REVIEW · SEMINYAK
2 Days Mount Batur Sunrise Trekking With Private Ubud Day Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Widyanata · Bookable on Viator
Two days, one volcano sunrise. This Mt. Batur trek is built for calm rather than the usual sunrise crush: you camp on the slopes and start your summit push at dawn with far fewer people, plus your natural hot-spring soak is included for an easy reset. The catch is the climb is steep and early, and the summit area can still feel a bit commercial when the big crowds show up.
You’ll also like the practical setup: pickup and drop-off are included from many hotels in south Bali (and Padang Bai is specifically mentioned), so you’re not trying to coordinate scooters on mountain-time. It’s a private tour/activity, meaning it’s just your group, and the guide vibe matters—names like Gede, Wayan, Komang, Mata, Agus, and Jero come up repeatedly in a very positive way for being patient and supportive.
On Day 2, you roll into Ubud for a full highlights day (about 8 hours) with entrance tickets handled. It’s a smart pairing if you want volcano drama plus Bali’s cultural-and-temple rhythm without adding another planning day—and yes, expect cold air up top, so pack layers for comfort.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel
- Why Mt. Batur Sunrise Feels Different When You Camp Overnight
- Pickup at 1:30am: Timing, Transfers, and How Not to Lose Your Day
- Day 1 on Mt. Batur: Camp Night + Summit Push for Sunrise
- What the summit hike really feels like
- Batur Natural Hot Spring: A Ticketed Soak That Actually Helps
- Tip for enjoying it more
- Day 2 in Ubud: Private Highlights in an 8-Hour Block
- A note on what “highlights” usually means here
- Guides and Drivers: Why the People Part Really Matters
- What’s Included (and What You Should Still Bring)
- Included for Day 1
- Included for Day 2
- Price and Value: Is $99 a Good Deal for Two Days?
- Where value shines
- Where value might not fit
- Fitness, Weather, and Terrain: The Real-World Considerations
- Summit crowds: manage your expectations
- Should You Book This Mt. Batur Camping + Private Ubud Combo?
- FAQ
- What time does the Mt. Batur start?
- Is this tour private?
- What happens on Day 1 at Mt. Batur?
- How long is the hot spring visit?
- What’s included for the overnight part?
- How long is the Ubud tour on Day 2?
- Is the price really $99 per person?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
- What if weather is bad for the hike?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel

- Overnight camping on Mt. Batur so you can enjoy sunset and then hike for sunrise without doing the whole thing in the dark
- Batur Natural Hot Spring ticket included with up to about 90 minutes to soak and recover
- Camping gear, flashlight, and hot drinks included so you’re not scrambling for basics
- Private 8-hour Ubud highlights day with entrance fees included
- Pickup and drop-off from many south Bali areas (including Padang Bai) to reduce logistics stress
- Moderate fitness needed for steep sections, early starts, and altitude-style effort
Why Mt. Batur Sunrise Feels Different When You Camp Overnight
The biggest reason to choose this kind of overnight Mt. Batur sunrise trekking package is simple: the mountain can get insanely busy for the early summit rush. By sleeping on the slopes and timing your summit push thoughtfully, you get a calmer experience than the classic 4 am scramble that turns every step into a competitive footrace.
I like that the tour is clearly aiming for serenity—especially for sunset from the volcano. You’re not just arriving, snapping photos, and leaving; you’re part of the rhythm of the place for real, including nighttime on the slopes.
The other big win is your “recovery plan.” After a steep hike day, you don’t have to invent your own post-trek reset. You head to a ticketed natural hot spring break, which is exactly the kind of practical touch that makes a volcano trip feel doable instead of brutal.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Seminyak
Pickup at 1:30am: Timing, Transfers, and How Not to Lose Your Day

The tour start time is listed as 1:30 am, which tells you right away this is a serious early-morning operation. What helps is that transfers are included, with an English-speaking driver and guide, so you aren’t coordinating the toughest part of the trip on your own.
This is also where the “where you’re staying” matters. The experience notes transfers from much of south Bali, and the tour is positioned as a solution for people who are staying around places like Seminyak and who don’t want to fight traffic or schedule confusion at night. One review even called out pickup from areas like Ubud, Sanur, and Canggu—so the tour seems used to handling multiple Bali bases, not just one tiny corner.
Because it’s private, you also avoid the biggest headache of shared tours: you’re less likely to be stuck waiting on other groups while you’re already awake and caffeinating internally.
Day 1 on Mt. Batur: Camp Night + Summit Push for Sunrise

Day 1 is centered on Mt. Batur and the summit experience, including a summit moment around sunrise from 1717 meters. The exact flow can vary based on sunset and sunrise timing and weather, but the tour’s premise stays consistent: you’ll spend the night camping on the volcano slopes, then take a short hike to watch sunrise.
That overnight piece is what makes the experience feel less like a “thrill ride” and more like a real hike. You’re not just hauling yourself up in the dark and then immediately rushing down; you get to sleep in the mountain air first, then get up for the sunrise summit push when visibility is better.
Guides are a big part of why this hike works for regular humans. In the positive guest notes, guide names like Gede and Wayan show up with descriptions like patient, encouraging, and attentive to your pace. One review highlights a guide physically assisting when someone got tired, which is a good reminder: you’re paying for more than directions—you’re paying for safety, pacing, and the emotional support system that keeps your legs moving.
What the summit hike really feels like
Even with a guide, expect steep sections. The trip is geared toward people with moderate fitness, and reviews repeatedly mention that you need to be ready for heat, steep climbs, and the effort of a real ascent. If you’re coming from a low-activity travel schedule, pace yourself from the start.
Also, be realistic about the summit area. The tour is designed to avoid sunrise crush crowds, but Mt. Batur is still Mt. Batur. Some reviews mention the summit can include small stalls and a more commercial feel. So think of the summit as both a view platform and a travel hub.
Batur Natural Hot Spring: A Ticketed Soak That Actually Helps

After your Mt. Batur day, you get a ticketed soak at Batur Natural Hot Spring. The experience lists time for about 1.5 hours, and the highlight notes up to 90 minutes, so plan on plenty of time to get warm, relax your muscles, and dry off before you move on.
This stop is more than a fun add-on. It’s practical. Your trek involves steep climbing, and hot water recovery can make the difference between feeling okay for the next morning versus feeling like your thighs are filing a complaint with your body.
You also get facilities included with the ticket, which matters when you’re traveling early and your schedule is already running on mountain-time.
You can also read our reviews of more hiking tours in Seminyak
Tip for enjoying it more
Treat the hot spring as your “reset button,” not a quick dip. If you go in expecting a five-minute splash, you’ll miss the point. The best experience comes when you slow down and actually let your muscles cool and loosen.
Day 2 in Ubud: Private Highlights in an 8-Hour Block

Day 2 shifts gears to Ubud, with a private highlights day tour for about 8 hours. The itinerary notes that admission tickets are included, which removes one of the most annoying parts of independent Ubud touring: deciding what to pay for at each stop and how to manage ticket lines.
This second day is valuable because it balances your trip. Mt. Batur is intense and physical; Ubud is slower, cultural, and packed with sights. By bundling them, you get a volcano story and a Ubud story, without trying to cram both into random half-days.
Since the tour is private, you should expect a more responsive pace. If your guide spots that you’re tired after Day 1, you’ll likely feel it in the route rhythm and the time taken at each stop.
A note on what “highlights” usually means here
The exact attractions aren’t spelled out in the tour data you provided, but the tour is described as the highlight of Ubud and includes entrance tickets. That’s a good sign if you don’t want to spend your limited energy comparing dozens of options and deciding what’s worth your time.
Guides and Drivers: Why the People Part Really Matters

The volcano trek part is physical. The guide part is emotional and logistical. The best experiences here are the ones where your guide keeps you moving, but also keeps you calm.
In the guest feedback, guide names come up again and again—Gede, Wayan, Komang, Mata, Agus, and Jero—and the common thread is supportive energy. Some mentions are about being encouraging and patient; others are about helping with pacing and making sure everyone reaches the right moments. One review also calls out a guide who talks a lot and stays engaged throughout the hike, which helps the hours feel shorter when you’re climbing in pre-dawn darkness.
Drivers are also part of the comfort. Names like Jago and Youna are associated with clean, safe transport and a friendly, informative vibe. That kind of handling matters when your schedule starts at 1:30 am and you’re moving between hotels and trailheads before your brain fully turns on.
What’s Included (and What You Should Still Bring)

This tour includes a lot of the stuff that can slow you down or add extra cost elsewhere. Specifically, Day 1 includes the hike to Mt. Batur and the hot springs stop as all-inclusive. Camping gear is included, along with a flashlight, plus hot drinks and two simple meals.
Included for Day 1
- Camping gear (so you’re not sourcing random items)
- Flashlight
- Hot drinks
- Two simple meals
- Guided hike and hot spring ticket
Included for Day 2
- Private Ubud highlights day (about 8 hours)
- Entrance tickets included
The big practical takeaway: you can pack lighter than you would for a fully independent overnight trek. Still, your own comfort choices matter. The tour can involve cold air on the summit based on guest notes, so you’ll want warm layers for the hike and summit wait time.
Also remember: personal expenses aren’t included. That’s usually where the hidden costs creep in, like snacks, extra drinks, or whatever you decide to buy once you’re out of the routine and staring at the views.
Price and Value: Is $99 a Good Deal for Two Days?

At $99 per person, the best value here isn’t just “a cheap sunrise hike.” It’s the combination: overnight camping support, guiding, meals and hot drinks, hot spring access, plus a private Ubud day with entrance fees handled.
If you tried to DIY this, you’d likely pay separately for transport, guide time, camping items, and entry costs. This package bundles those pieces into one booking, and the transfer coverage reduces the need to hire extra rides for every segment.
Where value shines
- You’re buying time and coordination, not only a summit view
- The overnight format helps avoid the worst sunrise crush feeling
- Hot spring ticketing is included, so recovery isn’t an extra search
Where value might not fit
If you already plan to cover Ubud on your own and you only care about the sunrise, this combo might feel like you’re paying for more than your top priority. But if you want both volcano and Ubud without doubling your planning load, it’s a clean value proposition.
Fitness, Weather, and Terrain: The Real-World Considerations
This experience is listed for travelers with moderate physical fitness. That’s consistent with what you’d expect for Mt. Batur: steep steps, early timing, and a climb that can feel longer than it looks.
The weather factor is important. The experience notes that the tour requires good weather, and if it gets canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. In practice, that means you should keep your schedule flexible enough to absorb a change.
Guest notes also mention cold conditions on top and even wet, windy weather during some trips. So think layers plus rain-ready clothing as your general safety plan. If the weather is rough, a good guide makes a difference in pace and decision-making.
Summit crowds: manage your expectations
Even when you’re using an approach meant to reduce crowd pressure, you’re hiking to one of Bali’s best-known sunrise targets. Some reviews mention a more crowded atmosphere and commercial stalls at the summit area. The way this tour helps is by avoiding the most chaotic timing for certain moments, but it doesn’t magically turn Mt. Batur into a private mountain.
Should You Book This Mt. Batur Camping + Private Ubud Combo?
I’d book this if you want a true overnight Mt. Batur experience and you care about not spending your whole trip rushing and figuring out logistics. The overnight camping format plus the included hot spring stop is a great match for people who want sunrise views and a real sense of place, not just a box-checking tour.
You should also like the guide-first feel. Multiple guest notes highlight guides named like Gede, Wayan, Komang, Mata, Agus, and Jero as patient and supportive, which matters on a steep, early climb.
Skip it if you’re chasing only one thing—sunrise photos—and you already have Ubud planned. In that case, the Ubud portion and included structure might feel like extra cost.
If you do book, do one thing: pack warm layers for the summit wait time, accept that the climb is steep, and show up ready to follow your guide’s pacing. Do that, and you’ll get the best version of Bali’s volcano story: calm camp night, a memorable sunrise, and then Ubud the next day without the headache.
FAQ
What time does the Mt. Batur start?
The listed start time is 1:30 am.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s described as a private tour/activity, so only your group will participate.
What happens on Day 1 at Mt. Batur?
Day 1 focuses on Mt. Batur with guided time tied to the sunrise experience, plus camping as part of the overnight format.
How long is the hot spring visit?
The hot spring stop is listed for 1 hour 30 minutes, and the highlights mention a soak of up to about 90 minutes.
What’s included for the overnight part?
Day 1 includes camping gear, a flashlight, hot drinks, and two simple meals, plus the guided hike and the hot spring tickets.
How long is the Ubud tour on Day 2?
Day 2 is about 8 hours for a private Ubud highlights day.
Is the price really $99 per person?
Yes. The listed price is $99.00 per person.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.
What if weather is bad for the hike?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.





























