REVIEW · UBUD
Bali Bike Tour Ubud Area
Book on Viator →Operated by Cili Travel – Authentic Bali Adventures · Bookable on Viator
This Bali Bike Tour in the Ubud area is built for people who want more than temples on a bus. You’ll get quiet backroads north of Ubud, pedal past rice fields and local compounds, and learn what daily Balinese life looks like from the inside. The ride is mostly downhill, so it feels relaxed rather than punishing.
What I like most is the mix of active sightseeing plus real human moments. You stop for a family compound visit where you can see day-to-day routines up close, and you finish with traditional Balinese lunch overlooking the rice fields. Another big win is safety and ease: you’ll ride with a helmet and safety gear, while a support vehicle follows.
The main drawback to consider: this is weather-dependent countryside cycling. If conditions are poor, the tour can be changed or refunded, so keep some flexibility in your plans.
In This Review
- Quick take: what makes this Ubud bike tour special
- Why biking north of Ubud is such a smart move
- Getting set up: bikes, safety gear, and how the tour keeps you comfortable
- Stop 1: Petang (morning drive with mountain and rice views)
- Stop 2: Ubud countryside cycling + a family compound visit
- A quick heads-up on pace
- Stop 3: Bongkasa village ride-end + lunch in a family house
- The ride experience: mostly downhill, supportive pacing, and real safety
- What’s included (and how it affects value)
- Price and value: why about $67.28 can make sense
- Who this Bali bike tour suits best
- Weather and timing: the one planning factor you can’t ignore
- Should you book this Bali Bike Tour Ubud Area?
- FAQ
- What time does the Bali Bike Tour in the Ubud area start?
- How long is the tour?
- Is pickup included?
- Is this a private tour or a group tour?
- What does the tour include besides the bike?
- What happens during the bike ride?
- Do I need experience riding a mountain bike?
- What languages are the guides available in?
- What should I budget for?
- What if the weather is bad?
- Final verdict: quick call
Quick take: what makes this Ubud bike tour special

- Mostly downhill riding that works for most fitness levels, without feeling like a workout contest
- Small-group feel with a support vehicle, plus a safety car following for peace of mind
- Family compound visit to see how people live and what routines look like in real time
- Petang → Ubud → Bongkasa route with a mix of views, villages, and quiet lanes
- Balinese lunch included after the ride, served in a cozy setting with rice-field views
- English/Danish guide support, and guides who explain culture where it happens
Why biking north of Ubud is such a smart move

Ubud is busy, and the usual “see-it-all” routes can feel a bit like you’re watching Bali through a windshield. This tour changes the angle. Instead of sitting in traffic and stopping at the same headline spots, you move slowly through backroads where the pace matches the countryside.
You also get a calmer kind of sightseeing. The route description points to quiet lanes north of Ubud, and that matters. When you’re on a bike, you notice things that buses miss: small garden patches, the rhythm of villages, and the way people go about their morning without performing for visitors.
One more practical point: the tour is positioned as a mostly downhill experience. That doesn’t mean it’s effortless, but it changes the whole vibe. You can concentrate on the scenery and the cultural stops rather than wondering whether you’ll survive the climb.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Ubud
Getting set up: bikes, safety gear, and how the tour keeps you comfortable

Before you ride, you’re sorted with a quality mountain bike, plus a helmet and safety gear. That alone is a big deal in Bali, where roads and track conditions can vary a lot. If you’re not used to mountain bikes, the good news is that the tour design focuses on a ride style that doesn’t require advanced cycling skills.
You’ll also have help moving the day along. There’s an air-conditioned vehicle for the drive between areas (including the start point), and a support vehicle/safety car following while you’re on the bikes. In real life, that kind of follow-car safety matters because it reduces stress if something small goes wrong—like an equipment issue, a slow moment, or kids who need extra time.
The tour is sold as both a private experience and a small-group-style ride. Practically, that usually means you won’t be packed into a large crowd. You’re more likely to get time for questions and to actually hear the guide.
Stop 1: Petang (morning drive with mountain and rice views)
Your day begins with a drive to the start point. Petang is your first named stop, and you’ll spend about 1 hour on the transfer. This is not just logistics—it’s where you start noticing the setting: mountains and rice fields in the background as you move into the quieter cycling areas north of Ubud.
Think of this as your mental warm-up. You’re seeing the countryside from the road first, then switching to the bike so you can appreciate how the terrain changes once you’re moving slower and closer to the ground.
There’s no “admission ticket” cost here listed, and the stop is mainly about getting you into position for the ride.
Stop 2: Ubud countryside cycling + a family compound visit

After the drive, the main ride happens around the Ubud area, and that’s where the tour earns its reputation. You’ll have about 3 hours here, riding a mountain bike through rice fields, winding lanes, and local villages.
On a tour like this, the bike route itself is part of the story. Rice-field areas in Bali often feel peaceful, but from a bike you experience that peace differently. You’re closer to the details—paths, plants, small structures, and the way people organize their outdoor spaces.
Then comes one of the most praised parts: a family compound visit. This is where you see daily routines and get cultural insight not as a lecture, but as a live observation. In the reviews, the compound visit stands out for showing things like daily life and how offerings are part of normal rhythms.
Guides make a huge difference here. The tour uses an official guide (English and Danish language support is stated), and several guide names appear in reviews—people like Kumbara, Made Kumbara, Arya, Yande Widianthara, and Rias. You shouldn’t treat that as guaranteed, but it does tell you what to look for: a guide who explains what you’re seeing right where it happens.
What you’ll want to bring to this stop is patience and respect. A family compound visit works best when you’re curious, listen closely, and keep your camera manners in check.
A quick heads-up on pace
Even though the ride is described as mostly downhill, you’ll still be cycling and you’ll be on uneven rural paths. The tour says it’s suitable for most fitness levels, and that matches the “relaxed” style in the description. Still, if you have mobility limitations, or if you dislike long periods in the saddle, you might find it slower than you expected.
Stop 3: Bongkasa village ride-end + lunch in a family house

Your final stop is Bongkasa, and this is where the day turns from cycling into a cultural meal. The time here is about 45 minutes for the ride ending and lunch.
Lunch is not an afterthought. It’s described as authentic Balinese food in a family house setting, which is one reason people rate this tour so highly. You’re already learning about daily life and local routines, then you sit down to eat what locals eat as part of the normal flow of the day.
In many places, “included lunch” means a simple set menu at a generic restaurant. Here, the structure is different: the lunch is positioned as a cozy, family-style interaction, tied to the rural theme of the ride.
You’ll also have drinking water included, which is practical in the Ubud area—warm weather and biking add up fast.
The ride experience: mostly downhill, supportive pacing, and real safety

Let’s talk about what the biking actually feels like. The tour is marketed as mostly downhill, and that’s a key design choice. It means you can keep your attention on the environment—rice terraces, lanes, and village life—without being locked into heavy climbing or constant braking.
Safety is repeatedly supported by the structure:
- Helmet and safety gear are included
- A safety car/support vehicle follows
- The guide is expected to talk you through what you’re seeing
In the reviews, the idea of safety and guidance comes up again and again, with riders appreciating that the ride doesn’t feel chaotic. That’s exactly what you want in a countryside cycling tour.
One more detail that matters: you start at 8:30 am. Morning rides are usually cooler, and that changes the whole comfort level. It also gives you daylight for rural roads and makes photos easier without the harsh heat.
What’s included (and how it affects value)

Here’s what you’re paying for beyond the bike:
- Quality mountain bike + helmet + safety gear
- Traditional Balinese lunch in the post-ride segment
- Drinking water
- Air-conditioned vehicle for transfers
- Safety car following
- Official guide (English and Danish noted)
- Pickup offered is stated in the features list
- Mobile ticket is listed
And what’s not included:
- Tips (not included)
When you compare this to a cheaper “bike rental plus do-it-yourself route,” the inclusions are the point. A guided route gives you the cultural stops, the safe handling on rural paths, and the lunch plan. A do-it-yourself rental might be cheaper, but you lose the context and the family interactions.
Also, the guide languages matter. If you want your questions answered naturally—about offerings, daily routines, and local culture—English or Danish support makes that easier.
Price and value: why about $67.28 can make sense

At $67.28 per person (about a half-day experience), this tour sits in the middle of what you’ll find for active day trips in Bali. It’s not the cheapest option, but the value comes from bundling.
You’re getting:
- A guided countryside ride (not a self-guided loop)
- A family compound visit
- A real lunch included
- Safety and support via a following car
- Bike + helmet + safety gear
- Transfers with an air-conditioned vehicle
If you’ve ever booked tours that cost similar money but focus only on stops and photos, this is different. The day is organized around movement and learning in place. You’re not just getting from A to B—you’re slowing down and experiencing rural life in a way cars don’t do.
The best value tip: treat this as a “core day” in your Ubud area schedule. Put it early enough that you’re fresh, and pair it with slower evenings (markets, cafés, and rice-field viewpoints) afterward.
Who this Bali bike tour suits best
This tour is a great match if you:
- Want countryside Bali north of Ubud, not just crowded hotspots
- Like the idea of a guided ride with context
- Enjoy gentle-to-moderate activity and mostly downhill terrain
- Care about authentic interactions, like seeing daily routines and having lunch where locals eat
- Appreciate a tour with clear safety support
It’s less ideal if you:
- Need strenuous climbing, or dislike any uneven rural cycling
- Have very limited mobility and need step-free access details (the tour says you can ask about accessibility, but specifics aren’t listed here)
- Are only interested in big named attractions and nothing else
Weather and timing: the one planning factor you can’t ignore
This experience requires good weather. That’s important because it’s a bike tour on countryside roads. If conditions are poor, you may be offered a different date or a full refund.
So build this into a schedule with at least one flexible day. In the Ubud area, weather can change quickly, and you don’t want to lock yourself into a tour on a day you’ve already fully scheduled for something else.
Should you book this Bali Bike Tour Ubud Area?
I’d book this if you want the Ubud area to feel real—not staged—and you’re happy with a half-day that mixes mostly downhill cycling, a family compound visit, and included Balinese lunch.
It’s also a strong choice if you value safety and guidance. The bike + helmet setup, the follow car, and the guide-led culture stops make it easier to relax and enjoy the ride.
Skip it only if your priority is major “top attraction” sightseeing with zero cultural stops. For many people, this is exactly the kind of day that makes Bali click—because you’re traveling at the pace of the countryside, not the pace of a checklist.
FAQ
What time does the Bali Bike Tour in the Ubud area start?
The tour start time is 8:30 am.
How long is the tour?
It lasts about 6 hours.
Is pickup included?
Pickup is offered, and the tour also uses an air-conditioned vehicle for transfers.
Is this a private tour or a group tour?
This is listed as a private tour/activity, meaning only your group participates.
What does the tour include besides the bike?
It includes a quality mountain bike, helmet and safety gear, drinking water, an air-conditioned vehicle, a safety car following, and an official guide. Lunch is included as well.
What happens during the bike ride?
You’ll cycle through the Ubud countryside, including rice fields, winding lanes, and local villages, plus you visit a family compound. The ride ends in Bongkasa.
Do I need experience riding a mountain bike?
The tour says most travelers can participate, and it’s designed to be mostly downhill with comfort in mind. If you’re brand new to mountain bikes, it’s still worth checking with the operator if you’re unsure.
What languages are the guides available in?
The tour lists the official guide as English and Danish.
What should I budget for?
Tips are not included. Everything else listed as part of the tour is included, including lunch and water.
What if the weather is bad?
This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Final verdict: quick call
Book it if you want a calmer, countryside-focused Ubud day with real rural life and an included lunch. Pass if your plans don’t allow weather flexibility or if you only want classic top sights with zero village/cultural interaction.





























