Planning Bali with kids comes with the same handful of questions over and over: When should we go? Which areas are best? Is it safe? How much will it cost? This FAQ pulls the big worries into one place and points you straight to the deep-dive guides so you can move from “scrolling” to “booked.”
Quick tools that answer a lot of FAQs in one click
- ✈️ “When can we actually get there?” Play with routes, layovers and times that match your kids’ sleep rhythms using this Bali flight planner.
- 🏨 “Which part of Bali should we stay in?” Open the Bali Neighborhood Guide for Families beside your family stays search and match beaches, pools and vibes to your kids’ ages.
- 🚗 “Taxi, driver or rental car?” Compare options in Getting Around Bali With Kids and price cars via this Bali car comparison.
- 🎟️ “What should we actually do there?” Start with the Ultimate Bali Family Attractions Guide, then save a few must-dos from curated Bali family activities.
- 🛡️ “What if someone gets sick or plans change?” Build in a safety net from SafetyWing so doctor visits, delays and surprises don’t sit entirely on your shoulders.
For full context, pair this FAQ with the four anchors of the Bali cluster: the Ultimate Bali Family Travel Guide, the Ultimate Bali Family Attractions Guide, the Ultimate Bali Logistics & Planning Guide, and the Ultimate Bali Neighborhoods Guide for Families.
When is the best time to visit Bali with kids?
The sweet spot for most families is the dry season (roughly May–September) with an extra-soft spot in the shoulder months like May, June and September. You’ll usually get:
- More sunshine and less daily rain.
- Lower humidity than peak wet season.
- Good conditions for beaches, pools and day trips.
That said, school calendars matter. If you’re bound to holidays, the Best Time To Visit Bali For Families and the Bali Weather & Seasons Guide walk you through what each month actually feels like with kids.
Not automatically. Rainy season usually means:
- Short, intense bursts of rain rather than all-day storms.
- Greener landscapes and fewer crowds.
- More flexibility needed with outdoor plans.
If your kids do well with flexible plans and indoor time (pools, cafés, indoor play areas), rainy season can still work—especially when you build in more “Plan B” options from the Best Bali Adventure Parks & Water Parks and Best Markets & Shopping With Kids.
Where should families stay in Bali?
It depends on your family’s vibe and ages. A very simple starting point:
- Sanur & Nusa Dua: calmer water, promenades, resorts and stroller-friendly paths.
- Seminyak, Legian & Canggu: more cafés, surfing, shopping and sunset beaches.
- Ubud & Sidemen: rice terraces, temples, culture and greenery.
- Jimbaran, Uluwatu, Amed, Lovina, Nusa Penida: beach dinners, cliffs, snorkeling and slower coastal bases.
Use the Bali Neighborhood Guide for Families plus the individual guides (Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Nusa Dua, Sanur, Jimbaran, Uluwatu, Sidemen, Amed, Lovina, Nusa Penida) alongside your family stays search to choose a base—or two.
Many families love a split stay, for example:
- Beach + pool hub (Sanur, Nusa Dua, Seminyak, Jimbaran) and
- Cultural or nature hub (Ubud, Sidemen, Amed, Lovina).
The Ultimate Bali Neighborhoods Guide for Families and the Ultimate Bali Family Travel Guide show how to connect those dots in 5-, 7- and 10-day itineraries.
How long should we stay & what will it cost?
If you’re flying long-haul, most families feel 7–10 days is the sweet spot:
- 1–2 days to arrive, decompress and adjust.
- 4–6 “full” days to explore, do day trips and enjoy your stays.
- 1 “buffer” day around departure.
Shorter trips can still work if you focus on one hub and a few nearby activities from the Attractions Guide. Longer trips give you room for slower days, more remote corners and extra beach time.
Bali family budget FAQs
Bali can flex to many budget levels. You can:
- Keep it modest with simpler guesthouses, local warungs and a few paid attractions, or
- Lean into resorts, villas with staff, private drivers and high-end experiences.
The Bali Budget Guide for Families breaks down rough daily ranges (low / mid / high) for stays, food, transport and activities—so you can plug your numbers in and see what’s realistic.
A few levers make a big difference:
- Location: choose neighborhoods where you can walk to food and the beach instead of paying for constant transport.
- Stays: use filters on your Bali stays search to find mid-range options with breakfast included and kitchens or kitchenettes.
- Food: mix local warungs with café treats; kids often love simple Indonesian dishes.
- Activities: choose a few “big ticket” days (like water parks or safaris) and surround them with low-cost beach, rice terrace and temple days from the attractions cluster.
Is Bali safe & healthy for kids?
Generally, yes—Bali is a very popular family destination. The main considerations are:
- Traffic and road awareness, especially with scooters and busy streets.
- Water safety at beaches, pools and waterfalls.
- Food and water hygiene for sensitive stomachs.
The Health, Safety & Food Tips in Bali guide walks you through what to do, what to avoid, and how to set simple family rules that keep everyone safe without fear at the center of the trip.
There are clinics and hospitals used regularly by travelers. For peace of mind:
- Note the nearest recommended clinic to each neighborhood you’ll stay in.
- Pack a basic medical kit tailored to your kids (outlined in the Bali Packing List for Families).
- Make sure you have coverage with a provider like SafetyWing so doctor visits, tests or medication don’t cause financial stress on top of everything else.
Food, water & picky eaters in Bali
Most families find plenty of “safe” options for picky eaters:
- Plain rice, grilled chicken, simple noodles.
- Egg dishes, toast, fruit and smoothies.
- Western-style café menus in areas like Seminyak, Canggu, Sanur and Ubud.
The trick is to keep one sure-win option on each menu and then gently introduce new flavors. There are more detailed suggestions inside the Health, Safety & Food Tips guide.
Tap water is not recommended for drinking. Families typically:
- Drink sealed bottled water or use filtered water provided by their stay.
- Use bottled or filtered water for brushing teeth with younger kids.
- Watch ice and raw foods at the start of the trip until they see how everyone’s stomach reacts.
Getting around Bali FAQ
Not necessarily. Many families rely on:
- Private drivers for full and half days.
- Taxis and ride-hailing options for shorter hops.
- Walking within neighborhood hubs.
Renting a car can make sense for confident drivers who want full control, but traffic, road conditions and parking can be intense in some areas. The full breakdown lives in Getting Around Bali With Kids, and you can price rentals here: Bali car comparison.
If you prefer clear structure and door-to-door travel with kids, yes—especially for:
- Airport transfers (see the Bali Airport Guide (DPS) With Kids).
- Day trips to waterfalls, rice terraces and temples from the attractions guides.
Use the step-by-step process in How To Book a Private Driver in Bali and browse sample itineraries via curated Bali private driver experiences.
Age & stage FAQs
Bali works for both—it’s just a different trip:
- With toddlers: slower pace, more naps, gentler beaches and lots of pool time.
- With bigger kids: more temples, waterfalls, cultural shows, water parks and day trips.
The full comparison lives in Bali With Toddlers vs Bigger Kids (What To Expect), with concrete suggestions for neighborhoods and activities by age.
It depends on age, terrain and how much you like to walk. In general:
- Under 3: a carrier or travel stroller makes airport days, promenades and naps-on-the-go much easier.
- 3–5: a lightweight stroller or occasional carrier can still be useful for long evenings or hot days.
- 6+: usually okay without, as long as you pace walking days sensibly.
The dedicated Stroller or Baby Carrier in Bali guide breaks down what works best where (promenades, rice terraces, markets, temples).
Logistics, packing & planning FAQs
Think light layers, sun protection and a small “comfort kit” from home:
- Breathable clothes and swimwear.
- Hats, sunglasses and reef-safe sunscreen.
- Comfort items for sleep (stuffed animal, blanket, small pillow).
- Basic medical kit and a few familiar snacks.
You’ll find a detailed, age-sorted list in the Bali Packing List for Families.
Treat your arrival as its own “light” day:
- Choose flights that land at a kid-friendly time when possible, using the flight planner.
- Pre-book your transfer or driver so you’re not negotiating with tired kids in the arrivals hall.
- Plan a simple first evening: check-in, shower, easy dinner, sleep.
The Bali Airport Guide (DPS) With Kids walks through everything from immigration to SIM cards step by step.
Activities & attractions FAQs
“Must do” looks different for each family, but a lot of lists include:
- At least one calm beach day from Best Bali Beaches for Families.
- A rice terrace visit from Best Bali Rice Terraces With Kids.
- One or two gentle animal experiences from Best Animal & Monkey Experiences (Safe Options).
- A temple or cultural evening from Best Bali Temples for Kids or Best Cultural Experiences For Families.
- Optional: a water or adventure park day from Best Bali Adventure Parks & Water Parks.
To see what’s available around your dates and base, explore curated Bali family activities and then plug them into the itineraries in the Ultimate Bali Family Attractions Guide.
A helpful rule of thumb is no more than one big day for every one or two quiet days, especially with younger kids. For example:
- Day 1: Arrival + pool.
- Day 2: Beach + easy temple.
- Day 3: Bigger day trip (waterfalls, rice terraces, animal park).
- Day 4: Slow morning + markets + pool.
The Ultimate Bali Family Travel Guide and the Ultimate Bali Logistics & Planning Guide show how to use this rhythm across 3/5/7/10-day stays.
If this FAQ calmed your “Bali with kids” brain a little, it will do the same for another parent scrolling in the dark.
Share it with your partner or family group chat and pick one next guide together—neighborhoods, attractions or logistics—so the planning load feels shared, not solo.
When you’re home, come back and drop a quick comment with your kids’ ages, month of travel and one thing you wish you’d known sooner. That’s the kind of detail that quietly sharpens these guides for the next family.
Some of the links on this page support Stay Here, Do That at no extra cost to you. They help keep these guides calm, detailed and free from noisy banner ads.
© 2025 Stay Here, Do That — Family Travel Guides. Written for the parent who reads the FAQs before they hit “book.”