competent agent — treat it as $1,000–$1,400
all-in for the year, roughly $100/month amortised. Full requirements,
documents and timeline are in my E33G requirements guide,
and the overview of every route sits on the Bali remote work visa pillar. I’m not
a visa agency and don’t process applications — for filings, use a
licensed agent. Tax residency is a separate question with real
consequences; I’ve written about the 183-day rule carefully in digital nomad taxes in
Bali
.

Sample month:
what I actually see guests spend

A recent guest — a US-based product VP, 34 nights in Pererenan,
October–November 2026 — gave me her card statement summary for this
exact article: villa $3,400, food $1,050, driver+scooter $610, padel
club $140, spa $180, flights within Asia $420, misc $390. Total:
$6,190.
Her verdict: “I spent 20% less than a comparable month
in Lisbon and lived roughly twice as well.” (The comparison is a whole
topic of its own — see Bali vs Lisbon for digital
nomads
.)

The honest caveats

Plan your month with real
numbers

Averages are for articles; your month deserves a quote. Tell me your
dates, budget band and work setup on the reserve
page
and I’ll send you two or three verified villa or coliving
options with exact monthly pricing — usually within a day. If it’s
easier to talk, message me on
WhatsApp
. And if you’re still in the research phase, Bali Digital Nomad Luxury is the home base — everything on
it is personally verified, speed-tested and dated.

Figures collected November 2026 – January 2027 from guest
placements and my own household ledger. Not financial advice; confirm
visa and tax specifics with licensed professionals.

C
Chloe Bennett
nomad living curator, Bali Luxury Digital Nomad Living

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