Mount Batur starts before most people are awake. This early-morning hike gives you a front-row seat for Bali’s sunrise, then swaps altitude breath for a soak in a natural hot spring. I especially like the fact that the guide handles the climb and the timing, so you’re not fumbling around in the dark. One thing to consider: the pace is active, so you’ll want a moderate fitness level and the right attitude for steep sections.
What makes this feel good value is the mix of experiences in one day: summit views plus a complimentary breakfast, then a 1–2 hour recovery soak at Segara. I also like that you get hotel pickup and drop-off, and bottled water, which makes an early start a lot easier.
The only real drawback? It runs in all weather, and the mountain can be cold and damp before sunrise. So you’ll need to dress smart and accept that the day won’t always look like a postcard.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About
- Why Mount Batur Sunrise Is Worth the Very Early Start
- The Hike With a Real Guide: What the Climb Feels Like
- Summit Breakfast: More Than a Meal, It’s Part of the Timing
- Segara Natural Hot Spring: How the Soak Works for Recovery
- The Coffee Plantation Stop: A Pleasant Return-Route Break
- Price and Value: What $60 Gets You in a Real Day
- Pickup, Timing, and Why the Schedule Feels Easier Than You Think
- Weather and Dress: How to Stay Comfortable When the Mountain Does Its Own Thing
- Group Size: 100 People Is Still a Lot, but It’s Managed
- Who Should Book This Mount Batur + Hot Spring Day
- Book It or Skip It? My Decision Guide
- FAQ
- How long is the Mount Batur hike and hot spring tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
- What’s included in the price?
- How long do you spend at the natural hot spring?
- What fitness level do you need?
- Does the tour run in bad weather?
- How big is the group?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About

- Sunrise-first timing: you hike early so you’re not navigating the volcano in darkness without local help
- Complimentary summit breakfast: fuel you can feel during the climb and enjoy with the views
- Segara hot spring entry included: 1–2 hours to relax after the hike, with tickets handled
- Pickup + drop-off: saves time and stress in Ubud-area logistics
- Small-to-medium group size: capped at 100 travelers, so it’s not an endless crowd for the whole day
- Coffee plantation stop on the return: a simple culture-and-caffeine break, plus a drink along the way
Why Mount Batur Sunrise Is Worth the Very Early Start

Mount Batur is one of those Bali experiences that works because it’s time-based. You don’t just “see” something. You’re up there for the moment the sky changes—when the island is still waking up and the ridgelines turn from dark to glowing.
You’ll appreciate this tour’s approach: instead of trying to DIY the volcano at night, you go with an experienced guide. The benefit is practical. Your guide controls the route, the rhythm, and the safety side of moving on uneven ground in low light. That matters on a hike that’s described as steep but doable with moderate fitness.
And then there’s the payoff. The summit is your photo seat—panoramic views over Bali while sunrise happens. Even if you’re not a serious photographer, you’ll feel the shift from “I’m tired” to “Okay, this was the point.”
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Ubud.
The Hike With a Real Guide: What the Climb Feels Like

The climbing part is the heart of the morning. You’ll trek up Mount Batur with an included admission ticket and a driver/guide team. The time on the mountain is about 5 hours, and reviews strongly point to a safe, friendly guide vibe that keeps people moving at the right pace.
From the feedback, the guides focus on getting everyone to the summit without panic and without rushing. You’ll also notice a theme: trust. One review describes it as a huge trust factor, including how the driver got people to the base safely at an early pickup time (around 2am for that group). That kind of coordination is exactly what you want when the schedule starts before the day feels real.
How to think about the physical side: the tour asks for moderate fitness, which usually means you can handle uphill walking and some steep sections, but you’re not training for a summit-only marathon. If you’re comfortable with hills and you pace yourself, you’ll likely do fine.
Quick practical advice that fits what the tour asks for:
- Wear shoes you trust on rock and dirt (don’t plan on flip-flops)
- Dress in layers since you’ll be in mountain air early, and the tour says to dress appropriately
- Bring a steady mindset: the goal is the summit, not sprinting
Summit Breakfast: More Than a Meal, It’s Part of the Timing

A lot of tours mention breakfast. This one specifically includes complimentary breakfast at the mountain’s summit. That matters because it’s not just a nice-to-have—it supports the schedule you signed up for.
You’ll reach the summit before or around sunrise, spend time taking in views and photos, and then you eat. That means you’re not searching for food while you’re cold, tired, and trying to keep your energy up for the hike down or the hot spring later.
Also, breakfast at altitude usually beats breakfast later. You don’t have to bounce around looking for a café in town. It’s handled, and it keeps the day moving smoothly.
Segara Natural Hot Spring: How the Soak Works for Recovery

After the summit hike, you get to unwind at Segara Healing Bali Natural Hot Spring. The soak time is about 1–2 hours, and the admission ticket is included. This is a smart pairing: your legs do the hard work early, then you shift to a slow, restorative pace.
Here’s what I like about how this is built: it’s not a quick splash and go. You get enough time to cool down, settle your body, and reset for the rest of your afternoon (or just rest).
The hot spring element also softens the reality of a volcano hike. If you go in expecting a tough climb and a guaranteed recovery, you feel less disappointed by any rough weather or cold air in the morning. The tour gives you that balance.
Practical tip: even though you’re relaxing, you should still treat this as part of your day plan. Keep an eye on timing so you don’t cut your soak short and end up rushing the next transition.
The Coffee Plantation Stop: A Pleasant Return-Route Break

One highlight is a stop at a village coffee plantation for a drink on the way back to your hotel. This isn’t just a tourist detour. It’s a way to break the day’s physical arc with something lighter: aroma, taste, and a calmer pace after the mountain.
I like it because it gives the experience a local flavor without turning the schedule into a sprint of additional attractions. You’re already getting sunrise, summit food, a hot spring, and transport. The coffee stop is the finishing touch that feels human and easy.
If you’re the type who enjoys small cultural pauses—rather than rushing from one big site to the next—this is a good fit.
Price and Value: What $60 Gets You in a Real Day

At $60 per person, this is not a budget “bare minimum” tour. You’re paying for a full early-day operation: pickup and drop-off, a driver/guide, bottled water, breakfast, admission ticketing for the trekking and hot spring, plus a planned return stop.
Where the value shows up:
- Transportation is included, and that’s a big deal for early starts. Being picked up and delivered back saves you from figuring out timing with taxis.
- You’re getting entry and key activities bundled. That reduces the mental overhead of ticket lines and planning.
- The day is built around a sunrise hike you wouldn’t want to try without local guidance in the dark.
You might also look at when people book. On average, this is booked about 38 days in advance, which tells you demand is steady. If you’re traveling in peak seasons or around holidays, it’s worth locking in earlier so you can match your preferred pickup time.
Could you do Mount Batur cheaper by DIYing? Maybe. But you would still be spending on transport, and you’d be taking on route-finding and safety decisions. For many people, that trade-off is exactly what this $60 buys: peace of mind plus a smooth day.
Pickup, Timing, and Why the Schedule Feels Easier Than You Think

The total time is about 10 hours. You also get an “early finish” style of planning, meaning you should be back in time for an afternoon of activities or rest.
That’s an underrated part of Bali touring. If you do morning-only hikes that drag into late afternoon, you lose your daylight plans. This one is designed to keep the day contained.
Pickup is offered, and hotel transfers are available from a range of Indonesian towns and cities. In practice, that usually means you should be able to start from your accommodation without piecing together multiple rides.
From reviews, you’ll see real examples of prompt drivers and smooth early departures. One review mentions Arta as a driver being prompt. Another names Kupit as the driver, with emphasis on arriving safely at the base even with an early pickup around 2am.
Even if you don’t get the same drivers, the pattern matters: people describe the logistics as dependable, which is what you want when the schedule begins before most coffee is brewed.
Weather and Dress: How to Stay Comfortable When the Mountain Does Its Own Thing

This tour operates in all weather conditions. So if you’re imagining perfect visibility every time, adjust your expectations now. Mountain weather can shift. Fog and mist can happen. Rain can happen.
The fix is simple: dress appropriately. That phrase is vague, but it’s also honest. Use it as a checklist:
- Wear warm layers for early morning cold
- Bring clothing that can handle damp conditions
- Use footwear that can handle wet, rocky ground
The good news: the hot spring part is there for you either way. If visibility isn’t perfect, you still get the summit moment, the breakfast, and the recovery soak.
Group Size: 100 People Is Still a Lot, but It’s Managed
The tour has a maximum of 100 travelers. That’s not “private,” and it’s also not a tiny family hike where you get personal attention the whole way. Still, because the key moments are timed—summit, photos, breakfast, hot spring—the group cap helps keep things from turning into chaos.
If you prefer quieter, one-on-one experiences, you might find crowded periods. But if your priority is sunrise views plus a well-run schedule, the group size here is manageable.
Who Should Book This Mount Batur + Hot Spring Day
This is a strong match if you want:
- A guided sunrise volcano experience without the hassle of planning in the dark
- A full day that still leaves your afternoon open
- A natural hot spring soak included, not an added-cost afterthought
You’ll likely be happiest if:
- You have moderate fitness and you’re okay with steep uphill stretches
- You like photos and views that actually happen at a specific time
- You enjoy tours that bundle the basics—transport, tickets, food—so you can focus on the day itself
This may not be for you if you:
- Want a relaxed, flat walk (the climb is described as steep)
- Dislike early mornings to the point where 2am-style pickups are a dealbreaker
- Are strongly opposed to weather variability, since it runs in all conditions
Book It or Skip It? My Decision Guide
If your top goal is sunrise at Mount Batur plus a real recovery soak at Segara, this tour makes sense. The value is in the bundle: guide support, included breakfast, hot spring entry, and pickup/drop-off. That’s what turns a difficult early hike into an organized day you can actually enjoy.
I’d book this if you’re comfortable with a moderate fitness climb and you want your time in Bali to be active in the morning and flexible later. I’d skip it if you hate early starts or you’re looking for a totally gentle experience.
If you do book, set yourself up for success: warm layers, good shoes, and an attitude of steady pacing. Do that, and the sunrise + summit breakfast + hot spring combo can feel like a full, well-balanced Bali day rather than one long grind.
FAQ
How long is the Mount Batur hike and hot spring tour?
The total duration is about 10 hours.
How much does the tour cost?
It costs $60.00 per person.
Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
Yes. Hotel pickup and drop-off are included, along with a driver/guide.
What’s included in the price?
Included items are bottled water, breakfast, driver/guide, hotel pickup and drop-off, plus admission tickets for the trekking and the natural hot spring.
How long do you spend at the natural hot spring?
You soak for about 1–2 hours.
What fitness level do you need?
The tour asks for a moderate physical fitness level.
Does the tour run in bad weather?
Yes, it operates in all weather conditions. Dress appropriately.
How big is the group?
There is a maximum of 100 travelers.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.





















