Day 1: Bali
Pererenan brunch, Canggu walk, and rooftop drinks
Morning (10:30)
Penny Lane
A design-heavy brunch stop is exactly right for your bachelorette brief, and this one suits a first Bali trip because it feels celebratory straight away without requiring a huge early start.
💡 Ask for a table in the courtyard rather than near the entrance—the light is softer for photos and the music feels less loud before noon.
Lunch (13:00)
Canggu street shopping on Jalan Pantai Batu Bolong
This works for your foodie-shopping mix because it adds Bali texture between meals without a museum-style time commitment, and the route is easy for a group to browse at your own pace.
💡 The best shopping stretch is the smaller boutiques set back from the main surf stores—look for linen sets, local jewelry, and resortwear just off the main road.
Afternoon (15:00)
Pererenan beach walk
You wanted a real neighborhood walk in Bali, and this stretch gives you exactly that—less chaotic than central Canggu, still photogenic, and easy to pair with rooftop drinks after.
💡 Walk north from the main beach access for a cleaner shoreline look in photos and fewer surf-school boards in frame.
Sunset (17:30)
Sol Rooftop Bali
This is your clean photo-friendly sunset stop on day one, and it suits a bachelorette group because you get drinks, sea light, and a dressed-up atmosphere without a difficult late-day transfer.
💡 Ask staff which side catches the least wind before sunset—hair and candle tables get messy fast on breezy evenings.
Dinner (20:00)
The Lawn Canggu dinner and drinks handoff
For the first night, this keeps the transport easy and gives you a believable social flow from sunset into dinner and drinks without crossing districts late.
💡 Book a proper dining table, not a drinks sofa, if you actually want food to arrive on time once the music gets louder.
Day 2: Bali
Ubud rice terrace views and Goutama food street
Morning (09:30)
Tegalalang Rice Terrace
Since this is a first Bali trip and you asked for a genuinely iconic viewpoint, this is the right inland pick—visually strong, unmistakably Bali, and still manageable as a half-day outing.
💡 Enter from a main access point but walk a little farther down the path before taking group photos—the first platform gets crowded with quick-stop visitors.
Lunch (12:15)
This Is Bali - Balinese Food & Desserts
You specifically wanted a local food stop in Bali, and this is a high-conviction one for first-timers because the menu gives you recognizably Balinese flavors in a central Ubud location that feels easy for a group.
💡 Ask the staff to pace dishes family-style so the table can sample more and keep lunch social rather than staggered.
Afternoon (14:30)
Goutama Street and central Ubud boutique walk
This gives you the neighborhood walk you asked for, plus shopping and café texture, and it fits a packed trip because everything is close enough to keep the afternoon flowing.
💡 The smaller side lanes off Goutama are where you'll find nicer ceramics, woven bags, and less repetitive souvenir stock.
Sunset (17:30)
Cantina Rooftop Restaurant
This is a smart Ubud sunset choice for your group because it gives you a dressed-up drink moment and photo payoff without needing to leave the area before dinner.
💡 The best photos happen just before the light drops fully—take them early, then settle into drinks once the crowd starts posting and moving.
Dinner (20:00)
The Upper Deck Ubud
This gives you the one nice restaurant meal of the day in a setting that still feels celebratory, and it works for your foodie priorities without forcing a late transfer back toward the beach districts.
💡 Tell the staff you're celebrating and ask them to slow the mains slightly so sunset drinks don't collide with the kitchen pacing.
Day 3: Bali
Seminyak beach club, Petitenget dinner, and late cocktails
Morning (11:00)
Kynd Community brunch
A proper late brunch suits your night-owl group and gives you the polished, social start a bachelorette day needs before heading into beach-club territory.
💡 The front mural zone gets crowded fast, so eat first and take photos on the way out when tables are turning over.
Lunch (13:30)
Potato Head Beach Club daybed session
This is the signature celebration activity your trip brief calls for, and it's the right Bali pick because it combines beach, drinks, music, and a strong social atmosphere in one place without a long transfer chain.
💡 Book a shaded bed rather than the first row if you're staying several hours—the front looks great for ten minutes and feels much hotter by mid-afternoon.
Afternoon (17:00)
Potato Head Sunset Park
This keeps your strongest photo moment simple and iconic, which is ideal for a group that wants maximum payoff without scrambling between venues at golden hour.
💡 The upper lawn gives cleaner group shots than the edge nearest the main crowd, especially once sunset guests cluster around the obvious photo points.
Sunset (18:30)
Get-ready break at the hotel in Petitenget
A real buffer here matters for a dressed-up bachelorette night, and keeping it in the same district avoids the usual Bali mistake of forcing glam time inside traffic-heavy transfer windows.
💡 Order one shared ice bucket and have everyone lay out shoes before shower rotations start—small logistics save a surprising amount of time.
Dinner (20:00)
Ling-Ling's Bali
This is the best celebration dinner from your verified shortlist because it feels lively, photogenic, and social, and it puts you in exactly the right Petitenget zone for a smooth late-night continuation.
💡 Tell them it's a bachelorette dinner and ask to stagger cocktails and food slightly—this place feels better when the table isn't flooded all at once.
The Iron Fairies Bali
This is a believable nightlife handoff for your bachelorette group because it's nearby, atmospheric, and easy to get back from without a cross-city scramble after midnight.
💡 Go after 22:15 for the better energy, but leave before the latest crush if you want a simpler ride back.
Day 4: Bali
Seminyak brunch, boutiques, beach, and final dinner
Morning (11:30)
Sisterfields brunch
A late, easy brunch is perfect after your strongest night out, and this one keeps the final day social, reliable, and central for shopping without feeling like filler.
💡 Join the waitlist digitally if available and use the first 20 minutes for a quick browse nearby instead of standing outside in the heat.
Lunch (14:00)
Seminyak Village and Petitenget boutique shopping
This suits your shopping priority while keeping the day light on logistics, and it works well for a final day when people often want flexible time for gifts and resortwear.
💡 Use the mall only as a cool-air reset and spend more time on the surrounding boutiques where the finds feel less generic.
Afternoon (16:00)
Seminyak Beach walk and bean bag stop
This gives you one more easy Bali-photo block with ocean air and low effort, which is exactly right after a late night and before your final dinner.
💡 Choose a bean bag setup slightly away from the busiest entrance so you get a cleaner sunset line and fewer interruptions from sellers.
Sunset (18:00)
Pre-dinner cocktails at Potato Head Beachfront
A short return here works because it's familiar, easy, and gives your final evening a polished sunset drink without overcomplicating the route.
💡 Keep this to one round only—the point is a clean handoff into dinner, not trying to recreate the big party night.
Dinner (20:00)
Merah Putih final dinner
For a farewell meal, this is a strong first-time Bali choice because it feels special and distinctly Indonesian without tipping into a formal tasting-menu evening that would slow the group down too much.
💡 The upstairs room often feels more atmospheric for a celebration, but the ground floor gives a stronger sense of the dramatic architecture—choose based on whether photos or conversation matter more.
Created with rondinello.com. Share your trip: rondinello.com/p/T9MS2B