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Bali Luxury Digital Nomad Living

Moving to Bali as a Digital Nomad Family: Villas, Schools & Month-One Logistics

By Chloe Bennett · July 3, 2026

A digital nomad family in Bali needs three things locked before the
flight: a villa with two genuine workspaces and a fenced pool, a school
or childcare answer within a 15-minute drive, and a month-one logistics
plan that survives jet lag. Get those right and Bali is arguably the
best family remote-work base on earth — warm, safe, service-rich, with
first-rate international schools. Get them wrong and you will spend
your first month refereeing video calls from a bedroom while a toddler
discovers the koi pond. This is the playbook I use when placing
families, refined across dozens of placements since 2021.

I am Saskia, founder of Bali Digital Nomad Luxury.
Most of my clients are solo professionals and couples, but families are
the fastest-growing segment on our books — and the one where
accommodation mistakes cost the most. Everything below assumes the
month-long-plus horizon that family logistics demand; the economics of
that stay length are covered in our month-long luxury stays guide.

The villa brief:
what families actually need

After years of family placements, my non-negotiable
specification:

Realistic 2027 pricing for this specification:
$3,500–8,000+/month in the Canggu–Pererenan corridor
and Sanur, occasionally less in Umalas. Below $3,000 something on the
list above is usually missing — verify which.

Schools: the
decision that picks your neighbourhood

For stays beyond a month, school proximity — not beach proximity —
should anchor your villa search. Bali’s international school scene is
genuinely strong:

Two practical notes. First, the good schools have waitlists for
popular year groups — contact admissions before booking
flights, and ask specifically about short-term/term-length enrolment,
which several schools accommodate. Second, verify current tuition
directly with each school; fees change annually and third-party blogs
(including this one) go stale.

For a month-long stay, formal enrolment is often overkill: holiday
programmes, surf schools, and vetted nannies (IDR 4–8 million/month
full-time) cover the working day handsomely.

The area shortlist for
families, 2027

Sanur — my default family recommendation. Calm
streets, flat cycling paths, beachfront promenade, schools, and the
island’s gentlest traffic. The nightlife you are not using anyway is
elsewhere.

Umalas/Kerobokan — the strategic middle: 10–15
minutes to Berawa schools, quieter lanes, better villa value, easy
access to the Canggu ecosystem without living inside it.

Berawa — maximum convenience to CCS and
family-friendly cafes, at the cost of traffic and density. Choose a
gated side-lane villa, not the main arteries.

Pererenan — workable for families with school-age
kids bussing to Berawa/Sibang, and the best
parent-lifestyle-per-square-metre on the island. My wider neighbourhood
matrix is in the best areas
for nomads guide
.

Ubud — magical for a month with older children;
harder for daily school runs to the coast.

Month-one logistics, in order

  1. Week zero (before flying): villa contracted with
    workspaces verified, school/childcare conversation started, airport
    transfer and local SIM/eSIM arranged, travel insurance covering the
    whole family confirmed — I outline the insurance landscape in the nomad health
    insurance explainer
    .
  2. Week one: register your arrival details with your
    villa manager, set up Gojek/Grab accounts, do the big Pepito/grocery
    run, interview nannies/cooks (your villa manager or our team can
    shortlist vetted candidates).
  3. Week two: trial the school commute at 7.30am — Bali
    traffic is a morning phenomenon; a “15-minute” drive can be 40 at school
    run. Adjust expectations or villas accordingly.
  4. Weeks three–four: lock your recurring rhythm — gym,
    kids’ activities, date-night sitter — and decide whether to extend.
    Families that extend past month one almost always stay a quarter.

Visas, briefly and carefully

Families typically enter on visit visas while assessing, then move to
longer options: the E33G remote-worker visa for the working parent with
dependents on linked family visas is the common structure for longer
stays. Requirements, income thresholds and dependent rules are set by
the Directorate General of Immigration — verify current terms at
imigrasi.go.id and use a licensed visa agent for processing. Our remote work visa guide is a
plain-English orientation, not legal advice, and we happily refer
licensed agents.

The honest verdict

Bali with kids is not a compromise version of the nomad dream — done
properly, it is the upgrade. Children who spend a quarter here get ocean
confidence, a UN of friends, and parents who are home for dinner. The
price of that outcome is specification discipline on the villa and
starting the school conversation early.

Tell me your dates, children’s ages and school needs via the family stay inquiry form, or WhatsApp me at wa.me/6281139414563 — I will send
only villas I have walked through with a parent’s eye: pool fencing,
workspace doors, and the koi pond situation included.

Sources: Green School Bali — greenschool.org; Canggu Community
School — ccsbali.com; Directorate General of Immigration —
imigrasi.go.id. Tuition, visa terms and prices change; verify directly
with each institution. Nothing here is legal or immigration
advice.

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

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