How are the pool villas in Bali actually this affordable?
This was the thing that genuinely surprised me, so let me be honest about why it works. The private pool villas I stayed in around Ubud felt like proper luxury, your own plunge pool, rice fields out front, a floating breakfast brought to you on a tray, and they cost a fraction of what the same thing would back home in Sydney. The trick is that in Bali the splurge isn't really a splurge, so I happily paid for the villa and then kept everything else simple: most meals at the local warungs (nasi campur and a fresh juice for next to nothing), a private driver for the day rather than taxis on demand, and the public fast boat across to the islands. Spend where it changes the whole feel of the trip, which here is the villa, and save on everything that doesn't, and Bali gives you far more than the price tag suggests.
Getting around without losing a day to it
The bit nobody warns you about is the distances. You fly into Denpasar and it's a solid 1.5 hours up to Ubud, often more in traffic, so prebook a driver or grab a Grab from the terminal rather than landing tired and haggling. Once you're settled, I'd hire a private driver for the day for the bigger outings, Tegallalang rice terraces, the waterfalls like Tegenungan, all of it, because it's genuinely cheap and you're not wrestling a map in the heat. Scooters are everywhere and a fraction of the cost, but Ubud's lanes get tight and busy, so only ride if you're confident and always wear the helmet. And for Nusa Penida, your driver drops you at Sanur harbour for the fast boat across; from Toya Pakeh harbour on the other side it's about a 35-minute drive to the Kelingking viewpoint, and having a guide sorted for that day made the whole island so much easier to navigate.
What I'd actually plan around
If I were doing my eight days again, I'd build them the same way: slow villa mornings in Ubud for the floating breakfast and the rice-field calm, early starts for Tegallalang and the waterfalls before the heat and the crowds arrive, the Monkey Forest in town (sunglasses and snacks zipped away, they're quick), one full day out to Nusa Penida for Kelingking, and one special candlelit dinner at The Cave to bookend it all. The mistake I'd warn against is over-packing the itinerary; Bali rewards a relaxed pace, not a checklist sprint, and the days I loved most were the unhurried ones where the only plan was breakfast in the pool.



