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    Hotel in Ubud, Indonesia

    Amandari

    1,125pts

    Sacred-Site Village Architecture

    Amandari, Hotel in Ubud

    About Amandari

    Opened in 1989 as Bali's first village-style resort, Amandari occupies a dramatic position above the Ayung River gorge in Kedewatan, five minutes from Ubud. Its 30 thatched-roof suites, scored 90 points by La Liste in 2026, are arranged around private walled gardens and set along sacred land still used for Balinese ritual processions. Starting from $995 per night, it remains the foundational reference point for luxury resort design in Bali.

    The Approach That Sets the Tone

    The transition from Ubud's arterial roads to Amandari's driveway is one of those rare moments in travel where the shift is both physical and psychological. The noise of motorbikes drops away. A canopy of trees closes overhead. By the time the open-air lobby comes into view, its silhouette modelled on a wantilan, the traditional Balinese village meeting pavilion, the resort has already made its argument without saying a word. Amandari opened in 1989 as Bali's first village-style resort, and while that origin story is now well-documented, what matters more for the traveller considering a stay is that the design logic has aged with unusual integrity. The river-stone walkways, the high paras-stone walls, the thatched-roof suites entered through Balinese stone gateways: none of it has been renovated into blandness.

    This is the Aman formula at its most distilled. The group's properties, from Aman New York to Aman Venice, operate on the principle that the setting does most of the editorial work if the architecture is disciplined enough to step aside. At Amandari, that discipline is visible in what is absent as much as what is present: no overscaled grand staircase, no lobby bar positioned for spectacle, no architectural gestures competing with the Ayung River gorge dropping away beyond the pool terrace.

    Ubud's Luxury Tier and Where Amandari Sits Within It

    Ubud now carries a dense competitive set at the upper end of resort accommodation. Mandapa, a Ritz-Carlton Reserve has positioned itself on Ayung River access and a wellness-forward program. Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan occupies a dramatic lotus-pond promontory. Capella Ubud, Bali delivers a tented camp format, and COMO Shambhala Estate competes on a therapeutic wellness identity. Into this field, Amandari brings one claim no competitor can replicate: precedence. It is the original, scored 90 points by La Liste in its 2026 Leading Hotels ranking, and its pricing from $995 per night places it in the same bracket as its nearest peers while carrying the additional weight of being the property that, in many respects, defined what the bracket looks like.

    That said, Amandari's comparative position is not simply about heritage. At 30 suites, it is one of the more intimate properties in the Ubud luxury tier, a restraint that directly affects the quality of service density. Properties that have chased scale tend to absorb that intimacy into operational complexity. Amandari has not. For travellers comparing it against larger-footprint competitors, that ratio of staff attention to room count is a functional differentiator, not a sentimental one.

    Across Bali more broadly, properties like Alila Villas Uluwatu in Uluwatu and Nihi Sumba in Sumba occupy the same general price tier with distinct geographic and experiential identities. Amandari's position is rooted specifically in Ubud's cultural density: the temples, rice terraces, and ceremony cycles that make central Bali a different proposition from the coastal south.

    The Dining Programme

    Amandari's restaurant occupies a teak-framed open-air pavilion that looks across the 32-metre infinity pool and out over the Ayung gorge. The format is all-day, covering breakfast through dinner, with a menu that moves between Western preparations and Indonesian dishes, Balinese favourites included. This dual-register approach is consistent with Aman's broader dining philosophy at its Southeast Asian properties: neither fully destination-dining in the chef-tasting-menu sense, nor a generic international buffer. It is, instead, a programme calibrated around the guest who wants to eat well without leaving the property, with the landscape doing as much work as the kitchen.

    The sourcing is locally anchored. Produce, free-range poultry, and pigs come from organic farms in the surrounding region, a detail that matters less as a marketing claim and more as a function of what arrives on the plate: ingredients at the right altitude, in the right season, without the degradation that comes from long supply chains. The inspector's notation of baked goods from the minibar and a fruit platter on arrival reads as part of the same logic, a property that treats food as ambient hospitality rather than an upsell category.

    The Bar, positioned with terrace seating, carries a broad drinks selection and functions as the social counterpoint to the restaurant's more settled atmosphere. In the evenings, it provides a natural transition point between time at the pool and dinner, without requiring the resort guest to recalibrate for a different kind of venue.

    For travellers drawn to Ubud specifically for its wider dining scene, the full Ubud restaurants guide maps the town's options beyond the resort perimeter. Amandari's proximity to the art community, five minutes by road, means day excursions and evening dining in town are straightforwardly accessible.

    Spa, Wellness, and the Sacred Pathway

    The wellness infrastructure here runs deeper than the standard spa menu. A pathway that cuts through the resort and descends to the Ayung River valley below has been used for Balinese ritual processions for hundreds of years, a procession route that predates the resort by centuries. The path leads to a spring-fed pool flanked by three shrines and a seventh-century tiger carved into rock. The resort does not stage this as an amenity. It is simply there, and guests who take the 129 steps down encounter it on its own terms.

    Amandari's spa sits surrounded by water with two open-air massage bales, a beauty room, sauna, and steam room. Treatments draw on local ingredients: black rice exfoliant and volcanic clay feature in the Village Spa Journey, a programme that references the Balinese melukat purification ceremony. The pool, the 32-metre green-tiled infinity pool that was Bali's first, lies at the gorge edge and functions as the resort's central social space in a way that no interior room could replicate. Garden yoga is also available for guests who want structured movement rather than passive rest.

    Wellness-forward alternatives in the Ubud area include COMO Shambhala Estate, which builds its entire identity around a therapeutic programme, and Gdas Bali Health and Wellness Resort. Amandari is not purely a wellness property, but it is one where the wellness offering is coherent with the broader design intent rather than bolted on.

    The Suites and Villa

    All 30 suites are walled and thatched-roof, entered through stone gateways and opening on three sides through sliding glass doors onto private garden courtyards. Bathrooms include outdoor sunken marble soaking tubs with twin vanities. Some suites have private plunge pools; the duplex configurations place the bedroom on a mezzanine level with wraparound windows looking out over the Ayung valley. The Amandari Suite adds detached bedroom options, a separate living pavilion, a private pool, and an outdoor teak and bamboo bale. The single villa extends this further across five pavilions in the rice terraces, with a two-tiered pool and dedicated staff.

    Comparable smaller-scale design properties in the surrounding area include Bisma Eight Ubud and Chapung Sebali. For travellers considering Ubud alongside Bali's southern and coastal options, Potato Head Suites and Studios in Seminyak and COMO Uma Ubud represent different points on the same broad spectrum of considered design hospitality.

    Planning Your Stay

    Amandari is approximately 1.5 hours by road from Ngurah Rai International Airport (DPS), the standard routing for Ubud properties. Traffic in central Ubud can be slow, particularly during festival periods, which occur throughout the Balinese ceremonial calendar. The concierge can advise on which ceremonies and celebrations overlap with a given stay: the temples adjacent to Kedewatan village are within walking or short driving distance and these are functioning religious sites, not tourist set-pieces. The hotel can also arrange back-road cycling routes and river hikes for guests who want more structured activity outside the resort. Rates begin from $995 per night.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Which room category should I book at Amandari?

    The standard suites all include private garden courtyards, outdoor marble soaking tubs, and twin vanities, which puts them well above the entry tier at most competitors. The primary upgrade decisions are between a garden suite, a suite with a private plunge pool, and a duplex with refined Ayung valley views. For guests prioritising the view, the duplex configurations with mezzanine bedrooms and wraparound windows are the appropriate choice. The Amandari Suite, with its separate living pavilion and private pool, functions as a self-contained retreat within the resort and suits longer stays or guests who want the option of meaningful in-suite space beyond the bedroom. The villa, with five pavilions, dedicated staff, and a vehicle on call, sits in a different category entirely and is the relevant option for multi-family or extended private stays. La Liste's 90-point score applies to the property as a whole; the suite category determines how much of the setting you can access privately.

    What is Amandari known for?

    Amandari's primary claim in the Ubud context is precedence: opened in 1989 as Bali's first village-style resort, it established the design vocabulary of thatched suites, walled gardens, and gorge-edge pool placement that subsequent properties across the island have adapted to varying degrees. It sits in the Aman group portfolio alongside Aman New York and Aman Venice, with the same service philosophy applied to a specifically Balinese setting. Within that setting, the 32-metre infinity pool above the Ayung gorge, the sacred ceremonial pathway running through the property, and the spa programme drawing on local ritual traditions are the features that repeat most consistently in documented guest accounts and inspector notes. La Liste placed it at 90 points in the 2026 Leading Hotels ranking.

    How hard is it to get in to Amandari?

    At 30 suites, Amandari is a small property by the standards of Bali's larger resort competitors, and availability during peak periods, particularly the July-to-August school holiday window and the Christmas-to-New Year period, tends to tighten well in advance. Balinese ceremonial dates that attract significant visitor interest can create secondary demand spikes. Booking several months ahead for high-season travel is advisable. The property sits in the Aman portfolio, where direct booking through the group is the standard approach. For the Ubud area at comparable price points, Mandapa, a Ritz-Carlton Reserve and Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan carry larger room counts and may offer more date flexibility for last-minute planning.

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