The Garden Bali
Preschool in Canggu / Sanur. Ages 0.5–7. Curriculum: Early Years, Play-Based.
Parent perspectives
These anonymized parent perspectives are intended to help families prepare questions for a tour or admissions conversation.
The Garden Bali had a warm, community feel that helped us settle in. Our 5-year-old made friends quickly and came home feeling positive about school.
The fit with play-based learning has been great for our child. Lessons felt purposeful, and we noticed more confidence in class discussions.
We appreciated the balance between learning and outdoor time. Our 6-year-old came home in a good mood, and the environment felt safe and cared for.
Quick notes
- Two campuses (Canggu + Sanur)
- Early years focus
- Play-based learning
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
- What “play-based” really means (when it’s done well)
- Two locations, two kinds of families
- Ages and stages: the quiet key to happiness
- Fees: understand the real unit of cost
- What to look for on a tour
- Who The Garden tends to suit
- A practical parenting question
- Final thought
- The Bali reality: early learning is also childcare
- The best sign of all
If you’ve ever watched a toddler discover something for the first time — a bug on a leaf, a puddle after rain, a new word they can suddenly say — you know the real truth about early childhood:
Children are already wired for learning.
The job of a good early learning centre is not to “fill” them with knowledge. It’s to build an environment where their curiosity can grow into skills: language, independence, social confidence, and the ability to focus.
The Garden Bali is built around that idea.
It’s an early learning centre with locations in Canggu and Sanur, offering programs from the baby/toddler years through the preschool and kindergarten stages. The overall vibe is play-based, but intentional — learning through activities that are designed, not random.
What “play-based” really means (when it’s done well)
Play-based learning sometimes gets misunderstood. People hear “play” and think “no structure.”
In strong early years settings, play is structured in a different way:
- the room is arranged to invite certain kinds of learning
- teachers guide social dynamics gently
- activities are chosen to build specific skills (language, motor skills, early numeracy)
- children are encouraged to explore, but also to finish, tidy, and reflect
In other words: it’s not chaos. It’s designed freedom.
The Garden’s public language draws on approaches like Reggio Emilia and Montessori-style thinking (child-led exploration, beautiful spaces, respect for the child as capable), combined with a practical early learning routine.
Two locations, two kinds of families
Having centres in both Canggu and Sanur matters.
Canggu families often have:
- busy social calendars
- short-stay visitors and rotating friend groups
- lots of “activity energy” around them
Sanur families often have:
- calmer routines
- longer-term living patterns
- a slower daily rhythm
The Garden can serve both — but it’s still worth choosing the location that matches your life, not just your taste.
Ages and stages: the quiet key to happiness
The Garden is designed for young children (roughly from infancy/toddler stages through early childhood). That’s important, because early learning centres live or die by their understanding of development.
When you visit, ask about:
- adult-to-child ratios in each room
- how they handle separation anxiety
- how they support toileting and naps (if relevant)
- how they build language and social confidence
A good early years centre doesn’t rush children. It respects the pace of development.
Fees: understand the real unit of cost
The fee range shown on our site is Rp 40,000,000–Rp 100,000,000 /year (annual, IDR estimate). Many early learning centres price by week, month, or term — especially for families doing shorter stays in Bali.
So instead of focusing only on the yearly range, ask The Garden directly:
- What does full-time vs part-time cost?
- What are the minimum enrolment periods?
- What is included in the fee (materials, classes, snacks)?
- What are the “extras” (special classes, uniforms, field trips)?
Early learning costs can look simple on the first page and complicated on the second. Clear answers make planning easier.
What to look for on a tour
When you tour an early learning centre, the most important information is not on the wall. It’s in the adults.
Look for:
- teachers who get down at child level
- calm voices, not constant shouting
- gentle boundaries (“we don’t hit,” “we take turns”) enforced consistently
- children who look safe, not just entertained
And then look for one specific thing: how conflict is handled.
Toddlers will grab toys. Preschoolers will argue. That’s normal. The question is whether the adults treat conflict as a teaching moment or a nuisance.
Who The Garden tends to suit
The Garden can be a great fit for:
- families with children in the 6-month to 6-year range (or similar early years window)
- parents who want a nature-forward, play-based environment with real structure
- families who value social development and confidence as much as early academics
- short-stay families who need flexible enrolment (depending on terms)
It may be less ideal for:
- families needing primary/elementary schooling (older than early years)
- children who need a very quiet, low-stimulation environment (depending on the room and group)
- families who want a purely academic “prep school” feel in early years
A practical parenting question
After you visit, ask yourself: “Would my child feel safe here on a hard day?”
Not the best day — the hard day. The day your child is tired, clingy, or overwhelmed.
A good early learning centre is one where your child can have a hard day without being shamed for it.
Final thought
The Garden’s appeal is not that it promises genius toddlers. It’s that it tries to build the foundations that matter most in early childhood: secure relationships, confidence, curiosity, and the beginnings of self-regulation.
If your family is in Canggu or Sanur and you want an early learning environment that feels thoughtful, warm, and intentionally designed, it’s worth a visit — and worth a careful conversation about which program fits your child best.
The Bali reality: early learning is also childcare
Let’s be honest: for many families, early learning centres are not only about education. They are also about parents being able to work, rest, or simply breathe.
So it’s fair to ask practical questions:
- What are the operating hours?
- What happens if you’re late for pick-up?
- How do they handle illness?
- Are there short-term enrolment options for visiting families?
- Can you increase days later if you move from “trial” to “full routine”?
A centre that handles these questions kindly and clearly usually runs well behind the scenes — and that matters just as much as the classroom vibe.
The best sign of all
If you see children deeply engaged — not performing for adults, not just running wild — but focused in that quiet way kids get when they are building, painting, sorting, pretending, experimenting… that’s the moment you’re looking for.
That’s when you know the environment is doing its job.
Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.
Similar schools
Areas families also consider
These areas appear often among similar schools. Use them as quick shortcuts while you’re shortlisting.
FAQ
Curriculum
Early Years, Play-Based
Ages
0.5–7
Fees
Rp 40,000,000–Rp 100,000,000 /year
Type
Preschool
Address
Canggu Centre: Jl. Raya Semat No.18A, Canggu, Badung, Bali 80361. Sanur Centre: Jl. Mukti Sari No.10B, Sanur, Denpasar Selatan, Bali 80228.
Map link: Google Maps
Claim & upgrade this profile
School operator? You can claim this page to update fees, admissions notes, and photos. Verified and featured options are available and will be clearly labeled.



