Bali, Indonesia

Nirjhara

Price per night from$249.65

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (IDR4,070,250.01), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Bower power

Setting

Waterfall quartet

Ringed by palms and splashing waterfalls, Nirjhara is a back-to-nature resort in a lesser-trodden pocket of Bali’s south-west coast. The greenery-girdled hotel is minutes from volcanic beaches, rolling countryside and the island of Tanah Lot, a Hindu temple with some of the best sunsets in Bali. In tune with the lush vegetation on all sides, the suites and villas are dressed in timber, rattan and stone that was sourced from across the archipelago. At restaurant Ambu, regional specialities and flavour-filled fusion dishes are served in a wooden pavilion overlooking the largest of four waterfalls. At the spa, enjoy a Balinese massage or join an open-air meditation session in a thatched shala. Every guest gets unlimited use of bikes and surfboards during their stay, and the concierge can arrange hikes, ceramic workshops and cooking lessons with a local chef.

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

A cocktail each; for stays of two nights or more, a 60-minute massage for two

Facilities

Photos Nirjhara  facilities

Need to know

Rooms

25 villas, including seven elevated Canopy Suites.

Check–Out

Noon, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 2pm.

More details

Rates include sunrise yoga sessions, use of bicycles and surfboards, and films screened in the cinema room. Breakfast isn’t included, but doesn’t disappoint: expect lots of fresh fruit, Indonesian specialities like rice and corn fritters, Continental meat

Also

The hotel’s off the beaten track but still within reach of Bali’s bigger towns. Canggu is 10-minute drive away, Seminyak can be reached in around 30 minutes and Ubud, Bali’s spiritual heartland, is around an hour’s drive.

At the hotel

Beach, cinema, yoga shala, library, boutique, laundry and free WiFi throughout. In rooms: Samsung TV, Bang & Olufsen sound-system, minibar, Nespresso coffee machine, local teas, free bottled water and Republic of Soap bath products.

Our favourite rooms

We’re smitten with the Canopy Suites, which are the most avant garde in design, standing several metres off the ground. They’re high enough to be brushing dangling palm fronds, but low enough to command sweeping views over the rice paddies towards Mount Batukaru – especially advantageous at sunset. To cap it all, each of these elegant treehouses has a roof deck with a circular bath tub (which will easily fit two).

Poolside

Overlooking the hotel's natural waterfall, the long infinity pool is surrounded by exotic greenery and trees with snow-white blossoms. Sunloungers line the decked area and day-beds are tucked into leafy recesses on the outer edge.

Spa

The Retreat Spa stands next to a coconut grove and reflecting pool, endowing it with pacifying powers that get to work before you’ve even walked in the door. Many of the treatments draw on age-old Balinese wellness traditions and make use of Indonesia-sourced products. Treatments include massages, facials, botanical scrubs and reflexology. For the most immersive experience, try the Temple Blessing Ceremony, which is inspired by Balinese weddings and includes a sacred water blessing, foot ritual, massage, flower bath and a tea ceremony. The spa also has a waterside yoga shala for meditation, yoga and Pilates classes, and a 24-hour gym. A personal trainer can be booked for one-to-one sessions.

Packing tips

Bring hiking, biking, yoga and – if you have it – surfing kit.

Also

The hotel is set over several levels and there are no adapted rooms, so it’s unfortunately not accessible for wheelchair users.

Children

All ages are welcome, but older children and teens will be able to make the most of the surfing and bike-riding.

Food and Drink

Photos Nirjhara  food and drink

Top Table

Request a table close to the edge, where you'll have the best views of Mount Batukaru.

Dress Code

Humidity-defying light fabrics and loose silhouettes.

Hotel restaurant

Designed to make the most of Bali’s balmy evenings, Ambu apes the design of a pavilion, sporting a high ceiling, pitched wooden roof and open sides that allow a breeze to circle through the room. The lack of walls also makes it seem as if you’re sitting in the trees, with lush vegetation, birdsong and the splashing of waterall lending the feel of a tropical bower. The menu showcases Bali’s rich and diverse heritage, revisiting regional favourites with a fresh approach (there are Western dishes, too). The restaurant also makes the most of the hotel’s rural setting, working with the best farms and producers in the region.

Hotel bar

The bar is part of the restaurant, and made from a single piece of U-shaped timber. Choose a vintage from the judiciously chosen wine list or have the mixologists work their magic, shaking up a cocktail made with local fruits and herbs.

Last orders

Breakfast is available from 7am to 11am; lunch from noon to 3pm; and dinner from 6pm to 10pm. The Pool Bar serves food and drinks from 11am to 6pm; the main bar gets going at 5pm and stays open until 11pm.

Room service

In-villa dining is available around the clock.

Location

Photos Nirjhara  location
Address
Nirjhara
Jl. Nirjhara, Banjar Kedungu, Belalang Kediri
Tabanan
82121
Indonesia

Nirjhara is close to the temple complex of Tanah Lot, a peaceful stretch of Bali’s south-west coast. The hotel is encircled by jungle and rice paddies, and has no fewer than three waterfalls on its lush, green grounds.

Planes

Ngurah Rai International Airport is the best place to touch down; it’s about a 50-minute drive from here to the hotel. You can fly directly from most of Australia’s larger airports, or from Amsterdam if you’re coming from the Continent. From the UK, you’ll need to take a connecting flight; popular stopovers include Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur, Dubai and Singapore.

Automobiles

Most visitors get by without doing any driving themselves, in part because the roads aren’t always what they’re used to. Hiring a car with a driver is cheap and easy, but if you do plan on getting behind the wheel, there’s valet parking at the hotel.

Worth getting out of bed for

Banish traveller's fatigue by joining one of the regular yoga or meditation sessions, held in a wooden shala with a sculptural roof and soundtracked by the chirps of bright-liveried birds in the canopy overhead.

After a hearty Balinese breakfast, head out to explore the countryside on your bicycle (every guest gets one) or pedal down to the beach, where you can make use of your surfboard. If you’re in need of a little guidance, the concierge can arrange lessons with a qualified instructor. (Veterans, on the other hand, should set sights on Kedungu, a local favourite with a buzzy scene.) The sunsets on this side of the island are said to be the best in Bali, so aim to be installed in your spot of choice (drink in hand, natch) in good time for the show to begin. There’s also a cinema that holds weekly screenings of blockbusters and silver-screen classics.

Like getting your hands dirty? As the concierge to book you in for a ceramics workshop at Gaya, a stylish studio on the fringes of Ubud. It’s well worth a visit even if you don’t plan on taking a class, but be warned – temptation will strike when you see the shapely creations on sale in the showroom. Culinary wizards will be relish the expert-led cooking class, which starts with a visit to a local market, where you’ll learn to select the best the produce and spices according to scent, texture and taste. Armed with your natural bounty, you’ll then decamp to the kitchen to cook up a Balinese storm. Natural highs can be sought on the slopes of Mount Batur, an active volcano that makes for soul-lifting hikes. If you set off early, you’ll climb above the carpet of low-lying cloud that lingers over the canopy in the morning, making the sunrise seem all the more impressive. At last light, there’s nowhere better to be than Tanah Lot, a Hindu temple built on tiny island just off the shore. It’s the most famous sunset-watching spot in Bali – and the hotel can make it even better by arranging the journey in a vintage VW convertible. Alternatively, book the sunrise bike tour, which heads off at 6am.

Local restaurants

There’s not much in the immediate area, but one place that's within walking distance is the Fat Hog, an Australian-owned restaurant that has gained quite the repuatation for its friendly vibe and stellar barbecue ribs. The restaurant at Joshua District can be reached in under 10 minutes in a cab. Laid-back and industrial in looks, the building is right on the edge of some rice fields. Working from an open kitchen, the chefs turn out fusion dishes that borrow from Europe, Asia, the US and beyond, echoing the international crowd and ambience.

If you’re determined to eat out more than once, your next best bet is the village of Canggu, a 25-minute (traffic-dependent) drive away. Mason is one of the hottest spots in town, not least because of its pleasing interiors and sleek courtyard lit by strings of naked bulbs. The emphasis is on slow, careful preparation using organic ingredients, and Australian chef Nathan Sasi brings his knowledge of smoking, pickling, fermenting and curing to the table, ensuring plenty of twists and turns on the flavour front. The cocktails – prepared behind a bar of ridged concrete that runs the length of the room – are well worth a try, too. Billy Ho is inspired by the hand-me-down recipes and relaxed atmosphere found in family kitchens across Asia. The dishes are sourced from star chef Will Meyrick’s own notebooks, filled with favourites that he discovered on his travels across the continent. The flavours and rich and varied, coming from far and wide – Japanese izakayas, South Korean tea houses and Hong Kong’s cha cha tengs, where locals get back to basics with comfort food.

Reviews

Photos Nirjhara  reviews
Sam Kirby

Anonymous review

By Sam Kirby, Asia obsessive

Along Bali’s southwest coast, beyond the Canggu crowds and Seminyak’s influencers, there’s a secret place – a hidden oasis of natural beauty neatly concealed within the sleepy surf town of Kedungu. 

Discovering Nirjhara hotel is like stepping into an optical illusion. As you approach it through Kedungu’s dusty backroads, it feels as if there isn’t space for it. But then you find yourself mouth open, gawking at the entrance’s magnificent bamboo archway. It was at this moment that Mrs Smith squeezed my hand and forgave the punishingly long drive. 

Of course, discovering a secret world requires a bit of a quest. Ours had taken Mrs Smith and I – and our two-and-a-half year old – on a three-week self-driving road trip around Bali (anyone who has travelled Bali’s roads will know how brave, mad, ambitious…this is). We’d fought through the traffic of Denpasar; navigated the volcanic craters of Mount Batur; descended a death-defying, single-lane, vertigo-inducing mountain road to reach the deserted beaches of Tejakula; and drove high into the Munduk mountains, before finally heading back to the coast and arriving at Nirjhara, hot, sweaty and with my ‘driver’s knee’ still twitching from overworking the brake on our descent. 

Wandering through the hotel feels like walking through a botanical garden – the manicured grounds are flush with tropical plants and native flowers. A waterfall and river run along the western boundary, and it’s this sound of flowing water which provides the soundtrack to your stay. The nature surrounding and enveloping the hotel is seamlessly integrated with the architecture, leaving you feeling completely overwhelmed. It’s an escape from city life unlike anything else. 

Hungry after our long drive, we headed straight for the restaurant for some lunch. The space is open and overlooks the infinity pool, the aforementioned river and the green rice fields beyond. The menu covers Western classics and local Indonesian fare, all with a refined and delicate twist. We opt for fresh summer rolls, bursting with veg and a peanut dipping sauce that I would happily eat by the spoonful. Plus a poke bowl packed with plump line-caught tuna and zingy ponzu dressing. Lastly, a delicious tropical quinoa salad filled with pomelo, mango, sweetcorn and crispy tempeh. Meanwhile, our little Smith makes herself at home and chooses spaghetti pomodoro from the kids’ menu. 

As I ease back into the comfortable sofa and gaze out across the restaurant – sleek and sophisticated in a mix of natural stone and dark wood – I’m tickled by the sight of little Smith sat topless in her high-chair, smearing sauce all over herself. Luckily, Balinese hospitality (together with their delight in children) means the staff are all amused and take it in their stride, bringing her extras and going to great lengths in the coming days to indulge their youngest guest. 

Post-lunch we stagger to our room, one of the hotels’ River Pavillions – a one-bedroom villa tastefully decked in dark-wood panelling, muted colours and tasteful artworks. It would feel right at home in an episode of Architectural Digest’s Open Door series. The bathroom is relentlessly stylish and makes you wish you had a more extensive skincare regimen in order to spend more time enjoying it. There’s a bath tub, rain shower, his-and-hers vanities and toiletries which excite Mrs Smith very much. 

The villa has a large deck overlooking the river with an opulent freestanding second tub outdoors. I stare longingly at it and imagine myself sliding in for a long sunset soak with a cold beer in hand. Little Smith has other ideas and immediately strips off and transforms it into the world’s most decadent paddling pool. 

If soaking in your own outdoor bath, swimming in a 25-metre infinity pool or lounging on one of the hotel’s many day-beds isn’t enough to keep you busy, then Nirjhara also puts on a wonderfully varied schedule of activities. From yoga in a custom-built sala, which sits just above the river, to screenings in a nine-seater cinema room. The following day I opted for one of the hotel’s guided bike rides to Tanah Lot. 

Anyone who has been to Bali will know that you can very quickly suffer temple fatigue – there are over 10,000 after all. The experience of visiting some of the bigger and more famous ones (such as Tanah Lot) can be overwhelming as you muscle your way through the crowds in the heat. But cycling here at 7am feels like something of a hack. We take a leisurely 40-minute ride through small towns, farms and endless rice fields. It’s serene and memorable as I witness local village life, a privilege of being off the beaten track. 

The temple itself is near deserted but for a small smattering of keen tourists and locals; it’s truly breathtaking, built high on a rocky outcrop with the crashing surf beneath. I take lots of deep breaths and remember why we came here. 

The rest of our time at Nirjhara is spent soaking up everything the hotel has to offer. The luxurious swimming pool, exquisite food and the hotel’s proximity to Kedungu, which has a smattering of trendy cafés and stunning surf beach. Mrs Smith and I even manage to carve out time for a spa treatment, which – much like the rest of the service at Nirjhara – is an unbelievable experience. 

After little Smith is in bed on our final night, I wander up to the Ambu restaurant and bar for an early evening drink. The skies clear just long enough to reveal Mount Batur in the distance, peeking above the clouds. It’s a picture-postcard view that feels like it has been unchanged for centuries. I can’t help but wonder how long this place will remain a secret, and envy everyone who will come – even if braving the meandering journey – and discover it for the very first time.

Book now

Price per night from $249.65