Stay here: Regent Bali Canggu review

Bali's hippest coast welcomes a new luxury address
An aerial view of a beachfront resort with swimming pools, tropical gardens, guest buildings and the ocean shoreline.
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Denpasar (Bali)

Canggu has long been the domain of surfers, digital nomads and the açaí-bowl crowd. That a resort of such calibre now calls the same stretch of coastline home feels like a natural evolution. Regent Bali Canggu is an all-suites-and-villas sanctuary where Balinese tradition meets polished luxury, encased between the Indian Ocean and a patchwork of terraced rice fields.  

A bowl of seafood in a rich orange sauce, garnished with herbs and sliced vegetables, served on a wooden table in warm sunlight.
A hand holds a crisp garnish above a pink cocktail beside a window overlooking the ocean at sunset.
An open-air beachfront terrace with tables, chairs and a wooden pergola, overlooking the ocean under a blue sky.

Credit: Rosewood Phuket

What’s the deal?  

Regent Bali Canggu is a tender love letter to the island. The first Regent property here, it sits at the edge of the buzzing Batu Bolong strip – yet stepping through the entrance feels like crossing into another space entirely: the noise drops, the air cools and the pace slows to something ceremonial. 

Low-rise pavilions, built with local timber and andesite stone, sit gently in the landscape rather than towering over it. Their interiors nod to local design aesthetics without aping them; batik patterns and Balinese imagery are applied with tasteful restraint, working in harmony with a colour palette that shifts with the light – silver-green at noon, ochre at dusk. 

View from a luxury suite looking out towards a private pool, tropical garden and the ocean beyond.
A spacious bathroom featuring a carved wooden bathtub, glass shower and large window with ocean views.

Why stay? 

Canggu is Bali's most in-demand neighbourhood right now, yet proper five-star service remains a rarity here – Regent Bali Canggu is one of only a handful of true luxury hotels in the area. Guest suites and villas are large and softly lit, dressed in woven textures and warm timbers. A complimentary refreshment gallery stocked with local snacks and drinks gives a taste of the resort’s thoughtful approach to hospitality. The real showpiece, though, is the hand-carved teak bathtub found in every bathroom. Sinking into it after a day in the surf turned out to be the ritual I looked forward to most. Meanwhile, nine pools across the resort – each with their own cabanas – means you never need to wait for a sun lounger. 

During your stay, you can indulge at five dining spots. Poolside restaurant Taru serves comforting Indonesian classics like beef rendang and ayam bakar madu (chargrilled chicken). On the beachfront, award-winning chef Andrew Walsh runs Sazón, a convivial Spanish tapas bar where the small seafood plates alone are worth the five-minute stroll. Nearby, Walsh’s newly opened restaurant Cure adds modern European cooking to the mix. Back at the resort, a signature Regent Club lounge serves complimentary champagne each evening. 

The illuminated entrance of a luxury resort, with a wooden walkway crossing reflective pools towards the main building.

Cathay editors say…  

"The Massage Revolution at the world's first Regent Spa & Wellness is a treatment not to be missed. Performed on a warm quartz sand bed, the cradling grains shift beneath you as the therapist works – a sensation conventional tables simply cannot replicate. I followed the treatment with a crystal restoration and left feeling not just relaxed but genuinely restored. " 

More inspiration

Bali travel information

Country / Region
Indonesia
Language
Balinese, Bahasa Indonesia
Airport code
DPS
Currency
IDR
Time zone
GMT +08:00
Climate
Tropical
Country / Region
Indonesia
Time zone
GMT +08:00
Currency
IDR
Airport code
DPS
Language
Balinese, Bahasa Indonesia
Climate
Tropical
Find the best fares to
Denpasar (Bali)