Amed Family Travel Guide with Kids — Snorkeling, Black Sand Beaches & Slow East Bali
Amed is the part of Bali where time moves slowly, the sea is clear enough for your kids to spot clownfish from the shore, and Mount Agung looms in the distance like a storybook backdrop. This is your calm, sea-focused base for families who love snorkeling, simple routines, and low-key adventure.
Quick links for planning Amed with kids
- ✈️ Compare kid-friendly Bali flights (DPS) so you land at a reasonable hour for bedtime.
- 🚗 Reserve a family car for the Denpasar–Amed drive and control your own nap, snack, and photo stops.
- 🏨 Browse family stays in Amed (villas, beachfront bungalows, and small resorts).
- 🐠 Book guided snorkeling & dive trips around Amed so someone else handles currents, gear, and boats.
- 🩺 Set up flexible travel insurance for your family before you start cliff roads and boat days.
- 🌴 Want the full picture? Open the:
Amed in one look for families
Amed isn’t a single town; it’s a string of relaxed seaside villages stretched along Bali’s northeast coast. Expect black volcanic sand, calm water, and coral just off the shore. Instead of beach clubs and malls, you’ll find fishing boats, simple warungs, and dive centers that know you by name after two days.
For families, Amed works best as a second or third stop after somewhere more central like Ubud or Seminyak. Once you’ve done the temples, waterfalls, and rice terraces, Amed becomes the “exhale” portion of the trip where mornings are for snorkeling and afternoons are for board games, naps, and smoothies.
You won’t come here for playgrounds or mega-kids’ clubs. You’re here for house reef snorkeling, boat trips, simple routines, and starry skies. If your kids are content with the ocean, a mask, and a scoop of gelato at sunset, Amed might be their favorite part of Bali.
Who Amed works best for (and who should skip it)
Amed is a yes if your family loves:
- Being in the water most days (snorkeling, paddling, boat trips).
- Quiet nights with ocean sound instead of nightlife noise.
- Local warungs, barefoot cafes, and slow mornings.
- Uncrowded roads and more “village” than “resort strip.”
It’s especially good for tweens and teens who are safe in the water and happy to repeat favorite spots. Many families pair Amed with a bigger resort zone like Nusa Dua or Jimbaran so kids get both pool-slide energy and quiet reef time.
Amed might be a maybe or no if:
- Your kids are under 4 and not yet water-confident.
- You need flat, stroller-perfect promenades every day.
- Clubby, high-energy nightlife is a priority for the adults.
If you’re unsure, use Amed as a 2–3 night stop within a longer Bali loop. You can always extend once you’ve felt the rhythm.
What Amed actually feels like with kids
Picture a narrow coastal road with the sea on one side and steep green hills on the other. Fishing boats line the shore, dive shops are tucked between cafes, and Mount Agung watches from behind. There’s traffic, but it’s mostly scooters and local cars, not giant buses.
Nights are quiet and dark. You’ll see stars, hear roosters and waves, and maybe catch a little live music at beachfront spots like Café Garam at Hotel Uyah Amed & Spa Resort. It’s a place where families often go to bed roughly when their kids do, then wake early for sunrise light over the water.
Safety-wise, the biggest considerations are:
- Road edges & scooters: keep a firm hand on smaller kids along the main road.
- Reef & rocks: water shoes are your friend; black sand can get hot at midday.
- Sun: reflection off the water is real; long-sleeve rash guards make life easier.
Strollers & carriers
This is not a stroller paradise. You can push one short distances around some resorts and smoother strips in Jemeluk and Amed village, but expect:
- Uneven sidewalks or none at all.
- Steps down to many beachfront warungs.
- Gravel, sand, and narrow paths.
Bring a carrier for babies/toddlers and treat the stroller as optional, not essential. If you want stroller-friendly boardwalks, anchor more nights in Sanur or Legian/Kuta and keep Amed as the “ocean mission” portion of the trip.
Best family stays in Amed
In Amed, where you stay matters more than in denser parts of Bali because you’ll spend a lot of time right on your own little stretch of beach. Prioritize:
- Shaded pool and easy ocean access.
- Family rooms or villas so you’re not whispering after 8pm.
- On-site food, or walkable cafes for simple meals.
Three family-friendly stays to start with
- Salt Resort & Spa — Directly on Amed Beach with a seafront pool, family rooms, and a mellow atmosphere. Great if you want to wake up, walk 30 seconds, and be in the water while still having a proper restaurant and bar on-site.
- Amed Beach Resort — A classic Amed pick with an oceanfront pool, simple but comfortable rooms, and easy access to snorkeling and local warungs. Good choice if you want kids to be able to bounce between pool and sea all day.
- Hotel Uyah Amed & Spa Resort — Eco-minded, right on the beach, with poolside and ocean-view bungalows plus family villas. Café Garam on-site makes life easy when you don’t feel like wandering far for dinner.
If you’re not sure yet which cluster (Amed village vs. Jemeluk vs. Lipah) suits you, start by browsing a handful of family-rated Amed stays and checking how close they sit to snorkel spots and cafes on the map.
Things to do in Amed with kids
1. Snorkel straight off the beach
Amed’s biggest win for families is that you don’t have to charter a boat every day to see fish. In spots like Jemeluk Bay and Lipah Beach, you can often walk in from shore and be over coral within a few fin kicks. For younger kids, keep to shallower edges with plenty of sand underfoot.
If you’d like someone else to handle gear, safety briefings, and spotting turtles or statues, look at guided options and day trips around Amed and Tulamben through pre-booked snorkeling tours. You can choose slower-paced family departures and half-day options.
2. Try a gentle family dive or intro course
Older kids and teens often love trying their first bubbles in Amed. Local centers like Dive Concepts Amed, Abyss Dive Center Bali, Amed Bali Diving at Jemeluk, and Two Fish Divers Amed are used to beginners and can suggest easy sites and pool sessions.
If your kids are curious but not ready for a full course, look at short “try dives” or very shallow shore dives booked via family-friendly intro dive experiences.
3. Watch sunrise & sunset from a view cafe
Amed has several cliffside and hilltop cafes with standout views of Jemeluk Bay and Mount Agung. Parents get their golden-hour moment and kids get smoothies, cakes, and space to wander.
Local favorites include:
- Blue Earth Village — yoga decks, great views, and healthy food overlooking the bay.
- Good Stuff Cafe & Eco Store Amed — healthy bowls, burgers, and a small eco store with thoughtful kids’ touches.
- Joli Best View Cafe — as the name suggests, one of the best vantage points over the coastline.
4. Use Amed as your calm base for East Bali
On non-water days, it’s easy to hire a driver and use Amed as a launch point for:
- Water palaces like Tirta Gangga and Taman Ujung.
- Temples and viewpoints facing Mount Agung.
- Small, uncrowded beaches and villages further along the coast.
You can bundle one or two sights into a single, slow-paced day trip with a private car booked through your accommodation or arranged in advance when you reserve a family car with child seats.
Where to eat in Amed with kids
Food in Amed is relaxed and mostly small-scale. You’ll find a mix of Indonesian staples, fresh fish, smoothie bowls, and Western comfort food. Many spots are used to kids, happy to adjust spice levels, and can serve dishes family-style.
Kid-friendly cafes & restaurants to plug into your map
- Good Stuff Cafe & Eco Store Amed — healthy plates, kids’ options, and a small eco store attached; great for brunch and early dinners.
- Blue Earth Village Restaurant — panoramic views plus fresh, plant-forward meals; a good spot for an early sunset dinner with older kids.
- Rimba Cafe — homemade treats, burgers, wraps, and smoothie bowls in a leafy setting; easy to keep everyone happy.
- Galanga Restaurant — fusion menu with creative dishes and plenty of vegetarian options, good for a “nicer” family dinner.
- Asmat Restaurant Amed & Trattoria Amed — simple, family-friendly spots for pasta, pizza, and Indonesian dishes.
- Sama Sama Cafe Amed — beachfront warung with easygoing vibes and sunset views.
- Café Garam at Hotel Uyah Amed & Spa Resort — convenient if you’re staying nearby; good for lazy dinners when no one wants to move far.
For very picky eaters, keep a list of spots with sandwiches, fries, and smoothies, then alternate them with more local warungs. Many families in Amed settle into a gentle routine: same breakfast cafe, flexible lunch, favorite dinner spot on repeat.
Sample stress-free Amed day with kids
Use this as a template and adjust for naps, ages, and jet lag:
-
06:30–08:00 — Sunrise & slow breakfast
Watch sunrise from your balcony or the beach, then wander to somewhere like Good Stuff Cafe for pancakes, eggs, and coffee while kids play with whatever they can find in the sand. -
08:30–11:00 — Snorkeling window
Head to Jemeluk or Lipah for shore snorkeling, or meet your guide if you’ve booked a family snorkeling trip. Aim to be out of the midday sun by late morning. -
11:30–14:30 — Pool, naps & shade time
Retreat to your hotel pool, order a simple lunch, and build in quiet time. This is when younger kids nap and older ones read or scroll under a fan. -
15:00–17:00 — Short outing
Walk to a new cafe, explore a different stretch of beach, or do a short drive to a viewpoint. Keep it optional: if everyone wants more pool time, honor that. -
17:30–20:00 — Sunset and early dinner
Watch the sky change from somewhere like Blue Earth Village or Joli Best View Cafe, then have an early dinner so kids can be in bed on time and you still get a quiet hour to yourselves.
Repeat, swapping days for dive intros, half-day trips to water palaces, or simply doing less. Amed rewards families who don’t over-schedule.
Practical tips for Amed with kids
- How long to stay: 3–5 nights works well for most families, longer if you have older kids who are obsessed with snorkeling or diving.
- Getting there: Arrange a private transfer from the airport or your previous Bali base when you book your car or ask your accommodation to organize a driver.
- Money: ATMs exist but can be limited; bring some cash from a larger town just in case.
- Medical: For peace of mind, set up travel insurance that covers kids and water activities and know which clinics your accommodation recommends in case of ear infections or reef scrapes.
- Connectivity: Amed is fine for casual scrolling and maps, but speeds can dip. Make sure your Bali SIM or eSIM is set up before you arrive (see the Bali logistics guide for SIM and Wi-Fi setups).
How Amed fits into your bigger Bali plan
Most families plug Amed into a wider Bali loop that might look like:
- Start in Ubud (rice terraces, waterfalls, culture).
- Head east to Amed for ocean time.
- Finish in Nusa Dua, Jimbaran, Seminyak, or Canggu for beaches and easier airport access.
When you’re ready to cross-compare neighborhoods, open the Ultimate Bali Neighborhood Guide and use it side-by-side with this Amed guide.
Already dreaming beyond Bali? You might also like:
Some stays, tours, and tools mentioned above partner with Stay Here, Do That at no extra cost to you. You pay the same price (and sometimes less), while a tiny commission helps keep these deep-dive family guides online for the next parent planning late at night.
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