The 30-second verdict
Canggu is the beating heart of nomad Bali, and for the right person it is one of the most enjoyable bases on the map. It pairs a very low cost of living with one of the largest and most developed nomad communities anywhere, world-class coworking, surf at the doorstep, a deep cafe and wellness culture, and the villa-and-pool lifestyle that made Bali famous. You can live genuinely well here on 1,500 to 2,500 US dollars a month, and the social side requires no effort at all. It lands just below the top tier on livability.
The score reflects honest limits that money does not fix. The internet is cheap and often fast but genuinely unreliable, with outages that force you onto mobile data. Canggu is built for scooters, not feet, so walkability is poor and the roads are the real danger, far more than crime. The traffic has become a daily grind, the new criminal code sits in the background, and the deeper legal and tax picture covered on the country pages is awkward. Come for the community, the surf, the wellness, and the cheap rich life, manage the internet and the scooter risk deliberately, and Canggu delivers a lifestyle few places match.
Where to rent, and how the villa market really works
Housing in Canggu works unlike anywhere else in this guide, so understanding the mechanics matters. Most nomads rent a villa rather than an apartment, and the best ones are not on international portals at all. They circulate through Canggu villa Facebook groups and local agents on WhatsApp, which is genuinely where the market lives. A one-bedroom villa with a pool runs roughly 750 to 1,200 US dollars a month, a premium one 1,300 to 2,000, a studio 500 to 800, and a room in a coliving or kos from around 300. Prices have climbed noticeably as demand has grown, and central Canggu is now the expensive end.
The mechanic that shocks newcomers is upfront payment. Long villa leases are commonly paid six to twelve months in advance, sometimes the entire year, so securing a good villa means fronting a large lump sum rather than a monthly rent. The fewer, longer payments you make, the better the rate, which rewards commitment but demands cash. Monthly and short rentals exist but run far above the annual rate, and Airbnb carries a heavy markup, so the standard play is to land in a short rental for a week and then find your real villa locally, viewing it in person.
Two cautions matter. The first is rental fraud: a villa advertised below market by someone who wants a year wired before you have seen it. Never do that, view in person or through a trusted agent. The second is bigger and concerns buying rather than renting. Foreigners cannot own freehold land in Indonesia, and the leasehold and nominee structures marketed to foreigners carry real legal risk, with horror stories attached. As a nomad, the clear advice is to rent, not buy, and to treat any pitch to purchase land or a villa as something requiring independent legal advice and deep skepticism.
The neighborhoods, ranked by who they suit
Within greater Canggu, Berawa is the busiest and most built-up zone, dense with beach clubs and cafes and priced accordingly, the default for first-timers who want to be in the thick of it. Batu Bolong is the original heart, the main surf-and-cafe strip, lively and as walkable as Canggu gets, which is to say only somewhat. Pererenan, just north among the rice fields, is where nomads priced out of central Canggu have moved, quieter and a touch better value while still firmly in the scene, and it is the area on the rise.
Beyond Canggu proper, the choices diverge by mood. Seminyak is the polished, upscale older sibling, with fine dining and big beach clubs and a more grown-up feel. Ubud, an hour inland, is the jungle-and-wellness heart of Bali, calmer, greener, and built around yoga and cafes, a completely different pace that suits writers and the wellness crowd. Sanur, on the east coast, is the quiet, established, family-friendly option with a gentle beach promenade. Wherever you land, the citywide truth holds: Bali assumes you have a scooter, distances that look short take real time in the traffic, and walking between areas is rarely practical.
The dating and social scene
Canggu's social life is one of its defining strengths and comes together instantly. The nomad community is large, international, and concentrated, so meeting other foreigners takes no effort, and the connective tissue is everywhere: the beach clubs and cafes of Berawa and Batu Bolong, the coworking socials at Dojo and Tropical Nomad, the yoga and wellness communities, the surf lineups, and a packed calendar of events. Tinder, Bumble, and Hinge are all busy among foreigners, with the fast, transient rhythm of a place where everyone is on a visa cycle, which makes connections easy to form and easy to lose.
Two honest notes belong here. First, the scene is overwhelmingly expat-to-expat; genuinely connecting with Balinese locals is possible and rewarding, helped by Bali's relaxed Hindu culture, but it takes effort and a little Bahasa beyond the bubble. Second, the legal backdrop changed in 2026. The new criminal code criminalizes extramarital sex and cohabitation, but it is enforced only on a formal complaint from a spouse, parent, or child, so the practical risk for an unmarried foreign couple is low even as the law is genuinely in force. On LGBTQ life, be clear-eyed: Indonesia offers no legal recognition and a conservative climate, Bali is the most discreetly tolerant corner, and discretion is essential rather than optional. The country dating page covers this in full.
Coworking, internet, and getting work done
Coworking is where Canggu is genuinely world-class. Dojo Bali, the original, remains the community flagship near Echo Beach at around 110 dollars a month, with Tropical Nomad, B Work, and Karya rounding out Canggu and Outpost anchoring Ubud with yoga and community dinners included. These spaces are the backbone of nomad Bali, both for the reliable internet and generators they offer and for the social and professional network they create. If you work from Canggu, a coworking membership is close to essential.
The reason it is essential is the home internet, which is the island's real weakness. Villa fiber from Biznet, IndiHome, or MyRepublic can deliver 50 to 200 Mbps and is cheap, but reliability is the problem: construction, a downed pole, or a power cut can take your line out for hours or days, and installation can take a couple of weeks. Mobile data on Telkomsel is cheap and the standard backup, though 5G is limited and 4G is what you will mostly use. The working answer is redundancy: a villa with proven fiber, a strong mobile plan for outages, and a coworking membership for the days the villa drops. Plan for unreliability and you are fine. Assume European stability and Bali will repeatedly let you down.
Cost of living, safety, and getting around
Budget honestly and Canggu is cheap for the lifestyle. A lean life runs near 1,000 dollars a month, a comfortable one around 1,800, and an indulgent one past 3,000. A warung meal costs a few dollars, a cafe smoothie bowl more, a scooter rental 60 to 100 a month, a coffee around 2.50. The real costs are imported goods, Western dining, and anything tourist-facing, but a life that leans local is genuinely inexpensive.
On safety, hold the distinction firmly. Crime against foreigners is low, mostly petty theft, the snatched phone or bag, often from a passing scooter. The genuine danger is the road. Scooter accidents are the leading cause of injury and death for nomads in Bali, and they are common, so the rules are not optional: wear a helmet every single time, never ride after drinking, ride slowly and defensively, and be honest about whether you can ride at all. Insure specifically for scooter use and medical evacuation, because the worst Bali outcomes are road injuries that need flying to Singapore. The other hazards to respect are rip currents at some beaches and the usual money-changer and rental scams, all easily managed with care.
Getting around means a scooter, full stop. There is no real public transport, the ride-hailing apps Gojek and Grab are cheap and useful for cars and food, and a car is unnecessary. The trade-off is the traffic, which in central Canggu has become a genuine daily grind, and the poor walkability. A scooter is freedom here, and also the main thing that can hurt you, which captures Bali in a sentence.
The climate and the rhythm
Canggu is tropical and warm year-round, with highs around 30 to 32 Celsius and humid nights near 24, and it runs in two seasons. The dry season from roughly May through September is the best time to be here: sunny, lower humidity, prime surf. The wet season from November through March brings heavy afternoon downpours, higher humidity, and the occasional flood, though mornings are often bright and life continues around the rain. The constant warmth suits some and wears on others over months, and the humidity is a real factor in daily comfort and in how hard your villa's air conditioning has to work.
The broader rhythm is the wellness-and-surf lifestyle that defines Bali: early mornings, yoga and the gym, work from a cafe or coworking, an afternoon surf, sunset at a beach club. It is a genuinely good daily life, and it is most of why people accept the island's friction. Tap water is not drinkable, so you rely on refills and bottled water, and the island's struggles with traffic and waste are visible up close.
The bottom line
Canggu earns its standing on community, cost, coworking, surf, and a lifestyle that is hard to replicate, and loses the rest to unreliable internet, scooter-dominated danger, poor walkability, and the awkward legal and tax layer underneath. For a nomad who values community and a cheap, rich, outdoor life above bureaucratic ease and infrastructure, and who manages the internet redundancy and the scooter risk like an adult, Bali remains one of the most rewarding bases on the map. For the legal and financial reality beneath the lifestyle, read the country pages on the visa, tax, and residency rules, and note especially that the E33G excludes freelancers and that a KITAS can make you a tax resident from day one.