The first thing you notice is the sound. Not silence exactly, but the low, constant rhythm of waves breaking against the limestone below. Suluban Beach is 250 metres from your door, and there are private stairs down to the sand. That matters here — in Uluwatu, beach access is never guaranteed.
You might assume a development this close to the cliff edge would be small. It isn’t. Thirty units across a full hectare, with villas between 165 and 240 square metres. Two to four bedrooms depending on the configuration. Open-plan layouts that push the living space outward — through sliding walls, across pool terraces, into the salt air. The structural work is already done. Handover is Q2 2026.
What sets this apart from other Bukit developments is the shared infrastructure. There’s a proper yoga centre with ocean views. A surf recovery zone — sauna, ice baths, the things that actually get used. Full property management on site, which matters if you’re not living here year-round.
Single Fin is a five-minute walk. So are Blue Point and Mana. Uluwatu has quietly become one of the most bankable pockets on the peninsula, with consistent rental occupancy driven by the international surf crowd.
Leasehold from IDR 6.57 billion. Worth a serious look.