REVIEW · BALI
Mount Agung Sunrise Trekking Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Bali Trekking Tour · Bookable on Viator
Night hike, big morning rewards.
Mount Agung is Bali’s highest and holiest mountain, and this tour turns that into a real midnight-to-sunrise mission. I love that you’re not just signing up for a walk—you’re aiming for a sunrise summit with a guide from the dark start all the way through the descent. The whole thing is structured around late-night timing, so the mountain feels like a different place than the daytime crowds ever do.
Hotel pickup and a private group also take a lot of stress out of logistics.
Two things I like a lot: first, the door-to-door pickup and drop-off from your Bali area means you can focus on the climb, not the drive. Second, the tour includes the basics that make a night hike more doable: headlamp and trekking poles, plus coffee/tea and breakfast before you head back down.
One consideration: this is not a gentle “walk in the hills.” It’s designed for strong fitness and trekking background, and the ascent can be very steep and technical, with the descent sometimes feeling even more dangerous if you’re not ready for rocky sections.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Why a Mount Agung sunrise trek feels different in Bali
- The overnight timeline: pickup around 9pm, Besakih start at 11pm, summit at 6am
- Besakih Temple and Pasar Agung: the cultural spine of the route
- The climb itself: steep, technical, and not for first-timers
- What’s included on the mountain: guide time, poles, headlamps, water, breakfast
- Pickup zones across Bali: door-to-door convenience you should actually use
- Price and value: what $109 buys on a steep, overnight private trek
- Who should book this Mount Agung sunrise trek
- The practical reality: how to set yourself up for success
- Should you book this Mount Agung Sunrise Trekking Tour?
- FAQ
- How early does the tour start?
- What time do we reach the summit for sunrise?
- How long is the Mount Agung sunrise trekking experience?
- Is this a private tour?
- Where does the tour start?
- What pickup areas are included?
- What trekking gear is provided?
- What food and drinks are included?
- What is the price and what’s included in the ticket?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key things to know before you go

- Private transportation + hotel pickup/drop-off from many Bali areas, including Ubud, Sanur, Canggu, Seminyak, Kuta, Jimbaran, with other areas available.
- Headlamp and trekking poles provided, so you’re not scrambling for gear at the last minute.
- Summit timing around 6:00am, giving you a solid chance to see sunrise from the top.
- Temple-route stops including Besakih Temple and a stop at Pasar Agung Temple along the route.
- Breakfast plus coffee/tea included, so the morning doesn’t end at the summit photo.
- Strong-fitness required, and some sections can feel more like scrambling than casual hiking.
Why a Mount Agung sunrise trek feels different in Bali

If you’ve done sunrises in beach towns, you already know the vibe: quiet sky, golden light, people holding up phones. Mount Agung flips the whole script. You’re chasing sunrise from Bali’s highest and holiest mountain, so the mood is more intense and more sacred than a typical early-morning viewpoint.
You also get to experience a side of Bali that doesn’t happen on a normal day trip: temple areas in the early hours, mountain trails in low light, and that slow shift from night hiking to first light. It’s a full-body experience, not a quick stop-and-go photo moment.
And there’s a practical benefit too. Since the trek is organized around a scheduled summit arrival, you’re not guessing when to turn around. Your guide keeps the plan moving so you can focus on your footing and breathing.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Bali.
The overnight timeline: pickup around 9pm, Besakih start at 11pm, summit at 6am

This tour is built like a relay race: you drive in the evening, climb at night, then return in daylight.
Typically, you’ll be picked up from your hotel around 9:00pm (the exact time depends on where you’re staying). The route then brings you to the Besakih Temple starting point around 11:00pm, and the trek begins shortly after, around 11:15pm.
The key target is reaching the summit around 6:00am, where you watch sunrise and spend time taking in the view. Then the descent begins around 7:30am. You finish at the finishing point around 11:30am, and you’ll board the car back to your hotel.
That schedule matters for two reasons. One: it puts you at the summit at the right time instead of hiking until you’re exhausted and hoping for the best. Two: it means your body needs to handle an overnight start—so the pacing and your gear choice really matter.
Besakih Temple and Pasar Agung: the cultural spine of the route

The trek doesn’t start in the middle of nowhere. It begins at Besakih Temple, which is located in Karangasem, and it also includes a stop along the route at Pasar Agung Temple.
Here’s why that matters beyond “it’s on the itinerary.” Temples in Bali aren’t random landmarks. They’re living spaces tied to daily life and religious practice. Even if you’re mostly focused on the mountain, these stops help you connect the hike to the cultural meaning of Mount Agung rather than treating it like a climb only.
At Besakih, you’re effectively stepping into the Mount Agung story before you start the steep hours. At Pasar Agung Temple, the stop can work like a mental reset—something brief to break the nighttime momentum and give you a clearer sense that you’re moving through a meaningful route, not just a steep trail.
A balanced expectation: you likely won’t get a full temple tour at a relaxing pace during the overnight timeline. This is still a trekking-focused day. Think of the temple stops as brief, intentional moments woven into the hike, not a separate sightseeing package.
The climb itself: steep, technical, and not for first-timers

The biggest thing to understand is the style of hiking you’re signing up for. This is not labeled as a beginner-friendly stroll. You should have a strong physical fitness level and trekking background before you go.
In practical terms, the ascent is steep and can involve rocky, technical sections. Some people describe the experience as needing more than standard hiking skills—more like scrambling in places—especially during a night climb when footing is harder and visibility is limited.
Then the descent comes into play. The downhill can feel tougher than the uphill because steep rocky paths are punishing, and your legs work differently when you’re controlling your speed. One key review theme is that the descent can be the more stressful part of the whole adventure.
So what should you do with this info? Train your expectations. If you’re used to moderate trails, this will be a step up. If you’ve done technical hiking before, you’ll likely feel more confident managing balance and rhythm in the dark.
Your guide is with you the entire way, which helps a lot—especially when you hit tricky bits where turning around or slowing down can become tempting. Gear support matters too, and this tour provides trekking poles and headlamps to help you keep your footing.
What’s included on the mountain: guide time, poles, headlamps, water, breakfast
One of the best value signals here is that you get the tools that matter most for a midnight hike.
You’ll travel with a trekking guide from start to finish. That’s not just company—it’s route management and pacing. When the terrain gets steep, a steady guide helps you avoid the common mistake of burning energy too fast early in the night.
You also get walking stick (trekking poles) and a headlamp. Night trekking without reliable lighting is a bad time. With a headlamp, you can move more safely and read the trail better while you keep your hands more stable.
Food support is included in the form of breakfast and coffee and/or tea. It’s easy to underestimate how much this helps on a long, early timeline. Sunrise hikes are as much about fueling and recovery as they are about viewing light over the horizon. A real meal after the summit keeps the day from turning into pure “adrenaline and vibes.”
You’ll also have bottled water. Hydration is simple, but it’s also one of those basics that can be forgotten when you’re focused on the climb.
Pickup zones across Bali: door-to-door convenience you should actually use

The tour is private and includes pickup and drop-off, which is a big deal when you’re leaving around 9pm and returning around late morning.
Pickup service is available in several areas: Ubud, Sanur, Canggu, Seminyak, Kuta, and Jimbaran. If you’re staying somewhere less central, the tour notes that pickup and drop-off for Sidemen, Candidasa, and Nusa Dua are also available.
That matters because Mount Agung hikes can be logistically annoying if you’re relying on taxis at night. With a planned pickup window, you reduce stress and you’re more likely to arrive at the starting point on time for the 11pm Besakih start.
One more practical point: the tour mentions a mobile ticket option. That’s useful if you’re traveling with a phone-first routine and want to avoid paper.
Price and value: what $109 buys on a steep, overnight private trek

At $109 per person, this tour is priced like an experience that includes real operational costs: private transportation, a dedicated guide, and night trekking gear (headlamp and trekking poles). Add in breakfast, coffee/tea, and bottled water, and the total value starts to make sense.
It also helps that it’s consistently well-regarded: it holds a 4.9 rating with 98% recommending it. A high recommendation rate is a good sign for something as demanding as this, because most people who book sunrise treks are there for a specific outcome.
The value angle for you: you’re paying for fewer uncertainties. You get pickup, a schedule built around sunrise timing, and gear that supports night footing. You’re not trying to DIY a route, guess transport timing, or find equipment after dark.
The “cost you pay” isn’t money—it’s effort. If you’re not fit or not comfortable with steep rocky hiking, the tour can feel like a struggle rather than a triumph.
Who should book this Mount Agung sunrise trek
This is best for people who are ready for a physical challenge and who want a sunrise that feels tied to Bali’s sacred mountain culture.
You’ll likely enjoy it most if:
- You have strong fitness and trekking experience.
- You’re comfortable hiking in the dark and managing steep terrain.
- You want a private group setting where your guide can focus on your pace.
- You appreciate temple-route cultural context rather than a pure climb-only tour.
If you’re a beginner or you only do flat day hikes, treat this as a stop on your dream list rather than a “try it and see” option. The tour’s own guidance and the difficulty comments point the same direction: this is not the right place to learn technical footing skills.
The practical reality: how to set yourself up for success
Let’s be real—this kind of sunrise trek tests two things: legs and judgment.
First, keep your expectations grounded. Summit hikes often sound simple until you’re climbing steep rocky ground in low light. This route is designed for stronger trekking ability, so you should arrive with confidence in your readiness.
Second, lean on the included gear. Use the trekking poles for control on both ascent and descent. Wear and use the headlamp so you’re not guessing where your next step lands.
Third, trust the timing plan. The schedule targets a summit arrival around 6:00am. That means your guide’s pacing matters. Going too hard too early can wreck your energy before sunrise—then the descent becomes miserable.
Finally, don’t ignore the hardest-part warnings. Descent can be rough on steep technical paths. If your confidence dips when you’re tired, slow down and let your guide manage the rhythm. A successful sunrise is nice; safe footing is better.
Should you book this Mount Agung Sunrise Trekking Tour?
Book it if you want a true Mount Agung sunrise experience with private pickup, a guide throughout, and the gear and food support that make a midnight start feel manageable. The combination of sunrise timing (summit around 6am), included breakfast/coffee/tea, and headlamp plus trekking poles is exactly what you want for a steep overnight climb.
Skip it if you’re not ready for technical, very steep hiking, especially if you’re new to trekking or you don’t have the fitness to handle a demanding ascent and a careful descent.
My quick check before you commit: ask yourself if you’ve handled steep rocky trails before and if you’re comfortable hiking at night. If the answer is yes, this can be a memorable Bali “one big day” moment. If it’s no, you’ll probably want a gentler climb first—then come back when you’re properly prepared.
FAQ
How early does the tour start?
You’ll be picked up from your hotel around 9:00pm, and the trek starts after arriving at Besakih Temple around 11:00pm, with trekking beginning about 11:15pm.
What time do we reach the summit for sunrise?
The plan targets arrival at the summit around 6:00am for sunrise.
How long is the Mount Agung sunrise trekking experience?
The trekking experience is listed as about 8 hours, though the overall schedule runs overnight from late evening into late morning.
Is this a private tour?
Yes. It’s a private tour for your group only.
Where does the tour start?
The trekking starting point is at Besakih Temple, with the route also including a stop at Pasar Agung Temple.
What pickup areas are included?
Pickup and drop-off are included for Ubud, Sanur, Canggu, Seminyak, Kuta, and Jimbaran. Pickup and drop-off for Sidemen, Candidasa, and Nusa Dua are also available.
What trekking gear is provided?
The tour provides trekking poles (walking stick) and a headlamp.
What food and drinks are included?
Breakfast is included, along with coffee and/or tea, plus bottled water.
What is the price and what’s included in the ticket?
The price is $109 per person. Included items cover private transportation, a trekking guide, trekking poles and headlamp, coffee/tea, breakfast, bottled water, and admission ticket as noted in the schedule.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours before the experience start time for a full refund.












