Explore Indonesia
Indonesia is extraordinary in scale - an archipelago of over 17,000 islands, stretching across three time zones and home to some of the most diverse landscapes, cultures, and wildlife on earth. At its heart is Java, an island that opens up a world that rewards curiosity at every turn. You'll stand before Borobudur, one of the greatest Buddhist monuments ever built - a vast stone structure rising from the Javanese jungle that is as moving as it is magnificent. Nearby, the towering Hindu temples of Prambanan glow gold and orange at dusk. Volcanoes punctuate the landscape throughout, and your national guides and local experts will make sure you understand not just what you're seeing, but why it matters. Indonesia is a destination that changes how you see the world — and Bali, waiting at the end of it, is the perfect place to let it all sink in.
Unwind After Your Tour
Just a short hop from Java, Bali is one of Asia's most extraordinary destinations - and that's saying something in a region full of remarkable places. It's not just a beach: it's an island with a spiritual depth and cultural character all of its own, and that quality follows you all the way to the shoreline. After the scale and richness of an Indonesian cultural tour, it is exactly the right place to arrive.
Fully Inclusive of Tour & Flights
Bali has a quality that's difficult to define but impossible to miss. It is a predominantly Hindu island in the world's largest Muslim-majority nation, where daily flower offerings appear on doorsteps, gamelan music drifts through the air, and the landscape of terraced rice paddies and volcanic peaks is as beautiful as anywhere on earth. All of that atmosphere is present even at the beach - Bali doesn't leave itself behind when you reach the coast, and the result is a beach stay with a depth of character that most destinations simply can't match.
The coastline is varied enough to suit every kind of traveller. Seminyak and Kuta in the south are lively and social, with great restaurants, beach clubs, and consistent surf. The Bukit Peninsula offers something more dramatic - clifftop temples, hidden coves, and world-famous surf breaks at Uluwatu. Sanur, to the east, is quieter and more traditional, with calm, reef-protected water and a lovely seafront promenade. Whichever part of the coast you find yourself on, the warmth and beauty of the place are constant. And for those who want to venture inland for a day, Ubud - galleries, temples, and rice terrace walks - is just an hour away. In Bali, there is always more to discover. But if all you want to do is sit on the beach and let the island work its magic, that is more than enough.