A 500m tunnel turns the ride into theater. This Ubud ATV tour is built around adrenaline and scenery at the same time, with a 500m tunnel and rice terraces on the route, plus hotel transfer, lunch, and showers after you get good and muddy. I like that it’s guided end-to-end, so you’re not just driving in circles, and I like that the day is organized like a real activity, not a vague idea of fun.
One thing to consider: parts of the track can be bumpy and slippery depending on conditions, and there’s a note that the machines may not always feel brand-new. If you go, do a quick equipment check with your guide and keep your speed honest, especially around wet sections and narrow turns.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Why This Ubud ATV Route Feels Different: Tunnel, Waterfall, and Rice Fields
- Pickup, Timing, and How the 3.5 Hours Usually Play Out
- Gear, Safety, and the Start-Up Section Before You Go Fast
- The Ride Itinerary: Tunnel, Waterfall, River, Rice Fields, and Jungle Bits
- Stop and start: from practice track to the main route
- The tunnel: a cool, dark 500m stretch
- Waterfall and river sections: where you get wet
- Rice fields and forest area: the slower moments that make it worth it
- Riding time feel: 1.5 hours that won’t feel short
- Lunch After the Dust: Why the Shower Matters More Than You Think
- Private Transfer vs. Shared Riding: Getting the Best Value Setup
- Price and Small Extras: What $50 Really Buys You
- Who Should Book This ATV Adventure (and Who Might Prefer Something Else)
- My Booking Advice: Should You Book KUBER ATV Ubud?
- FAQ
- How long is the ATV experience, and what’s the total tour time?
- Is hotel pickup and transfer included?
- What gear is provided for riding?
- What route can I expect during the ATV ride?
- Is lunch included?
- Can children join the tour, and is insurance covered?
Key things to know before you go

- 500m tunnel ride: A former Dutch war tunnel that you pass through as part of the route.
- Clean finish included: Towels, shower facilities, and time to rinse before lunch and travel back.
- 1.5 hours of riding: Your actual ATV time is long enough to feel like a proper adventure.
- Group setup, with experience matching: You may be sorted by comfort/skill so the pace makes sense.
- Easy to pack for: Extra clothes, socks, and money for small add-ons help you stay comfy.
- Weather matters: It requires good weather, and poor conditions can shift dates or refunds.
Why This Ubud ATV Route Feels Different: Tunnel, Waterfall, and Rice Fields
Most Bali ATV tours sell the same promise: drive through “jungle” and see “views.” This one delivers a more specific mix, with sections that feel like they change scenes on purpose. You’re on a guided route through tunnel, waterfall, river, rice fields, and forest areas, and you also hit a wet fun attraction along the way. That variety matters. It keeps the ride from feeling like one long straightaway and it gives you more reasons to slow down and look around.
The tunnel section is the headline. It’s listed as a 500m former Dutch war tunnel, and even if you’re not a history buff, it changes the ride physically. Expect a cooler, darker passage with a real sense of movement forward rather than just spinning past scenery. After that, the route swings back into bright green rice fields and wetter jungle edges. It’s a good flow for photos too, because the light shifts as often as the terrain.
I also like that the tour is designed as a full half-day experience, not just “here’s the ATV, good luck.” From the welcome drink and gear check to the end-of-ride showers and meal, the day feels managed. That’s what turns an adrenaline activity into something you can actually enjoy without worrying about logistics.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Ubud.
Pickup, Timing, and How the 3.5 Hours Usually Play Out

The total time is listed at about 3 hours 30 minutes. Your schedule depends on your hotel pickup time, which runs from your area based on the available timetable. If you’re coming from Kuta, plan for about a one-hour drive to the riding location.
Here’s the rhythm you should expect:
- Hotel pickup, then transport to the ATV base
- A welcome drink on arrival
- Insurance/sign-in steps and gear distribution
- An intro and a short tryout area before you take off
Then you get into the main ride. The actual ATV riding time is about 1.5 hours, which is a sweet spot. It’s enough time to feel the route and get into your driving rhythm without turning into a full-day slog.
After the ride, you shower, eat lunch, then head back. The tour ends back at the meeting point, and the return to your hotel is included through the hotel transfer service.
If you want the cleanest experience, I’d choose an earlier slot if you have control. One practical tip from past riders: starting early (around 0730) can help you get a private-guided feel and a pace that matches your enthusiasm. Early also gives you more daylight for tunnel-to-rice-field contrast.
Gear, Safety, and the Start-Up Section Before You Go Fast

You get the essentials up front: helmet and rubber boots, plus towel and shower facilities after the ride. There’s also insurance included. That matters because ATV rides can go sideways fast if you’re underprepared, and wet terrain + rubber boots is a big help.
Before you ride the main track, you’ll do a short introduction and practice in a special area. This is more important than it sounds. Even if you’re a confident driver, the ATV feels different than a car: throttle control, braking, and balance all come into play—especially when the ground turns slick.
A small caution that’s worth listening to: at least one rider noted that the machines may be older and need maintenance. That doesn’t mean you should panic, but it does mean you should treat your first minute on the ATV like a safety check. Make sure your helmet fits well, confirm the ATV feels stable when you start, and mention any concerns right away to the guide/instructor before the real ride begins.
Also, the tour is built for good weather. If rain is heavy, muddy trails can change the difficulty level, and that’s why the operator requires good conditions. It’s not just about comfort. It affects traction, visibility, and overall safety.
The Ride Itinerary: Tunnel, Waterfall, River, Rice Fields, and Jungle Bits

This is the part you’ll remember, so it helps to know what you’re actually doing for the 1.5 hours.
Stop and start: from practice track to the main route
After arrival and gear, you’ll get an intro and try the ATV in a special area. This is your warm-up. Use it to get comfortable with slow turns, stopping smoothly, and how your ATV handles when the ground isn’t flat.
The tunnel: a cool, dark 500m stretch
The track passes through a tunnel listed as 500m and described as a former Dutch war tunnel. Expect a change in sound and lighting. It’s also a fun reset moment: the adrenaline stays, but the environment shifts.
If you’re the type who likes photos, this is where you’ll want to be mentally ready—tunnel lighting doesn’t behave like daylight, so even simple framing can look dramatic.
Waterfall and river sections: where you get wet
Next comes the waterfall and river parts of the route. The tour also includes a wet fun attraction, and the day is set up for you to rinse afterward. In practice, that means you should dress with the assumption that you’ll get wet. Bring extra clothes, socks, and anything else you care about, since you’ll want something dry for lunch and the ride back.
Rice fields and forest area: the slower moments that make it worth it
The route runs through rice fields and forest areas. This is your visual reward after the technical sections. Rice terraces also help the ride feel varied, because the ground isn’t always the same texture. You might feel more open space here, then more jungle and tighter turns again.
Riding time feel: 1.5 hours that won’t feel short
Because the route includes multiple terrain types—tunnel, wet areas, rice field scenery, and forest edges—it tends to feel longer than a simple track. The guide keeps you moving so you don’t lose time, but you still get enough changes in scenery to stay engaged.
Lunch After the Dust: Why the Shower Matters More Than You Think

Lunch is included, and you’ll have it after showering. That sequence sounds basic, but it makes the day actually pleasant.
At ATV parks, the usual problem is you finish riding and you’re stuck sweaty, muddy, and stuck in the same clothes until you reach your hotel. Here, you get shower facilities and towel support before you sit down to eat. That turns lunch from a rushed chore into a real break.
It also makes it easier to enjoy the ride with friends or family without everyone ending the day miserable. You’re still doing an adrenaline activity, but you’re not paying for it later with a full day of discomfort.
As for lunch itself, it’s described as delicious and served at the restaurant after the ride. The key point is timing: you’re not waiting around for long after the ATV portion. You rinse, refuel, then head back.
Private Transfer vs. Shared Riding: Getting the Best Value Setup

The tour includes private hotel transfer (based on your area) and the ATV experience is handled with guides and groups. In other words: you get a smoother start and return, even if the ride itself may happen in smaller groups depending on your setup.
That mix is often the best deal. You don’t want to spend your morning matching buses and meeting points, especially in Bali traffic. Private transfer handles the painful part.
Also, there are group discounts, and the activity has a maximum of 35 travelers. That upper limit matters because it affects how crowded the operation feels. With smaller capacity, you typically get faster attention at arrival, better control on safety briefings, and fewer long waits for gear.
If you’re planning this as a couple’s activity, tandem riding is a common option—two people riding one bike. Just note that tandem ride must be booked in multiples of 2 (like 2, 4, 6, 8 travelers).
Price and Small Extras: What $50 Really Buys You

The price is $50.00 per person. For that, you’re getting a guided ATV experience with:
- Private hotel transfer
- Helmet and rubber boots
- Professional quad/ATV guide
- Towel and shower facilities
- Lunch
- Insurance
That’s the core value. The price isn’t just about the engine time. You’re also paying for transportation, safety gear, and the structured schedule that prevents the typical chaos of self-riding.
Now for the extras you should budget so you’re not surprised:
- CD photos/videos are not included
- There can be an extra $25 for a solo traveler, payable on the day by cash or credit card
- If you’re picked up from the Nusa Dua or Uluwatu area, there’s an additional $10 per car, payable on the day
Also, you should bring extra money and extra clothes, plus socks. That “bring extra” line isn’t filler. It’s your reality check for wet sections and for feeling good after you shower.
If you’re price-shopping, compare this not just against cheaper ATV rates, but against what’s included. When shower, gear, insurance, and transfer are in the base price, you don’t have to scramble later for add-ons.
Who Should Book This ATV Adventure (and Who Might Prefer Something Else)

This tour fits best if you want a guided ATV day with a mix of thrill and scenery.
You’ll likely enjoy it if:
- You like active days and want a real adrenaline experience
- You want countryside variety: tunnel, waterfall, rice fields, forest
- You care about comfort afterward (shower and towel included)
- You want hotel pickup handled for you
It may not be ideal if:
- You want a fully private ATV experience with no group structure. The transfer is private, but you’ll still ride with guided group dynamics.
- You have mobility limits that make mounting/dismounting difficult. (The data doesn’t list accessibility details, so if you’re concerned, it’s worth asking directly before booking.)
- You’re very sensitive to noise, wet conditions, or uneven terrain. The track includes wet areas and a wet attraction, and terrain can get tricky when conditions change.
If you’re thinking about kids: children under 6 can join, but insurance is not covered. The tour advises booking as a single ride for that situation, which matters for safety planning.
My Booking Advice: Should You Book KUBER ATV Ubud?
Yes—if you want a guided, well-rounded ATV day that mixes tunnel drama with real Ubud countryside. The best reason to book is the structure: you get gear, time to practice, a clear 1.5-hour ride block, then showers and lunch so you don’t end the day uncomfortable.
Before you commit, do three quick checks:
- Pick an early time if you can; it can make the day feel smoother and more customized
- Bring extra clothes and socks so wet sections don’t ruin your afternoon
- When you arrive, take a moment to confirm your ATV feels right before you join the main track
If you’re hoping for a super-calm ride, or you hate any chance of getting muddy, pick a different style of tour. But if you want the kind of day where you leave with tunnel memories and wet-rice-field photos, this one is a solid value.
FAQ
How long is the ATV experience, and what’s the total tour time?
The total tour duration is about 3 hours 30 minutes. Your actual ATV ride time is about 1.5 hours, with pickup, shower, and lunch included in the full schedule.
Is hotel pickup and transfer included?
Yes. The tour includes private hotel transfer, and it’s arranged based on the available pickup timetable for your area.
What gear is provided for riding?
You get safety equipment including a helmet and rubber boots. Towels and shower facilities are provided after the ride.
What route can I expect during the ATV ride?
The track includes a 500m tunnel, a waterfall, river sections, rice fields, and forest areas, plus a wet fun attraction.
Is lunch included?
Yes. Lunch is included, served at the restaurant after you finish the ATV ride and shower.
Can children join the tour, and is insurance covered?
Children under 6 can join, but insurance is not covered. The tour advises booking under 6 as a single ride.




















