Loading ...

Explore Bali Under ₹50,000 – Complete Budget Plan (2026)

0

Can you really experience the magic of Bali on a budget of ₹50,000?

Short answer: Yes. Absolutely yes.

Long answer: I asked myself the same question before booking my trip. Bali had always seemed like one of those destinations reserved for honeymooners with fat wallets or digital nomads with Western incomes. But after crunching the numbers, booking flights at the right time, and figuring out where to save versus where to spend, I realized something important.

Bali might be the most budget-friendly tropical paradise within reach for Indian travelers.

The Indonesian Rupiah works in your favor – ₹1 equals roughly 190-200 IDR . Your money stretches further here than in many domestic tourist spots. And unlike some destinations where “budget travel” means sleeping in dorms and eating instant noodles, Bali lets you live reasonably well while keeping your bank account happy.

This guide breaks down exactly how to make ₹50,000 work for a Bali trip. Flights, visa, accommodation, food, transport, activities – the whole picture. No unrealistic “you can do it for ₹20,000” nonsense. Just real numbers from someone who actually did the math.


First, Let’s Talk About That ₹50,000 Figure

Here’s the honest truth: ₹50,000 is tight but doable for a 5-6 day Bali trip from India, covering everything except international flights. The flight cost is the big variable, so we’ll handle that separately.

What ₹50,000 typically covers:

  • Visa on arrival and tourist levy
  • 4-5 nights accommodation (budget guesthouses)
  • All meals (mix of local warungs and occasional cafes)
  • Local transport (scooter rental or ride-hailing)
  • Entry fees to temples, waterfalls, attractions
  • At least 2-3 paid activities or day trips

What it doesn’t cover:

  • International flights from India (₹25,000-40,000 round trip depending on season and booking time)
  • Travel insurance (but honestly, don’t skip this)
  • Excessive alcohol or fine dining every night
  • Luxury spa treatments

The key is being smart about where your money goes. Let’s break it down category by category.


Pre-Trip Costs: Visa, Levy, and Hidden Expenses

Before you even land in Bali, there are unavoidable costs. Budget for these upfront.

Visa on Arrival (VoA)

Cost: IDR 500,000 (approximately ₹2,500)

Most Indian citizens need this. It gives you 30 days in Indonesia, extendable once. You pay at the airport upon arrival – card or cash accepted, though card is smoother .

Tourist Levy

Cost: IDR 150,000 (approximately ₹750)

Introduced in 2024 and still going in 2026. You’re supposed to pay this online before arrival through the Love Bali portal (lovebali.baliprov.go.id). In practice? Enforcement is inconsistent. Some travelers report no one checking. But technically you need it, so budget for it .

Travel Insurance

Cost: ₹800-1,500 for 5-7 days

Please don’t skip this. Scooter accidents happen. Medical evacuation from remote areas is expensive. I’ve seen too many “it won’t happen to me” stories end badly. Cover yourself.

Total pre-trip expenses: Approximately ₹3,500-4,000


Flights From India – The Biggest Variable

Flight costs will make or break your ₹50,000 budget.

Typical round-trip fares from major Indian cities :

  • From Delhi/Mumbai: ₹30,000-40,000
  • From Bangalore/Chennai: ₹28,000-38,000
  • From Kolkata: ₹25,000-35,000

How to save on flights:

  • Book 2-3 months ahead – last-minute fares are brutal
  • Fly mid-week (Tuesday-Thursday) rather than weekends
  • Consider flights with connections in Kuala Lumpur or Bangkok – sometimes cheaper than direct
  • Set price alerts on Skyscanner or Google Flights
  • Shoulder season (April-June, September-October) has better deals than peak winter

If you’re stretching ₹50,000 total including flights: You’ll need to find flights under ₹30,000 and be extremely disciplined with on-ground spending. It’s possible but requires sacrifice.

For this guide, we’re assuming: You’ve booked flights separately or found a killer deal under ₹30,000, leaving you the full ₹50,000 for everything else.


Accommodation – Where to Stay Without Breaking the Bank

Bali’s budget accommodation scene is genuinely good. You don’t need to stay in party hostels unless you want to.

Budget Areas Compared

AreaVibeNightly Budget (₹)Good For
CangguHipster, surf, cafes1,200-2,200Young travelers, digital nomads, beach lovers
UbudCultural, yoga, rice fields1,000-2,000Culture seekers, wellness travelers
KutaParty central, loud800-1,500Budget absolute minimum, nightlife
SanurCalm, family-friendly1,500-2,500Older travelers, peace seekers
SeminyakUpscale, shopping2,500+ (avoid)Not for strict budgets

Canggu and Ubud offer the best value-to-experience ratio. In Canggu, you’re close to beaches and the famous cafe scene. In Ubud, you’re surrounded by culture and rice terraces .

What ₹1,500-2,000 Per Night Gets You

  • Clean, air-conditioned room with private bathroom
  • Basic breakfast included (banana pancakes, coffee, fruit)
  • Friendly family-run guesthouse (often called losmen)
  • Usually located down a quiet lane, not main road
  • Good WiFi, hot water, fresh towels

Booking tip: Use Agoda or Booking.com to research, then check if the property has direct contact options. Sometimes booking direct saves 10-15% .

For 5 nights: ₹7,500-10,000 total


Food – Eating Well on a Shoestring

Bali’s food scene is incredible at every price point. The trick is balancing local warungs with occasional cafe treats.

Where to Eat

Local Warungs (Family Eateries)

  • Nasi Campur (mixed rice with sides): ₹150-250
  • Mie Goreng or Nasi Goreng: ₹120-200
  • Satay sticks with rice: ₹200-300
  • Fresh young coconut: ₹50-80

These are everywhere. Look for places packed with locals – that’s how you know it’s good .

Street Food

  • Pisang Goreng (fried banana): ₹20-40
  • Martabak (stuffed pancake): ₹100-200
  • Bakso (meatball soup): ₹80-150

Budget Cafes

  • Smoothie bowl: ₹300-450
  • Avocado toast: ₹350-500
  • Good coffee: ₹120-200

Saving Strategy:

  • Breakfast at your guesthouse (usually included)
  • Lunch at a warung (₹200-300)
  • Dinner at a slightly nicer spot (₹400-600)
  • One “treat” meal per day at a cafe
  • Avoid alcohol or limit to one Bintang beer (₹150-250)

Daily food budget with this mix: ₹800-1,200

For 5 days: ₹4,000-6,000


Getting Around – Scooters, Drivers, and Ride-Hailing

Transport is where you can save big or waste money. Choose wisely.

Scooter Rental (The Budget King)

Cost: ₹300-500 per day plus ₹100-150 for fuel

This is how most budget travelers explore Bali. It gives you freedom, lets you reach hidden spots, and costs a fraction of private drivers .

Requirements:

  • International Driving Permit (get this in India before leaving)
  • Confidence riding a scooter (traffic is chaotic)
  • Helmet always (required and just smart)

Pros: Cheap, flexible, fun
Cons: Requires skill, slightly risky, traffic can be intense

Ride-Hailing Apps (Gojek / Grab)

Cost: Short trips ₹150-300

These work like Uber but also offer “Gojek” options – basically getting a ride on the back of a scooter. Cheaper than taxis, widely available in tourist areas .

Private Drivers

Cost: ₹2,000-3,500 for full day (8-10 hours)

For day trips covering multiple sights (like Ubud to Bedugul to Tanah Lot), hiring a driver makes sense. Split between 2-4 people and it becomes reasonable.

Taxis

Cost: ₹400-800 for medium trips

Blue Bird taxis are reliable and metered. Others will try to negotiate fixed prices – usually higher.

For 5 days with scooter rental: ₹2,000-2,500 total including fuel


Activities and Entry Fees – Where the Real Bali Lives

Bali’s attractions are wonderfully affordable. Most temples and waterfalls cost ₹100-500 to enter. Compare that to entry fees in many countries, and you’ll appreciate how far your money goes here .

Must-Visit Places and Their Costs

Ubud Area

  • Sacred Monkey Forest Sanctuary: ₹480
  • Tegalalang Rice Terraces: ₹50 (donation)
  • Tirta Empul Holy Water Temple: ₹290 (includes sarong)
  • Ubud Art Market: Free entry
  • Campuhan Ridge Walk: Free
  • Traditional Dance at Ubud Palace: ₹100

South Bali

  • Uluwatu Temple: ₹140
  • Kecak Fire Dance at Uluwatu: ₹480
  • Tanah Lot Temple: ₹400
  • Garuda Wisnu Kencana Cultural Park: ₹500
  • Padang Padang Beach: ₹100

Waterfalls

  • Tegenungan: ₹100
  • Kanto Lampo: ₹100
  • Tibumana: ₹50
  • Sekumpul: ₹95 (north Bali, requires guide)

Day Trips

  • Nusa Penida Island tour (organized): ₹3,100-3,800
  • Mount Batur sunrise trek: ₹2,400-3,800
  • Snorkeling trip to Blue Lagoon: ₹1,500-2,500
  • White water rafting (Ayung River): ₹2,000-3,000

Money-Saving Activity Tips

  • Pick 2-3 paid attractions per day max
  • Free stuff: beaches, rice terrace walks, sunrise/sunset views
  • Visit temples early (before 9 AM) – fewer crowds, better light
  • For Nusa Penida, DIY with a scooter if you’re confident (cheaper than tours)
  • Book tours through your guesthouse – often cheaper than online platforms

Activity budget for 5 days: ₹5,000-8,000


Sample 6-Day Budget Breakdown (₹50,000 Total)

Here’s how the numbers actually pencil out for a realistic trip.

Fixed Pre-Trip Costs

ItemCost (₹)
Visa on Arrival2,500
Tourist Levy750
Travel Insurance (approx)1,000
Total4,250

On-Ground Expenses (6 Days / 5 Nights)

CategoryDaily (₹)Total (₹)Notes
Accommodation1,6008,0005 nights in budget guesthouse
Food1,0006,000Mix of warungs and cafes
Transport4502,700Scooter rental + fuel
Activities1,0006,0002 paid activities daily average
Miscellaneous4002,400Water, snacks, SIM card, small tips
Buffer1,650Unexpected expenses

Total On-Ground: Approximately ₹26,750

Remaining Budget

Initial budget: ₹50,000
Minus pre-trip: ₹4,250
Minus on-ground: ₹26,750
Remaining: ₹19,000

That remaining ₹19,000 covers your flight if you booked separately, or becomes extra spending money for nicer meals, souvenirs, or an additional excursion.


6-Day Bali Itinerary (Optimized for Budget)

Day 1: Arrival & Seminyak Sunset

  • Arrive at Ngurah Rai Airport, transfer to Canggu or Seminyak guesthouse
  • Afternoon: Settle in, rent scooter
  • Evening: Sunset at Batu Bolong Beach or Seminyak Beach
  • Dinner at local warung
  • Spend: ₹2,500 (transfer, scooter deposit, food)

Day 2: Ubud Culture

  • Morning drive to Ubud (1 hour)
  • Monkey Forest Sanctuary
  • Lunch at Ubud warung
  • Afternoon: Tegalalang Rice Terraces, Tirta Empul Temple
  • Evening: Traditional dance at Ubud Palace
  • Stay overnight in Ubud
  • Spend: ₹2,800 (entry fees, food, fuel)

Day 3: Ubud Waterfalls & Art

  • Morning: Kanto Lampo and Tibumana waterfalls
  • Lunch in Ubud
  • Afternoon: Ubud Art Market, Campuhan Ridge Walk
  • Evening: Relaxed dinner
  • Spend: ₹2,000

Day 4: South Coast Exploration

  • Morning drive to Uluwatu area
  • Visit Padang Padang Beach, Uluwatu Temple
  • Sunset Kecak Fire Dance
  • Dinner in Jimbaran (seafood, split cost)
  • Stay in Canggu area
  • Spend: ₹3,000

Day 5: Nusa Penida Day Trip

  • Early morning fast boat from Sanur to Nusa Penida
  • Visit Kelingking Beach, Angel’s Billabong, Broken Beach
  • Return to Bali mainland
  • Spend: ₹4,000 (includes tour/boat)

Day 6: Last Morning & Departure

  • Breakfast at Canggu cafe
  • Last-minute souvenir shopping
  • Airport transfer
  • Fly home
  • Spend: ₹2,500

Total Itinerary Spend: ~₹16,800, leaving room for flexibility


Practical Tips to Stretch Your Rupee Further

Money-Saving Habits That Actually Work

1. Cash is still king
ATMs are everywhere but charge fees. Withdraw larger amounts less often. Keep small bills for warungs and markets .

2. Drink the local water (safely)
Most guesthouses provide a refillable gallon. Use your reusable bottle. Save ₹50-100 daily on plastic bottles.

3. Eat where locals eat
If a warung is packed with Indonesian workers at lunch, that’s your spot. Food is fresher, cheaper, and more authentic.

4. Skip the airport taxi
Use Grab or Gojek from the airport. Can save ₹500-800 on that first transfer .

5. Learn basic Indonesian phrases
“Harga berapa?” (how much?) and “Mahal” (expensive) help with market bargaining. Sellers respect the effort.

6. Visit during shoulder season
April-June and September-October give you good weather with 20-30% lower prices than peak July-August .

7. Book your first night only
Once in Bali, you can find better deals walking into guesthouses. Only do this if you’re comfortable with uncertainty.

8. Share costs
Traveling with one other person cuts accommodation and driver costs in half. Solo is possible but slightly pricier.


What ₹50,000 Won’t Get You (Be Realistic)

Let’s be honest about limitations so you’re not disappointed.

With ₹50,000 total including flights, you won’t get:

  • Luxury resorts with private pools
  • Multiple fine dining experiences
  • Daily private drivers
  • Helicopter tours or private charters
  • Extensive spa treatments
  • Alcohol every night

With ₹50,000 excluding flights, you’ll live:

  • Comfortably in good guesthouses
  • Eating well with variety
  • Doing most activities you want
  • Possibly upgrading to a nice hotel for 1-2 nights

Know which category you’re in and plan accordingly.


Final Thoughts

Bali surprised me. Not just because it’s beautiful – everyone knows that. But because it’s accessible. The Island of the Gods doesn’t demand a luxury budget to reveal its magic.

That moment watching sunset at Uluwatu, the cliffs dropping into the Indian Ocean, the sound of gamelan music floating up from the temple – that costs ₹140 entry. Walking through Tegalalang rice terraces at golden hour, the only sounds being wind and water – free. A plate of nasi campur from a warung where the grandmother cooking has been making the same recipe for forty years – ₹250.

These experiences don’t have price tags. They just exist, waiting for whoever shows up.

So yes, you can explore Bali under ₹50,000. You’ll stay in clean guesthouses, eat incredible food, see temples and waterfalls and beaches that’ll stick in your memory forever. You’ll come home with stories, not debt.

And honestly? That’s the whole point.


Planning your Bali trip? Been there and have tips to share? Drop your questions or experiences below – I read every comment and I’m happy to help figure out the details!

Share.
Leave A Reply