There’s a particular quality of light in North Ubud that’s hard to describe until you’ve been inside a house built to catch it. This two-storey villa, finished and occupied since 2015, is surrounded by jungle on three sides. The canopy fills the windows. Mornings here are birdsong and filtered green shade.
The layout is unusual — two separate living areas, which gives the place a flexibility you don’t find in most two-bedroom villas. One space feels like a lounge; the other works as a study or a second sitting room for guests. Both bedrooms are ensuite. The pool sits on the ground level, tucked into the garden.
The location is practical despite feeling remote. Co-working spaces, restaurants, and a gym are a two-minute walk. Central Ubud and the Monkey Forest are ten minutes by scooter. Crucially, the land sits in the designated Pink Zone — tourism-zoned, meaning short-term holiday rentals are legally straightforward. That’s increasingly rare in Ubud, where zoning ambiguity has stalled more than a few investment plans.
Available freehold at IDR 5.47 billion or leasehold (33 years plus extension) at IDR 3.78 billion. For a completed, income-ready property in Ubud’s most active rental corridor, both structures make sense depending on your horizon.