Escape the Ordinary
Our Guide to Uluwatu,Bali
Written by
Staff of NUDIENT
Published
Thursday, 25 June, 2025
We flew the team to Bali to start 2025 in motion. For a few months, Uluwatu became our home base. The setting for slow mornings, clear-headed work sessions and nights that turned into something else.
This guide isn’t built around checklists. It’s shaped by rhythm, not routine. Made for the Lifestyle Architect. Someone who blends freedom with focus, and moves through places with intention.

Coffee spots we kept returning to
Alchemy (Bingin)
A vegan café serving organic, plant-based dishes. Both raw and cooked options. A calm spot to start the day with a coffee and get into flow. We often stayed longer for the recovery center. Cold plunge, sauna and yoga. A soft reset when the pace needed slowing.
Analog Café (Bingin)
Retro interiors and Japanese listening bar energy. The coffee is strong and the menu hits close to home. Coming from Sweden, it felt surprisingly comforting to find classics like meatballs and skagen toast on the menu. Familiar flavors in an unfamiliar place.
Artisan (Bingin/Uluwatu):
A 30 seconds scooter ride from our gym and always an easy yes for breakfast. We kept returning for the Simple Life plate. Upstairs, a co-working space became our unofficial HQ. Quiet enough to focus, bright enough to stay a while.

Restaurants that kept us longer than planned
YUKI (Canggu/Uluwatu)
Japanese fusion and wood-fired dishes served in a relaxed, open-air space. We came here more than once and it never missed. The menu has range, but the wagyu sando stood out every single time. Probably the best thing we ate during the entire stay.
Teja (uluwatu)
One of our favorite sunset spots for dinner. Golden hour hits different here. We usually started by sharing a few of the smaller dishes, then moved into mains. The charcoal chicken and pork tomahawk were the ones we kept coming back for.
Kala (uluwatu)
A Greek-inspired neighborhood grill that worked especially well with a bigger group. We’d kick things off with a cocktail or a glass of pét-nat, then pass around their selection of meze. If you're only going once, make it count with one of the souvlakis.

Hotels and villas that felt like home
Uluwatu has some of Bali’s most thoughtfully designed hotels. But since we were traveling as a group, renting a villa through Airbnb made more sense. It gave us flexibility, more space to work from, and homes that felt both functional and inspiring. There are options for every budget, with interiors that lean minimal and modern without losing warmth.
Bingin Treetops
This is where we stayed for most of the trip. A quiet area up the hill with clean lines, soft views, and newly built villas. Peaceful, but still close to the rhythm. If you're looking for a calm neighborhood with great villa options, this is the spot.
Grün Uluwatu:
Sustainable villas tucked into the trees, overlooking the ocean. Each stay comes with access to a spa, gym, pilates classes and plunge pools, both hot and cold. Designed for those who like to slow down with intention.


Where we trained, recovered and reset
The Istana (Uluwatu)
A clifftop retreat offering yoga, meditation and biohacking therapies with some of the most unreal views in Uluwatu. The steam sauna, tucked inside a dome-like structure, is worth the visit alone. Make sure to book your timeslot in advance. This place gets busy for a reason.
Bambu Fitness (Bingin)
An open-air gym in a tropical setting, fully equipped with group classes, top-tier equipment, a wellness center and a café. What really stands out is the energy. The staff and instructors are as friendly as they are committed. The 8:15 morning Shred class became a daily ritual for most of the NUDIENT team.
Santai Recovery Spa (Bingin)
Close to where we were staying, Santai gave us the most value in our wellness routine. We’d head there for an hour of alternating sauna and cold plunges after morning workouts. Always left feeling lighter, clearer, and ready for the work-day ahead.

Nightlife worth staying up for
Savaya (Uluwatu)
If you're into techno and Bali is on your radar, you’ve probably heard of this place. The clifftop setting is unreal and the lineup features some of the biggest names in the game. But for us, it didn’t quite land. Pricey, polished and a little too removed from the kind of intimacy we look for.
Il Salotti (Uluwatu)
A home-run. This Italian spot starts as a restaurant but transitions into one of Uluwatu’s most intimate late-night experiences. We came for dinner, stayed for the energy. Small-scale, solid tunes and a vibe that felt more like a house party than a nightclub.
Papasdelibali (Uluwatu)
We never quite cracked their schedule, which meant we missed more than we caught. But the night we did make it was unforgettable. Market by day, techno heaven by night. We stayed too long, danced too much, and were absolutely not ready for work the next morning.

Before we go…
Don’t miss the sunrise trek up Mt. Batur. Sure, it’s a little touristy, but the moment you’re sitting at the summit, watching the sky shift from pitch black to blazing daylight, it’s nothing short of bliss and awe.
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