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Banyak Villa Bali

Two guests. One quiet corner of Bali.

A private retreat in the lush interior of Bali, where golden mornings and warm evenings belong entirely to you.

Adi Xendit sits in the southern reaches of Bali, in a landscape shaped by volcanic earth, tiered rice paddies, and the slow rhythm of village life.

2Guests
5.0Rating
FlexibleCheck-in
Book DirectDirect

An intimate space shaped by Balinese warmth

Adi Xendit sits in the southern reaches of Bali, in a landscape shaped by volcanic earth, tiered rice paddies, and the slow rhythm of village life. The property is designed with two guests in mind — not as an afterthought, but as a deliberate choice to keep the experience personal, unhurried, and genuinely restful. At these coordinates, you are close enough to the cultural heartbeat of the island to explore comfortably, yet far enough from the main tourist corridors to return each evening to real quiet.

The architecture draws on vernacular Balinese building traditions: open-air transitions between interior and garden, thatched or terracotta roof elements, and the use of natural stone and dark timber that weather beautifully in the tropical climate. Light moves through the space differently at each hour — filtered through palm fronds at dawn, direct and golden at midday, diffused and amber by late afternoon. The palette inside responds to that light: warm neutrals, hand-woven textiles, and locally sourced furnishings that feel rooted rather than imported.

The surrounding neighbourhood carries the texture of everyday Bali — the sound of a nearby temple ceremony on certain mornings, a warung a short walk away, motorbikes threading quietly past garden walls. It is the kind of place where the island reveals itself gradually rather than performing for an audience. Guests who appreciate that quality tend to return.

Practically, the property is well-connected: the main road south toward Seminyak and Kuta is accessible within minutes, and Ngurah Rai International Airport is reachable in under an hour depending on traffic. For two guests seeking a base that combines comfort with genuine local character, Adi Xendit offers a proportion and pace that larger properties simply cannot replicate.

What comes with the space

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Wireless Internet

Reliable WiFi throughout the property, suitable for remote work, streaming, and video calls during your stay.

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On-Site Parking

Secure parking for one vehicle within the property compound, accessible directly from the lane outside.

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Equipped Kitchen

Full kitchen with gas cooktop, refrigerator, kettle, and essential cookware for preparing meals from local market ingredients.

❄️

Air Conditioning

Air conditioning in the bedroom ensures comfortable sleep even during the hottest months of the Balinese dry season.

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Hot Water Shower

Ensuite bathroom with consistent hot water, stone or tiled finishes, and natural ventilation that keeps the space fresh.

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Private Garden

Enclosed garden with tropical planting provides shade and privacy. Outdoor seating for two is included on the terrace.

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Quality Bed Linen

Bed made up with clean, high-thread-count linen. Fresh towels and toiletries provided for the full duration of your stay.

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Natural Ventilation

Louvered windows and open-plan transitions allow tropical cross-ventilation, reducing reliance on mechanical cooling during mild weather.

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Smart Television

Smart TV with access to streaming services when connected to the in-property WiFi network, available in the living area.

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Ambient Lighting

Warm-tone lighting throughout the interior creates a relaxed atmosphere suited to evenings in the tropics.

Spaces that earn their keep

Main Bedroom

Double or queen bed · natural ventilation · garden outlook

The bedroom is proportioned for two and finished in warm timber and stone. Louvered openings draw in the garden breeze, and the bed sits low to the ground in keeping with the vernacular aesthetic. Sleep here is genuinely quiet.

Open Living Area

Seating · ceiling fan · indoor-outdoor flow

The living space opens toward the garden on at least one side, keeping the boundary between inside and outside pleasantly ambiguous. A ceiling fan moves the air. Seating is arranged for two people who actually want to talk.

Kitchen and Dining

Equipped kitchen · dining for two · local stone counters

A functional kitchen with the essentials for preparing meals, set alongside a dining space that seats two comfortably. Stone counters and warm timber shelving give the room a grounded, tactile quality suited to morning cooking.

Garden and Terrace

Private garden · terrace seating · tropical planting

The outdoor area is planted with tropical species that provide shade and privacy in equal measure. A terrace gives you somewhere to sit at any hour of the day, from early coffee to late evening conversations under a warm sky.

Bathroom

Ensuite · natural materials · warm water

The bathroom uses stone and timber finishes consistent with the rest of the property. Warm water, adequate pressure, and enough natural light to make the room feel like part of the overall experience rather than an afterthought.

How a day unfolds at Adi Xendit

You arrive to the smell of frangipani and the particular stillness that settles over this part of Bali in the late afternoon. The gate opens onto a garden that has already done the work of separating you from the road. Inside, the space is cool from cross-ventilation rather than sealed air-conditioning, and the light coming through the louvered windows is already turning golden.

Morning begins early here, the way it does across the island. You wake to the sound of birds rather than traffic. The kitchen is stocked or ready for whatever you decide the day calls for — a slow breakfast with coffee brewed at your own pace, or a quick bite before heading out on a motorbike to catch the rice terraces in early light. The nearby warung opens by seven if you prefer to start the day with a bowl of bubur ayam and the particular pleasure of eating where locals eat.

Midday stretches out. If you are staying close, the garden and any available outdoor space become yours entirely — a book, a nap, the kind of afternoon that justifies having come so far. The afternoon heat invites slower movement: a walk through the lane behind the property, a visit to a nearby temple, or simply watching the light shift across the walls from inside.

By evening, the temperature drops just enough to make an outdoor dinner feel like the obvious choice. The village comes quietly alive — smoke from cooking fires, the distant pulse of a gamelan rehearsal, lights coming on in the compound across the lane. You eat well, sleep soundly in a bed sized for actual rest, and wake the next morning ready to do it again, or differently.

Southern Bali, close to everything that matters

Sanur Beach

Sanur Beach

20 minutes by car

A long black-sand and coral beach on Bali's east-facing coast, known for calm surf, morning walkers, and reliable sunrise light.

Pura Dalem Balingkang

Pura Dalem Balingkang

15 minutes by car

An active Balinese Hindu temple with layered stone gates and carved shrines set among old trees, visited by locals for ceremonial offerings.

Gianyar Night Market

Gianyar Night Market

30 minutes by car

One of Bali's most authentic evening markets, where babi guling, sate lilit, and fresh jaja are sold from open stalls to local families.

Tegallalang Rice Terraces

Tegallalang Rice Terraces

40 minutes by car

Terraced rice paddies carved from a river valley, irrigated by the traditional subak system and best visited in the early morning before crowds.

Notes on Bali, travel, and the art of slowing down

June 2026 · 4 min read

What to eat in southern Bali right now

From the charcoal-grilled fish at Jimbaran's shoreside warungs to a bowl of soto ayam at a roadside stall in Sanur, the best eating in this part of the island has always happened off the tourist map. A short guide to where locals actually go.

April 2026 · 5 min read

The early morning case for renting a motorbike

Before the tour buses reach Tegallalang and the cafes open their Instagram-facing windows, Bali belongs to the people on two wheels. Why the first hour of daylight on a rented scooter remains the most honest way to understand this island.

March 2026 · 6 min read

Bali's temple calendar and how to plan around it

Odalan festivals, Galungan processions, and the quiet daily offerings that mark every threshold across the island — understanding the Balinese Hindu calendar transforms a holiday into something closer to a genuine encounter with the place.

Frequently asked questions

What is the check-in time?

Standard check-in is from 2:00 PM. If you are arriving earlier, please message the host in advance and we will do our best to arrange early access or secure luggage storage while your room is prepared.

What is the check-out time?

Check-out is by 11:00 AM. Late check-out until 1:00 PM may be available on request depending on same-day arrivals. Please confirm with the host the evening before your departure.

How many guests can stay?

Adi Xendit is designed for a maximum of 2 guests. The bedroom, bathroom, and overall space are sized and equipped accordingly. Additional guests are not permitted under the booking terms.

Is parking available?

Yes. There is on-site parking for one vehicle within the property compound. Access is from the lane directly outside the gate. Motorbike parking is also available.

Do you accept pets?

Pets are not accommodated at this property. The garden and interior have been designed without pet-proofing measures, and we ask that guests respect this condition to maintain the space for all future guests.

How does direct booking work?

Booking directly through this site means you pay no third-party platform fees, and your reservation is handled entirely between you and the host. You will receive a confirmation by email and a WhatsApp message with arrival details within 24 hours of payment.

What is your cancellation policy?

Our cancellation terms are outlined at the time of booking. We recommend reaching out directly if your plans change — in most cases we can find a solution, including date changes, that works for both parties without financial loss.

How can I reach the host?

The fastest way to reach us is via WhatsApp, which is monitored daily from 8:00 AM to 9:00 PM Bali time (WITA, UTC+8). You can also send an email and expect a reply within a few hours during daylight hours.

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