REVIEW · UBUD
All inclusive Mount Batur Trekking with Hot Spring tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Mount batur adventure · Bookable on Viator
Sunrise starts before most plans. This all-inclusive Mount Batur trek is built around reaching the summit for the first light, with flashlight and walking sticks plus breakfast time at the sunrise point. I also like that you follow the climb with a natural hot springs soak in Kintamani. The one catch is the timing and cold mornings: a jacket is not included, so plan warm layers.
You also get a clean, low-stress setup: round-trip transfers by air-conditioned vehicle and a private format so it’s just your group. It works best when you want the early start and logistics handled, not when you want a long, flexible wander day.
With a moderate fitness level, you’re set up for the effort, but the hike is still uphill in the dark. If you’re sensitive to steep starts or early wakeups, this tour may feel like a big ask.
In This Review
- Key things that make this Mount Batur sunrise tour worth your time
- Why the Mount Batur sunrise hike feels different from a normal day trip
- What you get for the $53 price (and what that means for value)
- Your day at a glance: the timing that drives the whole experience
- 03:30 a.m. — arrival at the Mount Batur start point
- Around 05:30 a.m. — arrival at the summit sunrise point
- 08:00 a.m. — natural hot spring time in Kintamani
- Back to your hotel — transfers and wrap-up
- Stop 1: Mount Batur start point to the summit (the flashlight hike)
- Sunrise breakfast: banana sandwich and mineral water at altitude
- Stop 2: Kintamani hot springs soak to recover
- Stop 3 and transfers: getting from Ubud without turning your day into a logistics puzzle
- How hard is it really? Fitness, altitude timing, and the “real” commitment
- What to pack for a cold, early, summit-focused day
- Private tour pros: why “only your group” changes the experience
- The best part people rave about: smooth pickup-to-dropoff, and a fast-feeling descent
- Who should book this Mount Batur sunrise + hot spring combo
- Should you book this tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Mount Batur trekking with hot springs tour?
- What time do I arrive at the Mount Batur start point?
- What time do you reach the summit for sunrise?
- Is this tour private?
- What are the main things included for the hike and breakfast?
- Are admission tickets included for Mount Batur and the hot springs?
- Is a jacket included?
- What if weather is bad for Mount Batur sunrise?
- Can I cancel for free?
Key things that make this Mount Batur sunrise tour worth your time

- Hike by flashlight to reach the summit early so sunrise happens right where you want it.
- Breakfast is included (banana sandwich and mineral water) and timed around sunrise.
- Walking sticks and a flashlight are provided, so you’re not scrambling for gear.
- Kintamani natural hot spring soak after the hike gives you a recovery moment, not just a photo stop.
- Air-conditioned round-trip transfers keep the long day from feeling like pure chaos.
- Private tour for your group only means fewer waits and less mingling during key moments.
Why the Mount Batur sunrise hike feels different from a normal day trip
Mount Batur is popular for a reason. The timing is the whole point: you start at 03:30 a.m. and aim to reach the summit around 05:30 a.m. That means you’re not doing a generic sunrise look from the side of a road. You’re walking into it, step by step, with the volcanic terrain lit by head-level beams and the kind of quiet that only happens before sunrise.
I like how this experience is structured around your energy. You don’t spend the morning “figuring it out.” You get gear and food planned for the moment you’ll need it most. The itinerary is also simple to understand: climb, arrive for sunrise + breakfast, then soak in natural hot springs in Kintamani, and finally head back to your hotel.
One practical note: the summit timing listed includes being at about 1,717 meters above sea level among clouds. That’s exactly the kind of altitude where the morning can feel sharper than you expect, even if you’re used to warm weather elsewhere in Bali. For this reason, the fact that a jacket isn’t included matters more than it sounds. Bring what keeps you warm while you’re waiting for sunrise.
You can also read our reviews of more hiking tours in Ubud
What you get for the $53 price (and what that means for value)

At $53 per person, the value comes from bundling the “big pieces” you’d otherwise have to piece together yourself. This tour includes:
- Round-trip air-conditioned transfers
- Flashlight and walking sticks
- Breakfast (banana sandwich, mineral water)
- All fees and taxes
- Admission tickets for the key stops
The smartest part of the pricing isn’t just the cost. It’s the risk reduction. Early morning hikes can turn into a mess if you’re missing gear, don’t know meeting points, or waste time at the wrong place. Here, the essentials are handled for you, and the flow stays consistent: you arrive at the starting area, hike to the sunrise point, eat breakfast with the views, then head to the hot spring to reset.
If you’re comparing to DIY options, remember that DIY can cost you in time and uncertainty, not just money. Early transport plus the right start time plus a planned breakfast is where tours save you energy. This one keeps that focus.
Your day at a glance: the timing that drives the whole experience

This is listed as about 10 hours total. The itinerary shows a clear rhythm:
03:30 a.m. — arrival at the Mount Batur start point
You’ll arrive around 03:30 a.m. at the parking area/start point. That’s early, yes, but it’s also how you avoid trying to guess your way through pre-dawn timing. Reaching the trail in darkness is normal for this sunrise schedule.
Around 05:30 a.m. — arrival at the summit sunrise point
The plan is to reach the summit around 05:30 a.m. Sunrise timing depends on the day and weather, but this window is built specifically for first light. You’ll be at altitude (about 1,717 meters), and the experience is described as being among clouds. In plain terms: expect a scene that can look like you’re hiking into a world above the world.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Ubud
08:00 a.m. — natural hot spring time in Kintamani
After the hike and breakfast portion, you relax in Batur Natural Hot Spring (Kintamani) starting at 08:00 a.m. You’re scheduled for about 1 hour 30 minutes. This is a nice recovery block, not a rushed dip.
Back to your hotel — transfers and wrap-up
The itinerary also includes a 2-hour transfer segment mentioned for the route from the pick-up point to the Mount Batur area. That helps explain why the day totals around 10 hours even though the main activities feel concentrated.
Stop 1: Mount Batur start point to the summit (the flashlight hike)

The main event here is the hike to Mount Batur’s summit for sunrise. The experience calls out that you’ll hike using a flashlight, and you’ll have walking sticks provided. That matters because the hike starts in low light. Walking sticks can take some strain off knees and balance when you’re negotiating uneven sections.
What you can expect at this stage:
- A very early arrival at the 03:30 a.m. parking/start area
- A hike in the dark leading to the 05:30 a.m. summit window
- Time spent moving steadily toward the sunrise point, not just sightseeing from a single stop
Why I think this format is practical: it reduces guesswork. You’re not trying to time a sunrise on your own with a delayed start. Instead, the itinerary gives you the structure you’d want if you’d planned it yourself—except you’re not doing the heavy thinking at 4 a.m.
Possible drawback to keep in mind: early hikes usually mean cold waiting time. Even if you’re moving, the minutes before sunrise can feel chilly, and a jacket isn’t included. If you’ve ever underestimated how cold it gets at altitude, this is your reminder.
Sunrise breakfast: banana sandwich and mineral water at altitude

Breakfast is included and timed to the sunrise experience. You get a banana sandwich and mineral water, and it’s part of the summit sunrise viewing.
This is more than a snack. It’s a smart pacing tool. At sunrise time, you’ll likely be tired from the climb and ready for a quick fuel reset, so having breakfast already built into the schedule helps you enjoy the moment without worrying about finding food.
Also, sunrise conditions can be changeable. Clouds, wind, and visibility shifts can happen at altitude. When that’s the case, having breakfast ready means you can stay calm and comfortable while you watch the sky work its way into morning.
Stop 2: Kintamani hot springs soak to recover

After the summit, the tour shifts to recovery mode at Batur Natural Hot Spring in Kintamani. The itinerary schedules it at 08:00 a.m. with 1 hour 30 minutes to relax.
Here’s why this part is valuable: after an early uphill hike, your legs want a “do nothing” moment. Hot springs are a natural fit. The tour includes admission tickets here too, so you’re not paying extra on-site.
Practical tips for this stop, based on how these hot spring experiences work:
- Bring your energy down a notch. This is not a sightseeing sprint.
- Plan to enjoy time sitting and soaking rather than rushing through for photos.
- If you tend to get cold easily after physical activity, use the full soak window to warm back up.
You’ll leave feeling like the day has a finish line, not just a return journey.
Stop 3 and transfers: getting from Ubud without turning your day into a logistics puzzle

This is a pickup-friendly experience from the Ubud area, and it includes round-trip transfers by air-conditioned vehicle. The itinerary also includes a 2-hour segment for getting from the pick-up point to the Mount Batur area, which helps explain why the overall day is around 10 hours.
Why I consider this a big deal: sunrise hikes can burn you out just with transport uncertainty. When transfers are included, you don’t have to negotiate timing with multiple drivers, guess the best meeting point, or worry about arriving too late for the summit window.
Also, being a private tour matters more than it sounds. Private doesn’t just mean privacy. It can mean less waiting around for other groups. That’s the kind of small difference that makes a long day feel manageable.
How hard is it really? Fitness, altitude timing, and the “real” commitment

The tour states a moderate physical fitness level is required. That’s a fair signal: this is not described as an easy walk. You’ll be hiking uphill, starting in the dark, aiming for a specific summit time.
I’d think of it like this:
- The challenge is mostly physical effort plus early-morning stamina.
- The time pressure comes from needing to be at the summit around 05:30 a.m.
- The altitude and cloud conditions can add chill while you’re waiting and watching sunrise.
If you’re generally active and handle early starts, this likely fits. If you don’t like steep uphill effort, or if cold mornings make you miserable, you might want to rethink or at least pack extra warm layers since a jacket isn’t included.
What to pack for a cold, early, summit-focused day
From the tour data, the only explicitly called-out clothing item is a jacket (not included). That’s the one non-negotiable.
Other practical packing logic, without inventing extra gear requirements:
- You’ll be using a flashlight and walking sticks during the hike, so you don’t need to bring those.
- You’ll have breakfast included, so you’re not expected to bring your own food.
- You’ll go straight to a hot spring afterward, so plan to keep it simple and comfortable.
The big takeaway: treat sunrise hiking in Bali like it’s a real winter-morning activity. Bring warmth. If you cut corners on clothing, you’ll feel it during the cold parts of the schedule.
Private tour pros: why “only your group” changes the experience
A private tour for your group only is listed here, and it’s a meaningful upgrade for sunrise hikes.
Here’s what it tends to improve:
- You get a calmer start. Early morning groups can feel chaotic if you’re constantly waiting or gathering.
- Timing stays focused. The itinerary centers on specific times: 03:30 a.m., 05:30 a.m., 08:00 a.m.
- You’re less likely to feel squeezed by other schedules.
If you travel with friends or family and you prefer moving as a unit, this fits well. If you’re a solo traveler who wants quiet, private also helps you avoid the feeling of shared early mornings.
The best part people rave about: smooth pickup-to-dropoff, and a fast-feeling descent
The most praised aspect of this experience centers on the full journey flow: pickup to drop-off feels organized from start to finish. That’s exactly what you want for a sunrise trek where delays can mess up the whole day.
Another highly praised detail is how the descent can feel fast. One review described coming down in a way that sounded like skiing. You shouldn’t expect literal winter conditions, but the idea matters: the downhill can move quickly and feel fun if you’re comfortable with balance on uneven ground. Walking sticks can help, especially when you’re tired after the climb.
So if you like the idea of not just “getting there,” but also feeling a sense of momentum on the way down, this tour’s pacing works.
Who should book this Mount Batur sunrise + hot spring combo
I think this is a great match if you:
- Want a sunrise experience that’s properly timed, not just a random early morning.
- Like tours that handle gear and basics like flashlight/walking sticks and breakfast.
- Want a recovery stop that’s included and scheduled right after the hike.
- Prefer the comfort of air-conditioned transfers back and forth.
You might want to skip or reconsider if:
- You’re not comfortable with a very early start (03:30 a.m.) and a moderate fitness hike.
- You tend to feel miserable in cold conditions and don’t plan for a jacket since it’s not included.
For couples, friends, and small groups—especially those staying around Ubud—this is one of the more straightforward “do it right” ways to tackle Mount Batur.
Should you book this tour?
If you want Mount Batur sunrise with the key supports in place—flashlight, walking sticks, breakfast, and included hot spring admission—this tour makes sense. The price is low enough that you feel good about doing it, but the inclusions are strong enough that it doesn’t feel like a bare-bones rush.
Book it if you’re ready for an early morning and you’ll bring a jacket. Pass if you hate cold starts or you’re looking for something more leisurely. For most people who want a real sunrise summit moment plus a hot-springs reset afterward, this one hits the sweet spot.
FAQ
How long is the Mount Batur trekking with hot springs tour?
The duration is listed as approximately 10 hours.
What time do I arrive at the Mount Batur start point?
The itinerary shows arrival at the parking/start point at 03:30 a.m.
What time do you reach the summit for sunrise?
The itinerary lists arrival at the summit/sunrise point at 05:30 a.m.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s listed as a private tour/activity, and only your group participates.
What are the main things included for the hike and breakfast?
Included items are walking stick and flashlight, plus breakfast with a banana sandwich and mineral water.
Are admission tickets included for Mount Batur and the hot springs?
Yes. Admission tickets are included for the Mount Batur stop and the Batur Natural Hot Spring stop.
Is a jacket included?
No. A jacket is listed as not included, so you’ll want to bring one.
What if weather is bad for Mount Batur sunrise?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Can I cancel for free?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.


































