REVĪVŌ Wellness Resort Nusa Dua Bali
When you book REVĪVŌ Wellness Resort Nusa Dua Bali in Bali, Indonesia through our withIN by SLH partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- A credit worth $50-$100 (USD) per room, per stay to be spent only on extras such as F&B or Spa, only on property and during the stay
- Daily Continental breakfast for two people
- Room upgrade to next room category, subject to availability at the time of check-in
- Early check-in, subject to availability at the time of check-in
- Late check-out, subject to availability
Location
The property sits in the southern peninsula of Bali, where the island's spiritual pulse meets the rhythms of the Indian Ocean. Benoa occupies a quieter pocket of the Nusa Dua area, removed from the tourist sprawl but still within reach of the island's ceremonial heart. This is Hindu Bali in its most concentrated form: temple festivals punctuate the calendar, offerings of frangipani and incense appear daily on doorsteps, and the gamelan rings out from village squares after dark.
The surrounding landscape reveals why this island has drawn pilgrims and travellers for centuries. North toward Ubud, the subak rice terrace system unfolds across hillsides, a UNESCO-recognized expression of the Tri Hita Karana philosophy that governs Balinese life (the harmonious relationship between humans, nature, and the divine). Closer to the property, the coastline alternates between sheltered beaches and limestone cliffs where surf breaks against volcanic rock.
Denpasar's I Gusti Ngurah Rai International Airport lies eight kilometres northwest, a straightforward transfer that delivers you from arrival gate to villa in under twenty minutes. The drive passes roadside shrines draped in yellow and white cloth, warung serving nasi goreng from dawn until midnight, and the occasional procession carrying temple offerings balanced on heads.
The Benoa peninsula rewards slow exploration. Traditional markets in nearby villages (Pasar Adat Desa Bualu two kilometres away, Pasar Tanjung Benoa at six kilometres) operate on rhythms unchanged for generations: vendors arrange pyramids of manggis and rambutan before sunrise, and the air thickens with turmeric, tamarind, and grilled sate. Nusa Dua Beach stretches along the coast three kilometres south, its pale sand backed by casuarina trees and calmer water than the surf breaks further west.
For deeper cultural immersion, the subak rice terraces lie sixty-five kilometres north, a worthwhile half-day excursion through villages where stone-carvers and silversmiths still work in open-air studios. The island's dive culture thrives around Tanjung Benoa (six kilometres), where boats depart for sites along the southern reefs. Book a morning departure to avoid the afternoon chop. Golfers will find Bali National Golf Club just over a kilometre away, its fairways bordered by mangroves and tidal flats where egrets stalk the shallows at low tide.
July and August deliver Bali's clearest skies, when southeast winds moderate the heat and humidity drops to its annual low. Mornings break cool enough for temple visits before the sun climbs; afternoons invite long swims in bathwater-warm ocean. Expect daytime temperatures around 28°C, with evenings that require nothing heavier than linen.
The wet season stretches from December through March, though rain typically arrives in afternoon deluges that clear within an hour, leaving the air smelling of wet earth and frangipani. The island turns vivid green; waterfalls swell, and rice paddies reflect pewter skies. November and April mark the shoulder months, when visitor numbers thin but weather remains cooperative.
October through early December offers the sweet spot: post-monsoon freshness, fewer crowds at temple sites, and lingering warmth that stretches beach days past sunset. The ocean calms after the dry season chop, ideal for snorkelling the coral gardens off Nusa Dua.
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