Australian Independent School logo

Australian Independent School

Fees
Rp 51,960,000–Rp 253,520,000 /year
Budget
Luxury
Type
International school
Ages
318
Curriculum
Address
Jl. Imam Bonjol No. 458A, Denpasar Barat, Denpasar, Bali 80119
Interest form
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International school in Denpasar. Ages 3–18. Curriculum: Australian.

Parent perspectives

These anonymized parent perspectives are intended to help families prepare questions for a tour or admissions conversation.

The community at Australian Independent School made a big difference for our family. Our 7-year-old found their feet fast, and the transition felt genuinely supported.
Parent from New Zealand · child age 7
We chose Australian Independent School for an Australian-style program. It’s reassuring to have a learning pathway that feels internationally portable if our plans change.
Parent from Sweden · child age 12
We appreciated the balance between learning and outdoor time. Our 16-year-old came home in a good mood, and the environment felt safe and cared for.
Parent from United Kingdom · child age 16

Quick notes

  • Australian school calendar (starts in January).
  • Fees are listed for Preschool through Year 12.
  • Extra services like bus and language support have separate fees.

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In-depth profile

Some families come to Bali for a year. Some come for five. Some come “for good” and then, two rainy seasons later, life changes and they move again.

That’s why schools that follow a national system can be quietly powerful. Not because the system is magical — but because it creates continuity. When you’ve already moved countries once, “continuity” stops being an abstract idea and turns into a practical need.

Australian Independent School (AIS Bali) is one of the clearest examples of that in Bali. Its backbone is the Australian Curriculum, delivered from early years through the middle years, with senior pathways that can include the IB Diploma or other graduation options. For families who want a modern, internationally minded education that still feels anchored to Australia’s approach, AIS can make a lot of sense.

The calendar is not a small detail

Here’s something people underestimate: the school year timing.

Many international schools in Bali follow an “August start,” similar to the US/Europe pattern. Australian schools often align with Australia’s rhythm — which means January starts can be part of the story.

Why does that matter?

Because it affects everything: when your child transitions, when you travel, and how smoothly you can plug back into school if you return to Australia (or another Australian-aligned system). For families thinking two steps ahead, this is a real advantage.

What “Australian Curriculum” feels like in the classroom

The Australian Curriculum is broad by design. It aims to develop strong literacy and numeracy, but also general capabilities — problem solving, communication, critical thinking, and social understanding.

In real life, that often translates into classrooms that value:

  • Student participation (not just note-taking)
  • Project work alongside core skills
  • Discussion and collaboration
  • Clear expectations paired with practical learning

It’s not “loose” learning, but it’s not purely exam-driven either. It can be a comfortable middle ground for students who need structure and room to think.

Who tends to thrive here

AIS is often a good fit for:

  • Children who like clarity, but don’t want learning to be only about tests
  • Families who may return to Australia later (or want Australian-style continuity)
  • Students who benefit from a broad curriculum in the earlier years
  • Parents who want a school that feels internationally minded without being overly complicated

It may be less ideal if your child needs:

  • A highly alternative, child-led model (think “forest school” style)
  • A very small, intimate community (depending on cohort size)
  • A Bali-culture-immersion approach as the main focus (AIS is international in feel)

Location and the “real commute”

AIS Bali is based in Denpasar (around the Imam Bonjol area). For families living in the city or nearby, the commute can be straightforward.

For families coming from Canggu, Pererenan, or the Bukit, it’s a different question.

A trick that saves a lot of regret: before enrolling, do two drive tests:

  1. The morning drive at school-run time
  2. The afternoon return at pick-up time

Bali traffic is not a minor inconvenience — it’s a lifestyle factor. A long commute can quietly steal your child’s energy and your family’s bandwidth.

Fees: don’t stop at the headline number

The fee range we show is Rp 51,960,000–Rp 253,520,000 /year (annual, IDR). That range usually reflects different year levels (younger years often cost less than senior years).

But the real “cost of school” includes the extras. Ask clearly about:

  • Enrollment and application fees
  • Materials, uniforms, technology devices
  • Transport options (if offered)
  • Lunch and canteen systems
  • Co-curriculars (sports, arts, clubs)

If the school can lay this out in a simple document, that’s a green flag.

Senior years: plan early, even if your child is young

If your child is still in early primary, you don’t need to decide on the IB Diploma today. But it’s smart to understand the path the school offers.

IB Diploma can be a strong fit for students who:

  • Read and write confidently in English
  • Can manage long-term projects
  • Enjoy connecting ideas across subjects

If your child is not that student yet, it doesn’t mean IB is “wrong.” It means you may want to understand what support systems exist — study skills coaching, counselling, learning support, and how teachers help students plan their workload.

The best schools don’t just offer a pathway. They teach students how to walk it.

The questions that reveal the truth

When you tour AIS, here are a few questions that tend to get you past brochures and into reality:

  • How do you support students who are new to English?
  • What happens if a child is ahead in maths but behind in writing (or the reverse)?
  • How do you handle behavioural issues — what is the discipline philosophy?
  • How do teachers communicate with parents (weekly notes, platforms, meetings)?
  • What does “student wellbeing” look like here in practice?

The answers tell you what kind of school you’re actually joining.

A note about “fit”

A school can be excellent and still be wrong for your family.

AIS tends to suit families who want a stable, internationally respected system with a familiar Australian logic to it — broad learning early, clear pathways later. If that description makes you breathe easier, AIS is worth putting on your shortlist.

And if it doesn’t, that’s useful too. Because the goal is not to find “the best school.” The goal is to find the school where your child can be both challenged and happy, and where your family can live a workable daily life around it.

A picture you can borrow for a moment

Imagine the first week after a big move.

Your child is wearing a new uniform that still feels stiff. They don’t know where to put their bag. They’ve learned three new names and forgotten two of them. They’re excited, but also tired in a way they can’t quite explain.

In that moment, what you want from a school is simple: routines that hold your child steady while they rebuild confidence. A clear timetable. Teachers who notice quiet kids. Friendly faces that make “new” feel less sharp.

That’s the quiet promise a well-run curriculum school can offer. Not perfection. Just steadiness — and the space for your child to become themselves again.

Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.

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FAQ

Curriculum

Australian

Ages

3–18

Fees

Rp 51,960,000–Rp 253,520,000 /year

Type

International school

Address

Jl. Imam Bonjol No. 458A, Denpasar Barat, Denpasar, Bali 80119

Map link: Google Maps

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