
A 3-star retreat on Nusa Penida, a short walk from the famous Kelingking Beach, with a year-round outdoor pool, a spa, garden-view rooms and free private parking.
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Kelingking Mesari Villa and Spa is a 3-star property tucked into the cliffs of western Nusa Penida, on Jalan Klingking in the Bunga Mekar area. Its greatest asset is position: the celebrated Kelingking Beach viewpoint, with its T-Rex-shaped headland, is only a short walk away, and the whole cluster of the island's west-coast sights sits within easy reach.
The style is relaxed and garden-focused, geared to couples and independent travellers who want a comfortable base close to nature rather than a big resort. Rooms are air-conditioned and come with a private bathroom, a balcony or terrace and views over the garden or the pool; a spacious suite adds a separate living room for those who want more space.
Set around a year-round outdoor pool and a sun terrace, the villa pairs its rooms with a spa and wellness centre, an on-site restaurant serving Indonesian and international dishes, a minimarket and free private parking. It makes an easy launch pad for early starts to the viewpoints before the day-trippers arrive.

Kelingking Mesari Villa and Spa keeps its accommodation deliberately small in scale, with two room types that both look out over the garden and the pool. Each one is air-conditioned and soundproofed, with a private bathroom featuring a walk-in shower and free toiletries, a flat-screen TV with streaming, a minibar and a tea and coffee maker, plus a balcony or terrace to make the most of the tropical setting.
The difference comes down to space and layout. The Deluxe Double Room is a comfortable 34 m² double built for couples, while the roomier 59 m² Deluxe King Suite adds a separate bedroom and a living room with a sofa bed, giving small families or travellers who like room to spread out a little more flexibility. Both open onto the pool-and-garden outlook that gives the villa its calm, green character.


For a small villa, Kelingking Mesari Villa and Spa packs in a genuinely useful set of facilities. At its heart is a year-round outdoor swimming pool wrapped by a sun terrace, backed up by a spa and wellness centre where you can book a massage after a long day on the trails. The on-site restaurant serves Indonesian and international dishes, with an outdoor dining area and cocktails, and there's a minimarket on the property for snacks, water and last-minute supplies.
Every room is air-conditioned, soundproofed and non-smoking, with free Wi-Fi throughout and a private bathroom stocked with free toiletries and a hairdryer. Practical touches round things out: free private parking, an airport shuttle that can be arranged, luggage storage and a tour desk to help plan the island's viewpoints, plus daily housekeeping, room service and a safety deposit box. Outdoor spaces include a garden, a terrace, an outdoor fireplace and a picnic area for slower afternoons back at base.
Kelingking Mesari Villa and Spa stands on the western cliffs of Nusa Penida, the largest of the three islands lying southeast of Bali across the Badung Strait. Most travellers reach the island by fast boat from Sanur on the Bali mainland, a crossing of roughly 30 to 45 minutes; from the harbour on the island it is a scenic but slow drive west to this quiet corner in the Bunga Mekar area. The great advantage of basing yourself here is that Nusa Penida's most famous west-coast sights are clustered close together, so you can be first in line at the viewpoints.
The headline attraction is right on the doorstep: the Kelingking Beach viewpoint, where a limestone headland shaped like a T-Rex plunges to a white-sand cove far below. The clifftop panorama is a short walk away; the beach itself is reached by a steep, strenuous scramble down the "neck", and strong currents mean the sea there is for admiring rather than swimming. A few minutes away is Pura Paluang, the unusual "car temple" with shrines carved in the shape of vehicles, while Broken Beach and the natural infinity pool of Angel's Billabong sit a short drive up the coast and are easily combined into a single half-day loop.
Getting around calls for a little planning. The island's roads are famously rough, steep and winding, so many visitors hire a car with a driver for the day, while confident riders take a scooter; the villa's tour desk can help arrange either. It pays to carry cash, as ATMs are scarce and many places do not take cards. The best months are the dry season from April to October, when seas are calmer and the trails are safer; snorkelling trips to see manta rays and turtles run year-round from the south coast and are at their best on a calm morning. Aim to visit the big viewpoints early, before the midday day-trippers arrive.
