Cost of Living in Bali 2026 — What Westerners Actually Pay | Starting Over in Bali
Starting Over in Bali after 55
Guide 1 · May 2026

Cost of Living in Bali 2026

What Westerners Actually Pay

Get the Complete 24-Page Guide
Real prices · Named restaurants · Tropsa scooter pricelist · Visa reality · Insurance traps · Flights
€19 one-time · instant download
Download Full Guide on Gumroad →
7-day money back guarantee · No questions asked

What's in the full guide

  • 12 chapters, 24 pages
  • 3 budget levels with full breakdown
  • Tropsa scooter pricelist Feb 2026
  • Nomad & Hujan Locale real prices
  • Bali International Hospital
  • Visa reality — what people actually do
  • Revolut setup for Bali
  • 5 data charts and comparisons
  • Area guide: Ubud vs Sanur vs Canggu
  • Flight routes & current prices
Introduction

Why This Guide Exists

I first landed in Bali in 2017 with a Tumi suitcase, no mobile data, and a vague sense that something needed to change. Eight years later I hold an Investor KITAS, run a company here, and have had the same table at the same restaurant for longer than some expats have been on the island. This guide is not written from a spreadsheet. It is written from a life.

My own number: I live in Bali on my pension of €1,800 per month — including two return flights per year from Europe to Bali. I stay at Suparsa's Homestay in Ubud, eat at good restaurants, drink cocktails at Hujan Locale, and ride my e-bike around town. I am not roughing it. I am living well.

  • Adapt or pay the price. Expats who replicate their home country habits spend home country money. Eat local, live local — and you spend half.
  • Housing is 60% of your budget. Choose accommodation wisely and you have room to breathe. Get it wrong and no warung lunch will save you.
  • Hidden costs are real. Flights home, visa fees, insurance, the 16% restaurant tax — add €200–400/month to whatever you budgeted.
The 16% rule: Every restaurant bill in Bali adds 11% VAT + 5% service on top of menu prices. A dish at 95,000 IDR (€4.75) costs €5.51 when the bill arrives. Always calculate 16% on top of the menu.
Chapter 1 — Free Preview

Bali vs Western Europe — The Real Numbers

Bali is genuinely cheaper than Western Europe — but not in every category. Savings are largest in housing, food, labour, and wellness. They reverse for imported wine, electronics, and European food products.

ExpenseWestern EuropeBali (Ubud)Saving
1BR apartment rent€900–1,400/mo€400–700/mo50–60%
Restaurant dinner€25–45€8–1850–65%
Massage (1 hour)€60–90€985–90%
Dentist cleaning€80–120€15–2570–80%
Cigarettes (pack)€8–12€1.25–2.5075–85%
Laundry (full bag, ironed)€20–40€3.50–585–90%
Wine (bottle, restaurant)€15–30€18–35More expensive
Chapter 2 — Free Preview

Where You Sleep — Your Most Important Decision

Housing determines everything — your daily rhythm, social life, transport needs, and monthly budget. The biggest mistake Europeans make: going straight to a private villa before they know Bali.

Homestays — The Smartest Way to Start

Suparsa's Homestay on Jalan Sri Wedari in Ubud is ranked #16 of 808 guesthouses in Ubud on TripAdvisor. Clean private room, AC, hot water, wifi, breakfast included. From €21/night. Central Ubud — walking distance to everything.

What a homestay actually gives you beyond the room: a Balinese family who watches out for you, a language bridge, help if you are sick or robbed, and the kind of community that no villa rental will ever provide. For someone arriving alone at 55+ in a country where they don't speak the language — this is worth more than any private pool.

Chapter 3

Food and Drink — Real Prices, Real Places

The quality of food across Bali is exceptionally high for the price. Many Balinese chefs learned their craft on cruise ships, in five-star hotel kitchens, or through Bali's own world-class hospitality training. At Nomad on Jalan Raya, JP's daily restaurant, mains run 85,000–145,000 IDR (€4.25–7.25 before tax). A gin tonic: 85,000–95,000 IDR. At Hujan Locale, cocktails are 145,000 IDR before tax — €8.40 after the 16% is added. A full evening at Nomad with drinks comes to €20–24...

Chapter 4

Getting Around — Real Prices from Tropsa

Tropsa scooter rental on Jalan Sri Wedari: Honda Scoopy €77.50/month, N-Max €120/month. A Gojek ride across central Ubud: €0.80. Yes, eighty cents. Airport to Ubud by GoCar or Grab: 450,000 IDR = €22.50...

Continue Reading — Full Guide

Chapters 3–12 cover food prices, transport, health insurance, visas, money tools, flights, area guide, and the complete budget breakdowns.

€19 · 24 pages · instant download
Get the Full Guide on Gumroad →
7-day money back guarantee · No questions asked

What's in the Full Guide

Ch 1
Bali vs Western Europe — The Real NumbersDirect cost comparison with data table
Ch 2
Where You Sleep — Your Most Important DecisionHomestays vs villas, real prices, the human safety net
Ch 3
Food and Drink — Real Prices, Real Places 🔒Nomad, Elletaria, Hujan Locale, Syrco BASÈ — named prices
Ch 4
Getting Around 🔒Full Tropsa pricelist Feb 2026, Gojek, Grab, airport transfers
Ch 5
Health, Insurance and the New Reality 🔒Bali International Hospital, the 90-day insurance trap, KITAS prices
Ch 6
Visas — What People Actually Do 🔒VOA online, B211A, Retirement KITAS, visa runs — honest reality
Ch 7
Money, Cards and Practical Tools 🔒Revolut setup, money changer traps, phone emergency kit
Ch 8
The Costs Nobody Mentions 🔒Laundry, massage, cigarettes, domestic help, electricity
Ch 9
Flights — Routes, Prices and Insider Knowledge 🔒Emirates suspended, alternatives, price benchmarks, AMS connection
Ch 10
Where to Live — Ubud vs Sanur vs Canggu 🔒Honest area guide with area cards and real verdict
Ch 11
The Three Budgets — Full Monthly Breakdown 🔒Basic, Comfortable, Luxury — line by line
Ch 12
Can You Afford It? Honest Income Scenarios 🔒Pension scenarios, the 9 surprises, JP's real monthly number
Questions before buying? Message JP on WhatsApp — he answers personally.