South Bali to North Bali Helicopter Charter
**A South Bali to North Bali helicopter charter turns a 2.5 to 3.5 hour mountain-road drive up to Lovina or Singaraja into a single direct air leg of roughly 25 to 30 minutes. Waypoint Aviation Bali coordinates it per flight, quote-on-request, with a licensed third-party operator — this is a point-to-point transfer, not a scenic loop.**
Most Bali helicopter pages sell the view. This one sells the clock. The road from the Ngurah Rai (DPS) area to Bali’s north coast climbs through the central highlands, past Bedugul and the crater lakes, and it does not care about your dinner reservation in Lovina. A direct charter leg over that same mountain spine collapses half a day of switchbacks into a short hop — and that time certainty, not sightseeing, is the entire reason people book it.
Waypoint Aviation Bali is a booking and transfer-coordination agency operated by Bali Premium Trip. It arranges flights with licensed, AOC-holding helicopter operators. It does not own aircraft, hold an Air Operator Certificate, employ pilots, or guarantee weather or schedule. Every figure below is indicative, per flight (per helicopter, not per seat), dated as of 2026, operator-dependent, and subject to change.
Why fly South-to-North instead of driving?
The south-to-north route is the longest routine ground transfer in Bali. Officials quoted in local reporting have warned that resort-area roads could face near-constant gridlock by 2027, which only widens the gap between road and air. If you have a fixed check-in at a north-coast resort, a sunset cruise out of Lovina, or a same-day return flight from DPS, the drive introduces risk that a direct leg removes.
Helicopter transfers are far more expensive than a car — orders of magnitude more. Nobody books this to save money. You book it to save two to three hours each way and to hold a schedule the road cannot promise.
What does a South-to-North charter cost in 2026?
Bali helicopter transfers are quoted per flight, not per passenger. The north-coast leg is arranged on a quote-on-request basis because landing logistics vary by destination. To anchor expectations, here are published 2026 transfer prices from Balicopter (marketed as charter transfers, not scenic flights) alongside where the South-to-North leg sits by flight time.
| Transfer leg (2026, per flight) | Flight time | Indicative price |
|---|---|---|
| Ubud | 15 min | IDR 5,990,000 |
| Nusa Penida | 20 min | IDR 6,590,000 |
| South Bali → North Bali (Lovina / Singaraja) | ~25–30 min | Quote on request |
| Gili Islands | 35 min | IDR 11,490,000 |
By flight time, the north-coast leg sits between the Nusa Penida and Gili legs, which frames a realistic expectation while your exact quote is confirmed. For reference on longer private legs, Bali–Lombok private helicopter charters (Luxury Indonesia Travel) start from about IDR 60 million (roughly USD 4,000) per helicopter for up to four passengers, and a VIP airport-to-hotel transfer (Bali Aero Travel, code DPSBA-VP04) starts from USD 1,700 per flight. My Bali Trips prices inter-island and long legs on quote-on-request only. Your final number depends on the operator, aircraft, exact landing point, and date.
How does the air leg compare to the road?
| Factor | By road | By South-to-North charter |
|---|---|---|
| Typical duration | 2.5–3.5 hours each way | ~25–30 minutes each way |
| Reliability | Traffic, roadworks, weekend congestion | Weather-dependent, daylight only |
| Best for | Budget, flexible timing | Fixed schedules, tight connections |
| Cost basis | ~USD 20 net per car (DPS–Nusa Dua reference) | Per flight, quote on request |
The cost columns are not comparable, and that is the point: this table measures time and certainty, not price.
Where can a helicopter land in North Bali?
North Bali (Lovina, Singaraja) does not have the helipad density of the southern resort belt, so the landing point is confirmed at the time of quote. Not every villa can receive a helicopter.
| Consideration | What to expect |
|---|---|
| Landing site | A helipad or an operator-approved cleared area; confirmed before booking |
| Daylight only | Bali operations run under visual flight rules (VFR), daytime only — no night landings |
| Weather | The central mountain crossing can bring cloud or wind; delays or cancellations are possible and cannot be guaranteed |
| Advance booking | Reserve ahead; this is not an on-demand service |
| Capacity | Per helicopter, typically up to 4 passengers — confirm with your quote |
| Peak season | The dry season, roughly April to October, is busiest |
Regulatory context, attributed for transparency: Indonesia’s Ministry of Transportation (Kemenhub) sets policy, and the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA / Ditjen Perhubungan Udara) oversees airworthiness, operations, and licensing under Law No. 1 of 2009 on Aviation and Government Regulation No. 3 of 2001. Operators flying these routes must hold an Air Operator Certificate and route permits under DGCA approval. Waypoint holds none of these — it coordinates flights with partners who do.
How does booking a South-to-North charter work?
- Send your route and date. Message the concierge with your pickup point in the south, your north-coast destination (Lovina, Singaraja, or a specific resort), passenger count, and preferred date and time.
- Receive a per-flight quote. Bali Premium Trip confirms availability with a licensed operator and returns an indicative per-flight price and landing plan.
- Confirm and prepay per operator terms. Once you approve, the booking is secured under the operator’s payment and cancellation terms.
- Pre-flight check. You receive briefing details, meeting-point instructions, and a weather check ahead of departure.
- Fly. Board at the southern dispatch point and land in North Bali roughly 25–30 minutes later.
Book your South-to-North Bali transfer
Ready to trade the mountain drive for a direct leg? Send your route, date, and passenger count to the Bali Premium Trip concierge for a per-flight quote.
WhatsApp: +62 811 2859 0000 · Email: sales@balipremiumtrip.com
Quotes are indicative and operator-dependent; flights are subject to weather, daylight, and DGCA-licensed operator availability. No schedule or price is guaranteed.
Is the North Bali airport corridor real?
This part is clearly speculative and should be treated as a future-ready concept, not a fact. A North Bali International Airport is reported to be in planning under Indonesia’s RPJMN 2025–2029, with no confirmed opening date. Separately, Indonesia is reported to require 1% Sustainable Aviation Fuel on international flights from Jakarta and Bali starting 2027. If that northern corridor matures, airport-to-airport and South-to-North heli-bridge legs become an obvious connector — which is why Waypoint pre-builds the route concept now. None of this is confirmed, and it changes nothing about how you book today.