Uluwatu School
School in Bukit Region. Ages 6–14. Curriculum: International.
Parent perspectives
These anonymized parent perspectives are intended to help families prepare questions for a tour or admissions conversation.
We were new to Bukit Region, and Uluwatu School felt welcoming from the first week. Our 7-year-old settled in quickly and started looking forward to mornings.
We chose Uluwatu School for a global classroom mix. It’s reassuring to have a learning pathway that feels internationally portable if our plans change.
Being based in Bukit Region made the routine manageable, and the school’s communication was straightforward. The day-to-day felt well organised.
Quick notes
- Based in Pecatu (Uluwatu area).
- Tuition fees are published online.
- Best fit for families wanting a smaller school that is growing.
Recommended guides
View all guidesHow to Choose a School in Bali
School Fees in Bali: How to Compare Total First‑Year Cost
Admissions in Bali: Timeline, Documents, and What Happens Next
In-depth profile
- Place-based learning is not a slogan here
- Who this tends to suit
- Fees: treat them as part of the routine, not just a number
- The “progressive” question: how do they teach fundamentals?
- Social life matters on the Bukit
- A small “tour test”
- The commute rule (again)
- The bottom line
- Grades and growth: ask what is open this year
- A final picture
There’s a moment on the Bukit when you understand why people live there.
It’s usually late afternoon. The heat softens. The wind picks up. The cliffs throw long shadows. And the ocean looks like a lesson you could stare at for hours.
If your family lives in this part of Bali — Uluwatu, Pecatu, Bingin, Jimbaran, Nusa Dua — the biggest question is often not “Which school is the most famous?” It’s “Which school fits our geography and our values, without turning life into a commute?”
Uluwatu School is one of the most talked-about answers to that question.
It’s a progressive international school in the Bukit region, designed with a strong sense of place. The learning is international in tone, but it’s built to make use of what surrounds it — especially the ocean and the environment.
Place-based learning is not a slogan here
Lots of schools say they care about the environment.
A Bukit school has an advantage: the environment is impossible to ignore. You see it in the cliffs, the beaches, the dry-season light, and the very practical reality of water use on the peninsula.
Uluwatu School leans into this by including themes like ocean literacy and environmental learning as part of the experience. That doesn’t mean kids are “outside all day.” It means the school is trying to connect learning to the real world kids live in.
For many children, this is the difference between education feeling like a chore and education feeling like a lived experience.
Who this tends to suit
Uluwatu School can be a strong fit for:
- Families based in the Bukit who want to avoid cross-island commutes
- Children who learn well with hands-on projects and real-world context
- Parents who value a progressive approach but still want structure
- Students who thrive when learning feels connected to life, not separate from it
It may be less ideal for:
- Families who need a full preschool-to-high-school pathway under one roof right now
- Students who want a very traditional “textbook-first” environment
- Families who live far from the Bukit (because the commute will do damage)
Fees: treat them as part of the routine, not just a number
Uluwatu School’s current fee range shown here is Rp 124,800,000–Rp 156,000,000 /year (annual, IDR). The school also has additional items (like registration, materials, and levies) that can change the true cost.
The best way to handle fees is to ask for a simple “all-in” picture:
- What do we pay in the first year?
- What do we pay each year after that?
- What is refundable vs non-refundable?
- What is included (materials, activities, trips)?
A school that answers clearly is making your life easier before you even enrol. That’s a good sign.
The “progressive” question: how do they teach fundamentals?
Progressive education can mean a lot of things. Sometimes it means beautiful projects with shaky basics. Sometimes it means strong basics taught through meaningful work.
So ask:
- How is reading taught in the early years?
- How is maths progression tracked?
- What happens if a child is ahead or behind?
- How do teachers assess learning — and how do parents see that progress?
If the school can show you examples (work samples, simple progress reports, clear learning goals), you’ll feel more confident.
Social life matters on the Bukit
On the Bukit, families often live in clusters. Kids meet at surf beaches, cafés, sports clubs, and play spaces.
A Bukit-based school can amplify that social life — or it can isolate your child if the community feels narrow.
When you visit, notice:
- Do kids look relaxed with each other?
- Do teachers greet students by name?
- Are there mixed backgrounds and languages, or is it one dominant group?
There’s no “perfect” mix. But you want a culture where your child can belong.
A small “tour test”
Here’s a simple test that’s surprisingly reliable:
Ask a teacher, casually: “What do you do when a child doesn’t want to join an activity?”
Their answer reveals the school’s philosophy in 30 seconds.
A thoughtful school will talk about:
- encouragement without forcing
- supporting nervous kids
- helping children build confidence
- boundaries that are kind and clear
A less thoughtful school will talk only about compliance.
The commute rule (again)
If you live in the Bukit and you choose a school in Canggu or Ubud, you are signing up for a daily drive that will shape your entire family life.
Some families do it. Many regret it.
Uluwatu School’s biggest advantage might simply be that it allows your child to have a normal day:
- sleep
- school
- friends
- activities
- home
No marathon in between.
The bottom line
Uluwatu School is not trying to be a “one-size-fits-all” international school. It’s trying to be a good school for families who live in the Bukit and want learning that feels modern, grounded, and connected to the place their children are growing up in.
If your child lights up when learning feels real — and if you want a school day that doesn’t revolve around traffic — it’s worth a serious look.
Grades and growth: ask what is open this year
Progressive schools in Bali often grow year by year. Uluwatu School has focused on primary years, and the exact grade availability can change as cohorts expand.
So make this the first question you ask: “Which grades are running this year, and what is the plan for next year?”
It sounds simple, but it saves heartbreak. Some families fall in love with a school’s philosophy, then realise their child’s year level isn’t offered yet. Better to know early, then plan with confidence.
A final picture
Picture the ideal version of the Bukit school day: your child learns, plays, gets salty air at some point, and still has energy left for family dinner. No two-hour drive. No exhaustion. Just a day that works.
If that picture matters to you, schools like Uluwatu School deserve attention — not because they promise perfection, but because they fit the reality of life on the peninsula.
Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.
Areas families also consider
These areas appear often among similar schools. Use them as quick shortcuts while you’re shortlisting.
FAQ
Curriculum
International
Ages
6–14
Fees
Rp 124,800,000–Rp 156,000,000 /year
Type
School
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