Skip to content
Destined for Bali
Remote Work & Business

Bali Coworking Prices Compared: What Every Space Actually Costs in 2026

A side-by-side comparison of coworking prices across Bali in 2026 — day passes, monthly plans, and dedicated desks in Canggu, Ubud, Uluwatu and Sanur.

Destined for Bali Editorial 11 min read
People working on laptops in a bright coworking space with natural light and wooden furnishings

I spent an embarrassing amount of time comparing coworking prices when I first moved to Bali. Every space lists their rates differently — some in rupiah, some in dollars, some by the hour, some by the month — and half the blog posts I found were quoting 2023 figures. So I did what I wished someone had done for me: I pulled together every current price I could find, converted them all into the same currency, and laid them side by side.

If you want detailed reviews of how each space actually feels to work in, I’ve written a separate guide to the best coworking and coliving spaces in Bali. This article is purely about the money — what coworking prices in Bali actually look like in 2026, from free to premium, so you can budget properly before you arrive.

Canggu Day Passes: What a Single Day Actually Costs

Canggu has the widest range of coworking prices on the island, which is useful — but only if you know what you’re comparing.

At the budget end, Tribal is genuinely free. You walk in, connect to the wifi, and work. There’s a pool and decent food. The trade-off is obvious: it’s more café-with-benefits than dedicated workspace, with no meeting rooms, Zoom booths, or guaranteed quiet. But for light work days — emails, admin, writing — it’s hard to argue with zero rupiah.

For a proper coworking day pass, Dojo Bali near Echo Beach starts from around IDR 200,000 ($12). That gets you 24/7 access, a pool, meeting rooms, Skype booths, and a café. Kinship Studio in Berawa charges IDR 250,000 ($16) for a more design-focused, quieter environment with a ceramics studio and photography gear on site.

SETTER sits at the premium end: IDR 300,000 ($19) per day for a polished, four-storey space with Zoom pods, ergonomic furniture, and a notably quieter atmosphere. Outpost charges $15/£12 (IDR 240,000) for a day pass that works across all three of their Bali locations (Canggu, Berawa, and Ubud) — solid value if you’re space-hopping.

The quick comparison: Tribal (free) → Dojo (IDR 200,000) → Outpost ($15/IDR 240,000) → Kinship (IDR 250,000) → SETTER (IDR 300,000). For a single day, the difference between cheapest and priciest is only about $7/£6 — but that adds up over a month if you’re buying day passes instead of committing to a plan.

Monthly Memberships: The Sweet Spot for Most Nomads

This is where most remote workers in Bali end up, and where coworking prices start to diverge meaningfully.

Puco Rooftop is the most affordable monthly option I’ve found in Canggu at roughly $154/£121 per month (approximately IDR 2,450,000). It’s a fully equipped space with rooftop views, high-speed wifi, and ergonomic workstations — genuinely good value rather than “cheap for a reason.”

Dojo Bali comes in at around IDR 2,500,000/month ($155/£122) for unlimited access. For roughly the same price as Puco you get the pool, the community events, and 24/7 access. Tropical Nomad is slightly higher at IDR 2,700,000 ($175/£138) for unlimited, with the benefit of rice-field views, 24/7 hours, and weekly member events (BBQs, workshops, film nights).

Outpost charges $195/£154 per month (IDR 3,100,000) for unlimited access across all Bali locations — Canggu, Berawa, and Ubud. If you split time between the coast and the hills, this is arguably the best per-location value on the island.

At the top, SETTER costs IDR 3,700,000/month ($230/£181) but targets a different market entirely — professionals who want a corporate-grade environment with daily Zoom pod access, a personal locker, and 30 pages of printing included.

Monthly price ladder: Puco ($154/£121) → Dojo ($155/£122) → Tropical Nomad ($175/£138) → Outpost ($195/£154) → SETTER ($230/£181). The range is about $75/£59 from cheapest to priciest — roughly the cost of a nice dinner out in Canggu. Worth thinking about what the extra money buys you rather than defaulting to the cheapest option.

Hourly Packages and Flexible Plans: Pay for What You Use

Not everyone needs five days a week at a desk, and several spaces have figured this out.

BWork offers the clearest hourly structure: $49/£39 per month for 25 hours, scaling up to $210/£165 for a dedicated desk. If you only need two or three focused days per week, the 25-hour package works out to roughly $2/£1.60 per hour — about the price of a coffee.

Kinship Studio in Berawa runs a similar system: IDR 800,000 ($50/£39) for 25 hours per month, IDR 1,100,000 ($69/£54) for 50 hours, or IDR 2,000,000 ($125/£98) for the full monthly pass. The jump from 50 hours to unlimited is only about $56/£44, so if you’re consistently hitting 50+ hours, the monthly pass makes more sense.

Outpost offers a 25-hour pass for $54/£43 per month including a hot desk at any Bali location, a mailing address, and three hours of private booth time. For someone who mostly works from their villa but needs a professional space for calls and focused sprints, this is a smart option.

The calculation that matters: if you’re buying day passes more than 12–15 times per month, you’re almost certainly better off with an unlimited monthly membership. At Dojo’s rates, for instance, 13 day passes (IDR 2,600,000/$163/£128) already costs more than the monthly unlimited (IDR 2,500,000/$155/£122). Do the maths before your second week.

Dedicated Desks and Private Offices: When You Need Your Own Spot

If you’re on longer calls, need a monitor permanently set up, or simply want to leave your things overnight, a dedicated desk changes the game.

Tropical Nomad charges about IDR 3,000,000 ($194/£153) for a dedicated desk — only IDR 300,000 ($19/£15) more than their unlimited hot-desk plan. You get your own fixed spot, which saves the morning scramble for a good seat.

Outpost starts dedicated desks at $232/£183 per month with some useful extras: unlimited hours, a locker, and a mailing address. Their multi-month plans bring the effective price down — a three-month commitment works out to $232/£183 per month and includes 48 hours of private-room time. A two-month plan is $210/£165 per month with 32 private-room hours.

SETTER adds a dedicated desk with monitor for an extra IDR 800,000 ($50/£39) on top of the IDR 3,700,000 monthly membership — total about IDR 4,500,000 ($280/£220). That’s the priciest option in Canggu, but you’re getting a premium, distraction-free environment with proper office infrastructure.

Meeting rooms are an additional cost everywhere. SETTER charges IDR 130,000–200,000/hour ($8–$12/£6–£10) for members (IDR 250,000–300,000/$16–$19/£12–£15 for non-members). Most spaces charge in a similar range — budget IDR 150,000–300,000/hour ($9–$19/£7–£15) if you take regular client calls. Outpost’s multi-month plans bundle private-room hours in, which can save a meaningful amount if you’re meeting-heavy.

Beyond Canggu: What Coworking Costs in Ubud, Uluwatu, and Sanur

Canggu isn’t the only option, and prices outside the nomad bubble can differ.

Ubud — A quick note: Hubud, the legendary Ubud space, has closed. Don’t plan around it. Outpost Ubud (in the former Roam property in Penestanan) is the main option now, and since Outpost memberships work across all locations, the pricing is the same: $15/£12 per day, $195/£154 per month unlimited, $232/£183 per month for a dedicated desk. Beluna (Beluna House of Creatives) offers a quieter, rice-field setting with a podcast studio and AC focus rooms — specific pricing isn’t widely published, so check directly, but expect day passes in the IDR 200,000–250,000 ($12–$16/£10–£12) range based on comparable Ubud spaces.

Uluwatu is growing quickly. The Space combines yoga and coworking with an open-air rooftop office — it’s a newer market, so prices tend to be slightly lower than Canggu. Monday Coworking & Coffee Shop in Ungasan is community-oriented and open Monday–Saturday until 11pm. Both are worth visiting with a day pass before committing.

Sanur has Livit Hub as the standout — a modern, ergonomic space on Jl Bumi Ayu. Sanur generally runs 10–15% cheaper than Canggu for comparable spaces, and the area is calmer and more family-friendly.

The trend: Canggu is the most expensive because demand is highest. Ubud matches Canggu at the established spaces (Outpost) but has cheaper café-coworking options. Uluwatu and Sanur are still building their scenes and tend to undercut Canggu on price.

How to Budget for Coworking in Bali

A few practical points that affect the real cost beyond the sticker price.

Don’t default to day passes. The break-even point between day passes and a monthly plan is typically 12–15 visits. If you’re working four or five days a week, a monthly membership saves you 30–50% compared to daily rates.

Factor in the extras. Monitor rental (IDR 50,000–75,000/day ($3–$5/£2.50–£4) at most spaces), printing, meeting rooms, and locker rental can add IDR 500,000–1,000,000/month ($31–$63/£25–£50) if you use them regularly. Some plans bundle these in — SETTER and Outpost’s multi-month plans are good examples. One thing most spaces don’t provide is a laptop stand — and after a week hunched over a flat desk you’ll feel it. I travel with a Nexstand K2 which folds flat, weighs next to nothing, and saves my neck. If you’re coming from the UK and haven’t sorted a plug adapter, an Anker Nano universal adapter handles Indonesia’s Type C/F sockets and charges everything via USB-C.

Exchange rate matters. Spaces quoting in USD peg to the current rate, while IDR-priced spaces effectively get cheaper for dollar earners when the rupiah weakens. As of mid-2026, $1 buys roughly IDR 16,000 — always check the current rate when comparing.

Compare the real monthly cost. A “cheap” coworking space 30 minutes from your villa costs more in time and petrol than a slightly pricier one you can walk to. Canggu traffic during rush hours is genuinely terrible — what looks like a ten-minute scooter ride can take thirty.

The bottom line: budget IDR 2,500,000–3,700,000 ($155–$230/£122–£181) per month for a proper coworking membership in Canggu — a fraction of what you’d pay in London, Manchester, or Bristol for comparable facilities — and the pool is included.

Final Thoughts

Bali coworking prices in 2026 run from genuinely free (Tribal) to about IDR 4,500,000/month ($280/£220) for a dedicated desk with monitor at a premium space like SETTER. Most nomads land somewhere in the IDR 2,500,000–3,000,000 range ($155–$190/£122–£150) for an unlimited monthly plan — which, let’s be honest, is still less than a Zone 1–2 monthly Travelcard.

The prices shift, spaces open and close, and exchange rates move — so treat the figures here as a current snapshot and confirm directly before you sign up. Start with day passes at two or three spaces, do the maths on your likely usage, and commit monthly only once you’ve found the one that fits how you actually work.

For full reviews of how each space feels to work in — the wifi, the vibe, the community — read my guide to the best coworking and coliving spaces in Bali.

FAQs

How much does a coworking day pass cost in Bali?

Day passes in Canggu range from free (Tribal) to about IDR 300,000 ($19/£15) at SETTER. Most spaces charge IDR 200,000–250,000 ($12–$16/£10–£12). Outpost’s $15/£12 day pass works across all their Bali locations, which is good value if you want to try different areas.

What is the cheapest coworking space in Bali?

Tribal in Canggu is free — wifi, a pool, and food, no membership needed. For a proper dedicated workspace, Puco Rooftop at about $154/£121 per month and Dojo Bali at around IDR 2,500,000/month ($155/£122) are the most affordable monthly options in Canggu.

Is a monthly coworking pass worth it in Bali?

Yes, if you work more than 12–15 days per month. At most spaces, the monthly unlimited price equals roughly 13 day passes — anything beyond that is effectively free. The monthly plan also usually includes extras like locker access and event invitations that day passes don’t.

How much is a dedicated desk in Bali?

Dedicated desks range from about IDR 3,000,000/month ($194/£153) at Tropical Nomad to $232/£183 at Outpost and up to IDR 4,500,000 ($280/£220) at SETTER with a monitor. The premium buys you a fixed spot, overnight storage, and typically better meeting-room access.

Are coworking spaces cheaper in Ubud than Canggu?

Not necessarily at established spaces — Outpost charges the same across locations. But Ubud has more affordable café-coworking options and the overall cost of living is lower, so your total monthly spend will likely be less even if the desk price is similar.

Do Bali coworking spaces charge in rupiah or dollars?

Both. Outpost and BWork price in USD; Dojo, Tropical Nomad, SETTER, and Kinship Studio price in IDR. When comparing, convert everything to one currency at the current exchange rate (roughly IDR 16,000 to $1 as of mid-2026) to get an accurate picture.

Is coworking in Bali cheaper than London or New York?

Significantly. A comparable hot-desk membership in London runs £300–£500/month; in Bali you’ll pay $155–$230/£122–£181. You also get pools, cafés, and community events that London spaces charge extra for — or don’t offer at all.

What hidden costs should I budget for?

Monitor rental (IDR 50,000–75,000/day or ~$3–$5/£2.50–£4), meeting rooms (IDR 130,000–300,000/hour or $8–$19/£6–£15), printing, and locker fees can add IDR 500,000–1,000,000/month ($31–$63/£25–£50). Some plans bundle these in. Also factor in scooter fuel for the commute — Canggu traffic makes distance matter.

Can I try coworking spaces before committing?

Yes — almost every space sells day passes, and I’d strongly recommend testing two or three before buying a monthly plan. Check the wifi during a busy afternoon, sit through a video call, and see whether the noise level suits you. One day pass costs less than the regret of a month in the wrong space.

When is the cheapest time to buy a coworking membership in Bali?

Low season (roughly February–April) sometimes brings promotions, though discounting is less common than it used to be. Multi-month commitments offer the most consistent savings — Outpost’s three-month dedicated desk, for instance, includes 48 hours of private rooms that would otherwise cost extra.


Before you go — I wrote this in 2026 and double-checked every price, fee, opening time and rule I could, but Bali changes fast. Treat the figures here as a guide and confirm the latest details before you book or travel.

Some of the links in this article are affiliate links: if you book through them I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only ever recommend things I would happily send a friend to.

Keep reading