REVIEW · SEMINYAK
Beratan , lake side temple tour , all inclusive
Book on Viator →Operated by Legian Driver Bali · Bookable on Viator
Cooler air, big views, temple stops.
This Beratan lake side temple tour mixes north-central Bali nature and culture in one long-but-manageable day, with that famous cooler, greener feel. I especially love the Ulun Danu Beratan lake-temple views and the fact that the main entry tickets plus lunch are handled for you. The one drawback to keep in mind: you’ll do a short forest walk for the waterfalls, and rain can limit what you can safely enjoy.
You’ll also appreciate the way it’s set up for convenience. Pickup options cover a wide set of Bali areas (including Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, and more), you ride in an air-conditioned vehicle, and you get an English-speaking driver cum guide—so you spend less time figuring things out and more time looking up at waterfalls and temples. Since this is a full-day loop (about 8 to 11 hours), plan for a long but scenic ride.
Finally, keep expectations realistic. Yes, it includes waterfalls and rice terraces, but it’s not a volcano day trip. If you’re hoping for Mount Batur, this itinerary is not built around that—also, if rain shows up, muddy paths can slow things down.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Feel Immediately
- North Central Bali: Why This Cooler Green-Focused Day Trip Feels Different
- Pickup Across Bali + A Comfort Setup for an 8–11 Hour Loop
- Ulun Danu Beratan Lake Temple: The Day’s First Big View
- Banyumala Twin Waterfalls: Short Trek, Real Forest Vibes
- Jatiluwih Green Land: UNESCO Rice Terraces With Optional Walking
- Taman Ayun Temple: A Water-Currounded Temple Built by Mengwi’s King
- Price and Value: What $85 All-Inclusive Buys You
- Weather Reality Check: What Rain Can Change on This Route
- Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Might Prefer Something Else)
- Small Tips That Make the Day Smoother
- Should You Book This Beratan Lake Side Temple Tour?
- FAQ
- What’s included in the Beratan lake side temple tour?
- How long is the tour?
- Where can I get pickup from?
- Is this tour private or shared?
- Does the tour include any trekking?
- Are temple and attraction entry tickets included?
- How far in advance do people usually book?
- What’s the cancellation policy?
Key Highlights You’ll Feel Immediately

- Ulun Danu Beratan: a one-hour stop built around the lake-temple viewpoint
- All-inclusive pricing: bottled water, lunch, and admission tickets are included
- Banyumala Twin Waterfalls: a short 15-minute trek through forest for the views
- Jatiluwih rice terraces: UNESCO scenery with a trekking option if you want it
- Taman Ayun Temple: a water-surrounded temple linked to the king of Mengwi
- Pickup coverage across Bali: options from Seminyak, Canggu, Nusa Dua, Ubud, and more
North Central Bali: Why This Cooler Green-Focused Day Trip Feels Different

Northern Bali has a reputation for being greener, and on this kind of day trip you actually get to experience that contrast. The area you’re visiting is often cooler than southern beach zones, which matters when you’re spending hours outdoors looking at rice terraces, temple grounds, and forest waterfalls.
The best part is that the scenery doesn’t feel like one single attraction type. You’re not just doing one temple and calling it a day. You get:
- a lake temple viewpoint,
- a forest waterfall experience,
- wide-open rice terrace views in the Jatiluwih area,
- and a different style of temple at Taman Ayun, where water is part of the design.
If you like travel days where nature and culture alternate every couple of stops, this route makes sense.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Seminyak.
Pickup Across Bali + A Comfort Setup for an 8–11 Hour Loop

This tour is designed to be easy on the start and finish. Pickup is offered from many areas, including Legian, Kuta, Tuban, Jimbaran, Nusa Dua, Pererenan, Berawa, Seminyak, Kedewatan, Singapadu, Keramas, Benoa, Canggu, Pejeng, and Sanur, with Ubud available. That matters because Bali traffic can be unpredictable. Fewer transfers usually means fewer headaches.
You’ll ride in an air-conditioned vehicle with bottled water, and you’ll have an English-speaking driver cum guide. There’s also parking included (so you’re not dealing with extra fees or random meet-up points). The “private tour” setup means it’s only your group, not a shared bus full of strangers.
Group size and comfort will depend on how your provider assigns vehicles, but in practice, a private setup on a day like this tends to feel calmer. It’s easier for your guide to manage timing, especially when you’re moving between places that can get busy.
Ulun Danu Beratan Lake Temple: The Day’s First Big View
The first stop is Ulun Danu Beratan Temple, with about one hour on site and admission ticket included. This is a lake-temple setting, and that alone changes the mood. Instead of rushing through temple halls, you get a chance to slow down and look across the water, then swing your attention up to the shrine structures.
Why this stop works for most people:
- It’s visually strong from multiple angles.
- You can balance “photos first” with “walk a bit and observe” within the same hour.
- The included time is long enough to account for light crowds.
Practical tips for this stop:
- Dress for temples (cover shoulders and wear clothing that’s easy to adjust).
- Bring a light rain layer even if the forecast looks fine. Lake views can bring quick weather changes.
- If you’re sensitive to cold, north-central Bali can feel cooler than you expect, especially near water.
This is the kind of start that sets the tone for the rest of the day. Once you’ve seen the lake-temple view, the waterfall and rice terraces feel like part of the same natural rhythm.
Banyumala Twin Waterfalls: Short Trek, Real Forest Vibes

Next up: Banyumala Twin Waterfalls, with about 15 minutes trekking through the forest plus roughly one hour at the destination area. Admission is included.
This is where you need to be honest with yourself. “Trekking” here isn’t a multi-hour hike, but it is still a walk through a green forest environment. Paths can be uneven, and wet conditions can make footing more challenging. That’s probably the main reason someone would choose this tour carefully rather than blindly.
What makes this stop worth it:
- It’s not a man-made viewpoint. You’re actually moving through a natural area.
- The forest setting gives you a different atmosphere from the temple and rice terraces.
- The time allocation lets you see the falls without a race against the clock.
If you dislike walking, you’ll likely still be okay because it’s a short trek, not a long slog. If you hate slippery ground, bring shoes with grip. And if it’s raining hard, you may need to accept that the experience becomes more about the scenery around the falls than getting close.
Jatiluwih Green Land: UNESCO Rice Terraces With Optional Walking

After the waterfalls, you head to Jatiluwih Green Land, where the big draw is the sight of hundreds of acres of rice terraces. You’ll have about one hour, with a trekking option available.
This stop is all about scale. The terraces aren’t just pretty; they make you feel how people shaped this land over time. Even if you don’t choose the trekking option, you’ll still get those wide views that make it worth the time spent.
Here’s how to approach it:
- If you want photos, pick a viewpoint and take your time. One hour is enough for multiple angles if you move slowly.
- If you want a bit of exercise, take the trekking option—but keep it moderate since your day is already long.
- If the weather turns, rice-terrace paths can get slick. In that case, it’s smarter to prioritize safe walking over chasing the perfect shot.
Jatiluwih is also a good mid-day emotional reset. After temples and waterfalls, the open terraces feel like a breath of space.
Taman Ayun Temple: A Water-Currounded Temple Built by Mengwi’s King
Then you’ll visit Taman Ayun Temple, with about one hour and admission included. What makes this one different is the setting: it’s surrounded by water, and it was built by the king of Mengwi.
This is the kind of temple where the details matter. The water layout gives you a natural framing effect, and the grounds can feel more spacious than some temples that feel tightly packed. You’re not only looking at the main structures—you’re also seeing the watery boundary that shapes how the whole place reads.
If you like cultural stops that feel less rushed and more scenic, Taman Ayun fits. You’ll also appreciate it after spending time in nature, because it shifts you back into Bali’s temple design logic—how sacred space is planned and experienced.
One note: like all temple visits, bring respect in how you dress and move. Simple good behavior goes a long way here.
Price and Value: What $85 All-Inclusive Buys You
At $85 per person, this tour can feel like a strong value, mainly because it isn’t just “transport and vibes.” The inclusions are real:
- bottled water
- air-conditioned vehicle
- English-speaking driver cum guide
- parking
- lunch
- admission tickets at the key stops
When you compare that to paying entry tickets separately across multiple attractions, the bundled approach becomes easier to justify. You also gain time convenience: fewer separate arrangements and fewer chances to miss something due to ticket lines or payment issues.
Another value signal: this tour is often booked about 35 days in advance, which usually means people find it predictable and worth repeating as a plan. Add the “private tour/activity” style—only your group joins—and you get fewer awkward tradeoffs.
Yes, it’s a long day. But if you want to see a set of north Bali highlights without turning your trip into a spreadsheet, this price structure is built for that.
Weather Reality Check: What Rain Can Change on This Route

One of the most practical insights from the experience pattern is simple: rain can change what you get to do. On a day like this, you’re moving between outdoors-heavy locations and temple areas. When it pours, you may lose time or choose to scale back closer viewing and slower trekking.
Also, don’t expect volcano sights here. A review note called out that it’s not a Mount Batur trip. So if you’re traveling specifically for a volcano experience, you’ll need a different itinerary.
What you should do:
- Pack a light poncho or rain jacket.
- Wear shoes you trust on damp ground.
- Plan your “must-see photos” early at each stop, then stay flexible for the rest.
Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Might Prefer Something Else)
This itinerary suits you if:
- you want a north-central Bali feel with cooler air and lush scenery,
- you like temples but also want nature stops that aren’t just quick photo ops,
- you prefer an organized day with included tickets, lunch, and pickup.
It’s also a good match if you’re traveling in a group and want a calm, private pace rather than sharing a vehicle with strangers.
You might consider skipping or adjusting if:
- you need a very low-walking day (there is a 15-minute trek involved),
- you’re chasing Mount Batur or a volcano storyline,
- you’re not comfortable walking on uneven ground, especially in rain.
If your ideal Bali day is equal parts culture and countryside, this works.
Small Tips That Make the Day Smoother
I always think the best day trips are won in the “details you can control.”
- Bring a light bag for your essentials. One day with multiple stops can scatter small items easily.
- Wear closed-toe shoes with grip for the waterfall forest walk.
- Keep a respectful temple outfit ready and easy to manage.
- Use sunscreen and sunglasses. Even when the air feels cooler, you’re outdoors for hours.
- Expect to spend time just looking, not only photographing. Rice terraces and lake views reward slow attention.
Also, since this tour includes lunch, you can spend less time searching for food at each stop. For a long day, that’s a real quality-of-life win.
Should You Book This Beratan Lake Side Temple Tour?
If you’re staying around Seminyak, Canggu, or nearby areas and you want a single organized day that covers Ulun Danu Beratan, Banyumala Twin Waterfalls, Jatiluwih rice terraces, and Taman Ayun, I’d say this is a strong booking choice. The all-inclusive nature—tickets, lunch, water, A/C transport, and pickup—means you won’t burn energy on logistics.
Book it especially if you like:
- scenic temple viewpoints,
- a nature break that’s short enough to manage,
- and a route that keeps changing the scene so you don’t get bored.
Pass on it if your priority is a volcano hike or if you need a totally non-walking itinerary. The waterfall trek is brief, but it’s still there—and weather can affect comfort outside.
FAQ
What’s included in the Beratan lake side temple tour?
The tour includes bottled water, an air-conditioned vehicle, an English-speaking driver cum guide, parking, lunch, and admission tickets for the listed stops.
How long is the tour?
It runs about 8 to 11 hours.
Where can I get pickup from?
Pickup is available from many Bali areas, including Legian, Kuta, Tuban, Jimbaran, Pererenan, Nusa Dua, Berawa, Seminyak, Kedewatan, Singapadu, Keramas, Benoa, Canggu, Pejeng, and Sanur. Ubud pickup is available too.
Is this tour private or shared?
It’s listed as a private tour/activity, meaning only your group participates.
Does the tour include any trekking?
Yes. There’s about a 15-minute trekking segment between the forest areas connected with Banyumala Twin Waterfalls. Jatiluwih also offers a trekking option, but it’s described as optional.
Are temple and attraction entry tickets included?
Yes. Admission tickets are included for the stops described.
How far in advance do people usually book?
On average, it’s booked about 35 days in advance.
What’s the cancellation policy?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the experience’s start time (free cancellation). If you cancel less than 24 hours before, the amount paid won’t be refunded.

























