Bali can feel like three trips in one day. This Ubud Tanah Lot Tour strings together waterfall power and coastal temple drama with a smooth, private-car schedule. I like how the day keeps moving without feeling rushed, and I like that you can add prepaid entry tickets for easier planning.
What makes this one especially useful is the mix of sights that each tell a different side of Bali: artisan shopping in Ubud, a working coffee/agrotourism stop, then a sea-temple finish. The one drawback to plan around is weather: a heavy rain can throw off the timing, and the experience notes it needs good weather.
Because it is built as a private day with hotel pickup, you’re not doing puzzle-piece transfers between areas. You’ll still want to bring a little patience for a long day (8 to 10 hours), and you’ll need to handle meals yourself since lunch isn’t included.
In This Review
- Key Things You’ll Notice on This Tour
- The Big Picture: Why This Combo Makes Sense
- Pickup and Time on the Road: How Logistics Affect Your Day
- Tegenungan Waterfall: Big Nature, Real Time to Enjoy It
- Tegalalang Rice Terrace: Classic Views With a Familiar Routine
- Ubud Traditional Art Market: Shopping That’s More Than Souvenirs
- Puseh Batuan Temple: A Short Stop With Meaning and Scenery
- Teba Sari Bali Agrotourism: Coffee Fields and a Rest Break
- Tanah Lot Temple: Cliff Views, Tide Timing, and Night-Level Magic
- Price and Value: Is $22 a Good Deal?
- The Weather Factor: One Reason to Keep Your Plans Flexible
- Who This Tour Suits Best (and Who Should Rethink)
- Should You Book This Ubud Tanah Lot Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Ubud Tanah Lot Tour?
- Does the tour include hotel pickup?
- Is the tour private?
- Are entrance tickets included?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is lunch included?
- What should I expect at Tanah Lot?
- What happens if the weather is poor?
Key Things You’ll Notice on This Tour
- Private air-conditioned car: hotel pickup and stress-free transfers across Bali’s north-to-coast route
- Tegenungan Waterfall time: a full stop with time to actually enjoy the falls, not just pose and go
- Tegalalang Rice Terrace + Ubud Art Market: classic views paired with traditional crafts shopping
- Batuan Temple (Puseh): a Hindu temple stop that’s also open for public visiting and scenic
- Teba Sari coffee/agrotourism: coffee fields plus a place to relax and sample
- Tanah Lot at low tide moments: cliff-and-ocean views that can change based on sea level
The Big Picture: Why This Combo Makes Sense
This tour is trying to solve a common Bali problem: you want the Instagram hits, but you also want culture and a sense of place. So instead of stacking only beaches and temples, the route mixes nature, crafts, and a working plantation-style stop.
I really like that it pairs Ubud-area highlights with Tanah Lot, rather than forcing you to choose one side of the island. You get inland Bali views (rice terraces, art shopping, and temples) and then you close with the ocean cliff scenery that Tanah Lot is famous for. If your Bali time is limited, this structure is a smart way to hit both moods in one day.
Just keep one thing in mind: this is a long day. You’re scheduled for 8 to 10 hours, so you’ll get the most out of it if you travel light, carry water habits, and accept that you’ll be on the move more than you would on a slower half-day.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Seminyak.
Pickup and Time on the Road: How Logistics Affect Your Day
The experience is built around hassle-free transfers, with pickup offered from hotels in Ubud and also much of south Bali. That matters because driving yourself or coordinating separate rides can eat up your energy and scatter your timing.
You’ll ride in a private, comfortable air-conditioned car, with an English-speaking driver who acts as your guide. The tour also includes bottled mineral water and free Wi-Fi, which is handy for quick map checks, messaging, or just charging your phone without fighting for signal.
One more detail: this is listed as a private tour/activity, so only your group participates. That typically means you can move at a pace that fits your group size and comfort level. It also means fewer people to herd, which can make the day feel smoother.
Tegenungan Waterfall: Big Nature, Real Time to Enjoy It
Tegenungan Waterfall is the first stop, and it sets the tone fast. This waterfall is in the Gianyar area, and the schedule highlights that you can get closer to the water’s power, with even the option to soak.
What you’ll love here is the chance to feel the scale. Waterfalls on Bali can be pretty, but this one is known for the feeling of being right there near the action. If you like nature stops that don’t just function as a quick photo stop, this start is a strong move.
The practical catch is weather and comfort. The experience notes it requires good weather, and one review specifically called out heavy rain interrupting the rest of the tour. I’d treat that as a hint: bring a light rain layer or poncho, and be ready for timing shifts if the sky opens up. Also wear footwear that works around slippery spots.
If you’re the type who wants one dramatic nature moment early in the day (instead of waiting until late afternoon), this first stop pays off.
Tegalalang Rice Terrace: Classic Views With a Familiar Routine
After the waterfall, you’ll head to Tegalalang Rice Terrace, one of Bali’s most photographed scenes. The schedule describes it as offering natural beauty of rice fields and notes it’s a favorite spot for pictures.
This is the kind of stop where you can get what you want in 60 minutes:
- a scenic walk along viewpoint areas
- time for photos
- a chance to enjoy the feel of rice-growing country
The real value of this stop isn’t only the view. It’s also a reminder that Bali’s cultural landscape is built around agriculture. You’re seeing a working kind of scenery, not just a decorative one.
The drawback is that it’s popular, so expect a typical tourist flow in an area like this. The tour’s advantage is that you get guided timing and a dedicated block, so you aren’t trying to schedule it yourself after you’re already tired.
Ubud Traditional Art Market: Shopping That’s More Than Souvenirs
Next up is the Ubud Traditional Art Market, with about an hour scheduled. This is where you can shop for traditional Balinese craftsmanship and souvenirs—think small items, accessories, and art pieces.
What I like about pairing this market with rice terrace time is that it balances “nature time” with “people time.” You’re not only looking at landscapes; you’re also engaging with local craftsmanship. For a lot of visitors, this is the moment where Bali starts to feel personal, because you’re looking at handmade items and deciding what you actually want to take home.
Keep your expectations grounded. Markets like this are great for browsing and buying small things, but they can also encourage impulse buys if you’re hungry or stressed. If lunch isn’t included (it isn’t here), plan a snack strategy. Even a quick bite before you shop can help you shop smarter and enjoy it more.
Puseh Batuan Temple: A Short Stop With Meaning and Scenery
The schedule includes Puseh Batuan Temple, also referred to as Pura Puseh. The stop is about 30 minutes, and the description calls it a large temple with wonderful scenery. It’s noted as a holy place for Hindu people, but open for public visitors.
This stop is short on purpose, and that can be a good thing. In a full day, a 30-minute cultural stop can give you a sense of Bali’s spiritual landscape without dragging your schedule into an all-day temple marathon.
What tends to make this type of stop memorable is how the temple setting feels integrated with its surroundings. The description emphasizes scenery, and temple visits are often where you slow down for a minute. If you’re coming off a waterfall and rice terrace, this is a chance to switch gears from movement to quiet observation.
Teba Sari Bali Agrotourism: Coffee Fields and a Rest Break
Then comes Teba Sari Bali Agrotourism, around one hour. The tour description calls it a wonderful agrotourism with beautiful coffee fields, plus a resto, bar, and lounge area.
This is more than a photo stop. Agrotourism stops are valuable because they connect Bali’s coffee culture to a place, not just a product. Even if you only have an hour, it gives you a break in the day where you can slow down, walk around a bit, and reset before the final coastal leg.
The coffee stop also helps the overall pacing. By the time you reach Tanah Lot later, you’ll be glad you had a calmer hour in the middle.
One small consideration: since lunch isn’t included, this kind of stop can function as your food planning checkpoint. The description mentions a resto and bar, so you might find options there if you want something more than water and snacks—just don’t assume it’s included in the tour price.
Tanah Lot Temple: Cliff Views, Tide Timing, and Night-Level Magic
You end at Tanah Lot Temple, which the description highlights as the place to go for ocean views and sea cliffs. Tanah Lot is one of those Bali sights where the surroundings are part of the attraction.
The big reason Tanah Lot works as a finale is the way the scenery can shift. One review described arriving when sea level was low, which exposed a pathway to the temple rock. People walked up and took pictures. Then, at night, the sea backed up and covered the path again—making the whole experience feel like it had a living, changing quality.
Here’s your practical takeaway: if your timing puts you there earlier or later, you might see different versions of the same coastline. That doesn’t mean one is better for everyone—it means you’re experiencing a place that reacts to the ocean.
The tour gives you about 2 hours here, which is plenty to enjoy the views, take photos, and watch activity around the cliffs. Just remember this is a coastal area, so comfort matters. Plan for wind and sea humidity, and keep your phone protected.
Price and Value: Is $22 a Good Deal?
At $22 per person, this tour sits in the affordable range for a private full-day plan that includes hotel pickup, a private air-conditioned car, bottled water, and an English-speaking driver.
To evaluate value, focus on what’s included versus what you’ll pay separately:
- Included: private car, water, free Wi-Fi, insurance, English-speaking driver/guide, and entrance tickets are listed as optional
- Not included: lunch
- Plus: the experience offers the option to upgrade for prepaid entry tickets, which is designed to reduce hassle
The upgrade piece is worth thinking about. If you prefer to reduce decision-making on the day and avoid pay-on-site logistics, prepaid tickets can be a comfort win. If you’re the type who likes flexibility and you don’t mind handling entry fees yourself, the base option might be fine.
Also note that the tour is described as having group discounts and a mobile ticket. Those are small touches, but on a busy island like Bali, anything that reduces friction helps.
One more timing detail: it’s commonly booked about 13 days in advance on average. That suggests it’s a popular route for people doing a first Bali trip or a short stay who want Ubud plus Tanah Lot without building their own itinerary.
The Weather Factor: One Reason to Keep Your Plans Flexible
The experience explicitly notes it requires good weather. And one of the provided reviews mentioned heavy rain interrupting the rest of the tour, with the person treating it like a sign to come back.
So what should you do with this info? Plan to be adaptable:
- Bring rain gear for waterfall and outdoor stops
- Keep your expectations flexible if conditions change
- If you can, schedule this tour on a day where you’re not racing an early flight or tight dinner reservation
Because the day includes outdoor nature and sea-side scenery, weather isn’t a small detail. It’s part of the tour experience.
Who This Tour Suits Best (and Who Should Rethink)
This tour is a great fit if you want:
- A private day with hotel pickup and a driver who keeps things organized
- A balanced mix of temples, rice terraces, coffee/agrotourism, and a major waterfall
- A finish at Tanah Lot with time to enjoy the ocean-cliff vibe
It might be less ideal if you:
- Want lots of free time and minimal driving (this is an 8 to 10 hour schedule)
- Hate weather uncertainty and would rather avoid outdoor stops entirely
- Need lunch included in the price (lunch isn’t included)
If you’re traveling as a couple, small group, or family that wants to see several areas in one day, this routing is practical. If you’re the kind of solo traveler who loves slow wandering with no timetable, you might prefer fewer stops.
Should You Book This Ubud Tanah Lot Tour?
I’d book it if you’re aiming for maximum Bali variety in one day: waterfall energy, Ubud crafts, coffee fields, and an iconic sea-temple ending. The private car and hotel pickup are the kind of conveniences that quietly make a big difference, especially when you’re bouncing between inland and the coast.
If weather worries you, take the hint seriously. Pack for rain and don’t plan this as the one day you can’t move anything around. But if you can handle a bit of unpredictability, the route has a strong payoff—especially the Tanah Lot timing surprises tied to sea level.
If you want a single, well-organized way to connect Ubud’s cultural side with Tanah Lot’s dramatic coastline, this is a solid choice.
FAQ
How long is the Ubud Tanah Lot Tour?
The tour runs about 8 to 10 hours.
Does the tour include hotel pickup?
Yes. Pickup is offered from hotels in Ubud and much of south Bali, with transfers handled by a private air-conditioned car.
Is the tour private?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity, so only your group participates.
Are entrance tickets included?
Entrance tickets are optional in the included list, and the tour offers an upgrade for prepaid entry tickets. The itinerary also lists admission ticket free for each listed stop.
What’s included in the price?
Included items are a private comfortable air-conditioned car, an English-speaking driver as your guide, bottle mineral water, free Wi-Fi, insurance, and entrance tickets are optional.
Is lunch included?
No. Lunch is not included.
What should I expect at Tanah Lot?
You’ll have about 2 hours at Tanah Lot for the ocean cliff views and sea temple setting. Sea level can affect access to the temple rock pathway.
What happens if the weather is poor?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

























