Best Beach Clubs in Bali: Entry Fees, Minimum Spends & What to Expect

· 6 min read Activities
Infinity pool and sun loungers overlooking the Indian Ocean, clifftop beach club, Bali, Indonesia

Book an experience

Book this activity

Lock in your preferred date. Prices shown are per person — free cancellation on most bookings.

Bali’s beach club scene has grown from a few sunset spots into one of the most developed in Southeast Asia. The range is wide — from low-key surf cafes to full-day luxury resorts with multiple pools, international DJs, and fine dining. Entry fees and minimum spends vary considerably, and understanding what you are paying for before you arrive makes the difference between a good day and an expensive disappointment.

This guide covers the main clubs in each part of Bali — Seminyak, Canggu, Uluwatu, and beyond — with honest notes on cost, vibe, and whether the experience justifies the price.


Seminyak

Potato Head Beach Club

One of Bali’s most photographed venues and still one of the best. The circular pool, reclaimed window frame architecture, and beachfront setting in Seminyak combine into something genuinely well-designed rather than just large. The food is good; the DJ programme runs daily.

Entry / minimum spend: Approximately IDR 200,000–350,000 minimum spend per person credited to food and drink as of 2026. Weekends and peak season require advance reservation.

Location: Jalan Petitenget, Seminyak. A 5-minute walk from the main shopping strip.

Vibe: Cosmopolitan, design-conscious, adult crowd. Busy but not chaotic on weekdays. Intense on Sundays when the party runs to sunset.

Best for: First-time Bali visitors wanting the iconic setting, couples, groups who want good food alongside the pool experience.


La Brisa

A more recent addition to the Seminyak/Echo Beach area — a driftwood-constructed venue with a strong environmental aesthetic, positioned between Canggu and Seminyak on the coast. The design is exceptional and the food focuses on fresh seafood.

Entry / minimum spend: Approximately IDR 250,000–400,000 per person minimum spend as of 2026.

Vibe: Lower-key than Potato Head, aesthetically distinctive. Tends to attract a slightly older, design-oriented crowd.

Best for: Those who want a beach club experience without the DJ-heavy party format.


Canggu

FINNS Beach Club

The largest beach club in Bali by area — three pools, multiple food and bar zones, and a volleyball court, all facing a straight stretch of Canggu beach. FINNS operates from morning to late night and the crowd changes accordingly: families and brunchers in the morning, surf crowd in the afternoon, party crowd from sunset.

Entry / minimum spend: Day pass approximately IDR 150,000–300,000 per person including a credit toward food and drink as of 2026. Klook often sells discounted day passes.

Location: Jalan Pura Batu Mejan, Echo Beach, Canggu.

Vibe: More casual and accessible than the Seminyak clubs. Surf culture ethos — you will see people arriving with boards. Large enough that it rarely feels overcrowded.

Best for: Groups, budget-conscious visitors, anyone wanting a full day at a beach club without spending heavily.


Atlas Beach Fest

Positioned as the largest beach club in the world by some measures — a sprawling complex with multiple event venues, restaurants, and a 1,400 sqm pool built over the beach at Berawa. The scale is impressive and the event programming is constant.

Entry / minimum spend: Approximately IDR 350,000–600,000 minimum spend per person as of 2026. Daytime entry is more accessible than evening event entry, which can be higher.

Vibe: International, event-driven. Atlas functions as a concert and event venue as much as a beach club — check the programme before going because what Atlas offers varies significantly by night.

Best for: Those who want a major event night, large groups, DJs and concerts.


The Lawn Canggu

A smaller, lower-key beach club that punches above its size in terms of food and atmosphere. Positioned at the quieter end of Batu Bolong beach, The Lawn occupies a clifftop setting with a sunset-facing pool and cocktail bar.

Entry / minimum spend: Approximately IDR 150,000–200,000 minimum spend per person as of 2026.

Vibe: Relaxed, local crowd mixed with travellers. Less party-focused than the bigger venues. The food is consistently good.

Best for: Solo travellers and couples wanting a sunset drink without a big crowd.


Uluwatu

Sundays Beach Club

Accessed via cable car or funicular down the cliff at the Ungasan Cliff Resort, Sundays sits in a sheltered cove below the Bukit Peninsula. The beach is white sand, the water is calm enough for swimming, and the setting — cliff walls on three sides, ocean on the fourth — is exceptional.

Entry / minimum spend: Approximately IDR 500,000–750,000 per person minimum spend as of 2026. The price is high but the setting genuinely justifies it for a full day out. Cable car access is included.

Vibe: Exclusive, resort-adjacent, mostly couples and honeymooners. The beach is small enough that capacity is limited and the atmosphere is calm rather than party-oriented.

Best for: Honeymooners and couples wanting the most dramatic beach club experience in Bali. The cable car descent alone is worth the visit.


Single Fin

A long-running Uluwatu institution rather than a designed beach club — a multi-level bar and restaurant built into the cliff above Suluban Beach, directly overlooking the surf break. The Sunday sunset session is one of the best-known events on the Bali calendar.

Entry / minimum spend: No cover charge as of 2026 — standard restaurant and bar pricing. Significantly cheaper than the resort-backed beach clubs.

Vibe: Surf-focused, casual. The crowd is a mix of surfers, travellers, and locals. More accessible and cheaper than Sundays or OMNIA.

Best for: Those who want a Uluwatu sunset with good food and drinks without a high minimum spend. Particularly good for Sunday sunset sessions when live music runs.


OMNIA Dayclub

OMNIA sits at the top of the Uluwatu cliffs — a designed space with an infinity pool appearing to overhang the ocean 150m below. The pool is the photograph. The DJ programme runs daily.

Entry / minimum spend: Approximately IDR 600,000–1,000,000 minimum spend per person as of 2026. Higher for special event nights.

Vibe: Glossy, bottle-service crowd. The setting is the sell; the music is commercial. More about the photographs than the party culture.

Best for: One visit for the view. The price-to-experience ratio is not as strong as Sundays Beach Club for a full day.


Practical Notes

What time to arrive: Most beach clubs open at 10am–11am. Arriving within the first hour avoids the queue for preferred lounger positions and the midday heat. Sunset is the peak period for the clifftop clubs.

Getting there: Uluwatu beach clubs are 30–60 minutes from Seminyak by Grab (IDR 60,000–120,000). No motorbike approach to Sundays — access is via the resort only. Canggu clubs are walkable from most Canggu accommodation.

Payment: Major beach clubs accept card; all have ATMs on site or nearby. Some promotional day passes purchased through Klook are non-refundable if you miss the date.

Booking: Klook sells day passes for FINNS, Atlas, and some Uluwatu clubs at occasionally discounted rates. Direct booking with the venue guarantees accurate information but is not always cheaper.

Browse Bali tours and experiences — activities can be booked last-minute in most cases, though peak season (July–August) fills up quickly.

See Also

Frequently Asked Questions

Do you need to book Bali beach clubs in advance?
For peak season (July–August) and weekends, advance booking is strongly recommended at the popular venues — FINNS, Atlas, Potato Head, and Sundays all book out. For weekday visits outside peak season, walk-ins are often fine but call ahead to confirm. Booking via Klook can sometimes offer discounted day passes.
What is a minimum spend at a Bali beach club?
Most beach clubs charge either an entry fee (which is non-refundable) or a minimum spend (which is credited to food and drinks). Some charge both. Expect a minimum spend of approximately IDR 200,000–500,000 per person at mid-range clubs, and IDR 600,000–1,500,000 at premium venues like Atlas or Sundays.
Which Bali beach club has the best view?
Sundays Beach Club and OMNIA both have extraordinary clifftop views in Uluwatu. Single Fin at Uluwatu also overlooks the surf break directly. For a beach-level view with a wide ocean horizon, Atlas Beach Fest in Canggu is currently the largest beach club on the island.
Can children go to beach clubs in Bali?
Most beach clubs are adults-focused and some have a minimum age of 18 or 21, particularly in the evenings. Potato Head, Sundays, and La Brisa are relatively family-friendly during the day. Check the specific club's policy before booking with children.
What should I wear to a Bali beach club?
Smart casual is the standard — swimwear at the pool, cover-ups required in dining areas. The clifftop clubs in Uluwatu (OMNIA, Sundays) have stricter dress codes in the evening. Most Canggu clubs are casual and surf-oriented. No boardshorts and singlets applies at premium venues after sunset.

Ready to explore?

Browse hundreds of tours and activities. Book securely with free cancellation on most options.

Browse on GetYourGuide →

Best price guaranteed — same price as booking direct. We earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.