There’s a specific kind of traveler who ends up in Ubud alone, and you can usually spot her within the first hour: notebook out at a café overlooking rice paddies, no itinerary rushing her, entirely unbothered by eating solo. If our Rajasthan luxury trilogy was about romance, drama, and grandeur, this new Real Shee Power Solo Women’s Travel series is about something different — the places where going alone isn’t just tolerated, it’s the whole point.
Ubud opens the series for a simple reason: more solo women land here specifically to travel alone than almost anywhere else on Earth, and the town has quietly built an entire culture around that fact — yoga shalas, communal warungs, wellness retreats, and a level of “solo traveler infrastructure” that took decades to develop and shows.
🧞♀️ Genie’s Take: Different series, same promise — I’m not here to tell you where’s “pretty.” I’m here to tell you where you can actually relax while traveling alone. Ubud earns its spot.
Short answer: yes, and by a wide margin. Ubud is consistently rated the safest and most comfortable base in Bali for women traveling alone — safer, in fact, than the island’s beach hubs. It’s walkable, filled with other solo travelers (so you’re rarely the only woman eating alone), and dense with a wellness and expat culture that means English is spoken everywhere and ride-hailing apps like Gojek and Grab are the default way to get around, cheap and GPS-tracked for both you and anyone waiting for you back home.
The standard precautions still apply. Avoid poorly lit alleys and isolated shortcuts after midnight, stick to busy stalls if you’re eating street food (Bali belly is real but manageable with basic hygiene awareness), and treat scooter rental with real caution — Bali’s biggest actual risk to travelers is road traffic, not crime.
Unlike our luxury guides where the hotel is the destination, solo travel is more about neighborhood fit than any single property. Ubud’s center is small enough to walk, but where you base yourself changes your whole trip.
Ubud center (around Monkey Forest Road and Jalan Hanoman): The most walkable option, close to the Campuhan Ridge Walk, yoga studios, and the Ubud Palace. Best for first-timers who want everything within a 15-minute walk.
Penestanan: A quieter, artsier hillside neighborhood a short walk or scooter ride from the center — rice-field views, fewer tourists, still close enough to walk into town for dinner.
Nyuh Kuning: Just south of the Monkey Forest, this is the pick for travelers who want to feel like they’re staying in an actual Balinese village while still being 10 minutes from everything.
🧞♀️ Genie’s Take: Book a villa or guesthouse with a shared pool, not a private one. It sounds counterintuitive, but shared pools are where solo travelers actually meet each other — and Ubud’s guesthouse culture is built around exactly that kind of easy, low-pressure socializing.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY 2.0
A well-marked, well-traveled ridge trail through green hills just north of the town center — genuinely one of the safest and most rewarding solo walks in Bali. Go at dawn, before the heat and the crowds, for the best light and the emptiest trail.
The famous, much-photographed terraced rice paddies about 20 minutes north of Ubud, built on the centuries-old subak irrigation system, a cooperative Balinese farming tradition tied to the philosophy of Tri Hita Karana — harmony with nature, with others, and with the divine. It’s touristy, and worth it anyway. Go early morning or approach from the quieter Kebon Road entrance to skip the busiest section.
A shaded temple complex home to hundreds of long-tailed macaques — genuinely fun, but keep sunglasses and dangling jewelry tucked away; the monkeys are opportunistic and famously good at spotting shiny objects.
Ubud’s wellness scene isn’t a gimmick — smaller shalas like Intuitive Flow offer classes overlooking misted valleys, and it’s one of the easiest, lowest-pressure ways to meet other solo travelers in a town built around exactly that.
At Tirta Empul, or for a quieter, more private version, the smaller water temples near Sebatu, visitors can take part in a traditional Balinese melukat purification ritual. Dress modestly, bring a sarong, and treat it as the spiritual practice it is rather than a photo op.
🧞♀️ On timing: April through October is Bali’s dry season and the most comfortable stretch for walking and outdoor exploring. If you can time a trip around Nyepi, the island-wide Day of Silence, it’s an unforgettable — if logistically restrictive — experience.
🧞♀️ On solo dining: Warung Biah Biah in the center is a go-to for solo diners — communal tables, cheap, authentic Balinese food, and an easy way to strike up conversation without trying too hard.
🧞♀️ On temple etiquette: Cover shoulders and knees at any temple, and carry a sarong — most sacred sites require one, and rental ones at the entrance are often worn and overpriced.
🧞♀️ On packing: Menstrual products can be harder to find (and pricier) outside tourist areas — pack enough for your trip. A portable door lock is a smart add for budget guesthouses, and rehydration salts are worth having on hand for Bali belly.
🧞♀️ On the scooter question: If you’re not already a confident rider, skip it. Ride-hailing apps are cheap enough that the convenience isn’t worth the risk on Bali’s often-chaotic roads.
Is Ubud safe for solo female travelers? Yes — it’s widely considered the safest and most solo-friendly base in Bali, with a strong culture of independent women travelers, walkable neighborhoods, and reliable ride-hailing apps.
Is Ubud or Canggu better for solo female travel? Ubud, generally — it’s quieter, more walkable, and built around wellness culture rather than nightlife, which tends to suit solo travelers looking to relax rather than party. Canggu is better suited to travelers wanting a more social, beach-club-driven scene.
How many days do you need in Ubud? Four to five days covers the major sights at a relaxed pace, with room for at least one full “no plans” day, which — honestly — is the point of Ubud in the first place.
What should I pack that I might not think of? A sarong for temple visits, a portable door lock for budget guesthouses, and enough menstrual products for your full trip, since they can be pricier and harder to find outside tourist zones.
This is Part 1 of the Real Shee Power Solo Women’s Travel series. Next up: Kyoto, Japan — one of the safest cities on Earth for solo exploration. Explore more Real Shee Power travel guides →
Sources: TravellingKing — Where to Stay in Bali for Solo Female Travelers · Bali Holiday Secrets — Solo Female Travel Bali 2026 · Arcadia Living — Is Bali Safe for Solo Female Travellers · Bisma Eight — Solo Travel Guide for Women in Ubud
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