REVIEW · UBUD
Beji Griya Waterfall Bali Spritual Holy Bath Experience
Book on Viator →Operated by Bali Ritual Tours · Bookable on Viator
Want a Bali ritual that feels personal? This Beji Griya Waterfall experience is built around a guided melukat purification, with a Balinese priest and the holy-water ceremony set in a sacred temple setting. One practical catch: women on their period aren’t allowed to join, so plan accordingly before you commit.
What I really like is how the tour handles the details. You get round-trip pickup in the Ubud and Sanur areas, plus the sarong, offerings, coconut water blessing, towel/locker, and even coffee or tea—so you can focus on participating rather than figuring out logistics.
In This Review
- Quick, practical highlights
- A Sacred Waterfall Bath in Ubud: What Melukat Is Really About
- Your 3-Hour Plan From Ubud or Sanur: Smooth Day Flow
- Beji Griya Waterfall Ritual Steps: What You Can Expect on Arrival
- The “stress release” feeling (without the woo-woo pressure)
- The Priest, the Offerings, and the Sarong: Why the Inclusions Matter
- If your driver also helps beyond the ritual
- Photos at a Holy Site: How to Get Great Shots Without Getting Wrong
- Price and Value: Is $45 Worth It for a Private Purification?
- Who Should Book This (and Who Should Skip)
- Photo-Friendly, Weather-Dependent, and Best as a Main Stop
- A Simple Packing Checklist (Based on What’s Provided)
- Should You Book Beji Griya Purification in Ubud?
- FAQ
- How long is the Beji Griya Waterfall purification experience?
- Is pickup included?
- What’s included in the ritual package?
- Do I need to bring a sarong or offerings?
- Are there any restrictions on who can join?
- What happens if the weather is bad?
Quick, practical highlights

- Private group setup so you move through the ritual space at your own pace
- Balinese priest-led melukat with included offerings and guidance through the steps
- Sarong + towel/locker provided for a smooth start without last-minute shopping
- Coconut for the water blessing and a simple, meaningful touch to the ceremony
- Round-trip transfers from Ubud/Sanur so your day stays easy
- 3 hours total (about 2 hours on site) gives you a spiritual stop without swallowing the day
A Sacred Waterfall Bath in Ubud: What Melukat Is Really About

If you’re in Ubud and you want more than a pretty waterfall photo, this ritual-style visit is the point. Beji Griya Waterfall is a sacred temple setting tied to melukat, a Balinese purification practice meant to clear spiritual and mental blockages through holy water.
The idea is simple: you’re not just sightseeing—you’re participating in a ceremony intended to help release tension and support spiritual balance. The holy water element matters here. It’s treated as a real part of the blessing, not just a scenic backdrop.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Ubud.
Your 3-Hour Plan From Ubud or Sanur: Smooth Day Flow
This is a private tour for your group only, with a pickup option from addresses in the Ubud and Sanur areas. That alone can be a big deal in Bali, where travel time can quietly eat your schedule.
The total time is about 3 hours, with around 2 hours at Beji Griya for the ritual experience. You’ll also have access to an on-the-go setup: the tour offers a mobile ticket, and it’s designed so you can keep the rest of your day flexible.
My practical advice: treat this as a main event on your calendar. Try not to stack something intense right before it. The ceremony is the core; your energy will thank you.
Beji Griya Waterfall Ritual Steps: What You Can Expect on Arrival

The visit centers on a melukat purification ceremony at the Beji Griya Waterfall temple. You’ll join the spiritual atmosphere of the site, with local pilgrims moving through the process in a way that feels lived-in rather than staged.
Here’s what you should plan for: your priest guides you through the ritual, and you’ll have the required items. The tour includes the offerings, and it provides a sarong so you’re dressed correctly for participating. If you’re the type who likes to know what you’re doing (or hates feeling lost), this part is a relief.
Also, the process is described as a purification intended to remove afflictions and help with blockages that may be affecting your results in life. That’s not a theme park pitch; it’s the spiritual framing behind why people come to the water.
The “stress release” feeling (without the woo-woo pressure)
The experience is often described as a way to let go of tension. Whether you view that in spiritual terms, emotional terms, or both, the structure still works: you slow down, you follow instructions, you take part in a ritual with meaning. For many people, that’s exactly what makes it feel powerful.
Just go in with a respectful mindset. This isn’t a performance you watch from the sidelines. It’s a space where you participate.
The Priest, the Offerings, and the Sarong: Why the Inclusions Matter

A big reason this tour is good value is that it removes the guesswork. You don’t have to figure out what to bring, what to wear, or how the ceremony works. Everything essential is covered.
Included items you’ll actually use:
- Entrance ticket
- Offerings and priest who guide the purification
- Sarong for the ritual
- Coconut for the water blessing
- Towel, locker, and sarong support
- Coffee or tea after (or as part of the experience flow)
What this means for you: less time preparing, less time worrying, and more time being present. If you’ve ever shown up at a religious site without the right basics, you know how distracting that can be. This tour tries to prevent that problem.
If your driver also helps beyond the ritual
In the feedback, I saw an extra point that stands out: getting a good guide can make the day smoother. One guide named Gusti was praised for being kind and informative, and for helping connect the day to other interests like coffee plantations even when it wasn’t strictly required. Not every day works out the same, but it’s a nice reminder that the human side matters, not just the itinerary.
Photos at a Holy Site: How to Get Great Shots Without Getting Wrong

You’ll be able to take photos in sarongs amid the waterfall setting, which is a big part of why many people book. The key is how you approach it.
My rule: follow the priest first, then let photos happen. If you treat the ritual like the priority and the camera like a secondary tool, you’ll blend in better and keep the mood respectful.
Also, since there are ritual steps and items involved, be ready for moments where you’re expected to pause, listen, and move as instructed. Don’t rush the process just to get one perfect shot.
Price and Value: Is $45 Worth It for a Private Purification?

At $45 per person, the value is really in the package, not just the waterfall. You’re paying for a private setup with round-trip transportation, the entrance ticket, and the ceremony support: offerings, priest guidance, coconut water blessing, plus sarong and basic conveniences like towel and locker.
If you tried to do this independently, you’d likely spend time—and mental energy—figuring out:
- how to join the purification properly
- what offerings are needed
- how to handle the clothing requirement
- where to store items
- how to coordinate a comfortable schedule without stress
For a 3-hour commitment, it’s a reasonable deal when you add up all the included pieces. You’re buying clarity and support.
Who Should Book This (and Who Should Skip)

This experience fits best if you want a Bali activity that’s not only visual, but also structured around a spiritual practice. It’s especially well-suited for people who:
- like guided experiences where someone explains what to do
- want a meaningful cultural stop in Ubud
- appreciate a private group setting
- plan to pair it with the rest of your day without long wandering
The one hard no from the tour info: women on their period can’t join the activity. If that applies to you right now, don’t book expecting flexibility. The rule is clear.
Beyond that, consider the “authenticity mood” factor. One negative experience mentioned that the spiritual essence felt diluted as the site became more commercial. That doesn’t mean it’s not spiritual—it does mean you should set expectations. You’re going to a place where locals and visitors interact, so the tone can vary.
Photo-Friendly, Weather-Dependent, and Best as a Main Stop

This experience needs good weather. If weather causes a cancellation, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. That’s important because waterfalls and holy-water rituals don’t run the same way in heavy rain.
Plan your day with some flexibility. If your schedule is packed with time-sensitive reservations, you might want to keep this ritual stop earlier rather than later, so you have options if the plan shifts (you can’t always control the weather).
A Simple Packing Checklist (Based on What’s Provided)
The tour includes key items like sarong, towel, and locker, so you don’t need to overpack. Still, I’d come prepared for the reality of a water-centered ritual.
Think practical:
- Wear comfortable clothes that are easy to change after
- Bring a plan for dry storage during the ceremony
- Expect you may get some water contact because it’s a purification bath
Since coffee or tea is included, you don’t need to worry about that piece—but you will still need lunch later.
Should You Book Beji Griya Purification in Ubud?
If you’re deciding between another waterfall stop and a guided spiritual ceremony, I’d lean toward this one. The value is strong because the tour doesn’t just drop you at a site. It supplies the sarong, offerings, and priest-led guidance, plus round-trip transportation from Ubud/Sanur.
Book it if:
- you want a private, structured ritual
- you like having the right materials handled for you
- you’re open to participating in a ceremony, not just watching
Skip it or be cautious if:
- you need to avoid the period restriction
- you want a totally quiet, off-grid experience with zero commercial feel
- your schedule can’t handle weather changes
If you match those boxes, you’ll likely walk away with something you can actually carry through the rest of your trip: calmer attention, a story worth telling, and a very Bali kind of meaning wrapped around a waterfall.
FAQ
How long is the Beji Griya Waterfall purification experience?
The tour runs for about 3 hours total, with around 2 hours spent at the Beji Griya Waterfall purification experience.
Is pickup included?
Yes. Round-trip transportation is offered, including pickup from addresses in the Ubud and Sanur areas.
What’s included in the ritual package?
It includes an entrance ticket, offerings and a priest who guide the purification, coconut for the water blessing, sarong use, towel and locker use, plus coffee or tea.
Do I need to bring a sarong or offerings?
No. The tour provides a sarong for the ritual and includes the offerings used during the purification.
Are there any restrictions on who can join?
Yes. Women who are on their period are not allowed to join the activity.
What happens if the weather is bad?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.





















