Bali’s tourist belt — Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Uluwatu, Nusa Dua — holds up fine over Christmas and New Year, even with the crowds. Where it gets patchy is everywhere outside that belt: Nusa Penida, the quieter Gili islands, north Bali’s waterfalls. Here’s the honest breakdown, including where our own eSIM isn’t the best pick for December.
Travelren sells a Bali eSIM, so we have a stake in this. Our plans route on Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison — not Telkomsel, which is the stronger network once you leave the main tourist zones. We’d rather say that upfront than have you find out on December 27th standing on a boat to Nusa Penida.
The quick answer
- Main tourist belt (Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Uluwatu, Nusa Dua): 5G is live and solid, even during the December crowd surge. Any major network handles it, including ours.
- Christmas – New Year is genuinely peak congestion season in Bali, alongside July–August. Towers in the busiest strips can slow down in the evenings when everyone’s on their phone at once.
- Nusa Penida, the quieter Gilis, north Bali, waterfalls: Telkomsel has meaningfully better reach here than Indosat (our network) or XL. If that’s most of your trip, factor it in.
Why December is a different test than the rest of the year
Bali’s peak seasons are July–August and Christmas–New Year. Tourist numbers spike, and so does the load on cell towers in the busiest strips — Kuta, Seminyak, and Canggu especially. The networks with more infrastructure in Bali (Telkomsel primarily) tend to hold up better under that load than smaller networks during the exact hours everyone’s uploading beach photos and video-calling family back home.
For the main tourist belt, this mostly shows up as slower speeds at peak hours (early evening, New Year’s Eve itself) rather than no signal at all. Hotels, cafes, and beach clubs across Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Uluwatu, and Nusa Dua all report reliable 4G/5G through the holidays — it’s the further-out spots where signal was already borderline that get pushed over the edge by the extra load.
Which network you’re actually on matters more in December
Your Travelren Bali eSIM roams on Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison, with Smartfren as a fallback. That’s a real, solid network across the tourist belt — 5G is live in Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Uluwatu, and Nusa Dua with typical speeds of 60–150 Mbps, and 4G LTE covers mainland Bali well.
What Indosat doesn’t do as well: Telkomsel has the deeper infrastructure once you’re off the main strip — Nusa Penida, Gili Meno, Gili Air, Nusa Lembongan, and north Bali’s waterfalls and rice terrace routes all favour Telkomsel. If your December itinerary is beach clubs and villas in the main belt, this doesn’t matter. If you’re doing a Nusa Penida day trip or chasing waterfalls up north, a Telkomsel-routed eSIM or local SIM will serve you better than ours will — and we’d rather tell you that than have you discover it standing on a cliff edge with no bars.
What a Bali eSIM costs for a December trip
Travelren Indonesia plans (AUD, live pricing):
- 1GB / 7 days: $4.50 — fine for a short beach-club stint with hotel WiFi as backup
- 2GB / 15 days: $7.00 — covers a typical 1–2 week Christmas/New Year trip
- 3GB / 30 days: $9.00 — if you’re staying through both Christmas and New Year
Install it before you fly and it activates the moment you land — useful over a busy holiday period when airport WiFi is also under more load than usual. Browse the full Bali/Indonesia eSIM range.
Practical tips for a December Bali trip
- Download offline maps before you go — Google Maps offline packs for Bali, especially if you’re driving yourself to Nusa Penida’s boat harbours or north Bali’s waterfalls, where signal is patchiest exactly where you need directions most.
- New Year’s Eve itself is the single busiest network night of the year in the tourist belt. If you need to make an important call or video chat home for midnight, do it a little earlier or later than the exact countdown — that’s when every network in Seminyak and Canggu is under the most simultaneous load.
- Nusa Penida day trips: coverage on the boat crossing and at the main viewpoints (Kelingking, Angel’s Billabong) is patchy on any network. Tell someone your return boat time before you lose signal, not after.
- Book activities and restaurants in advance for the Dec 24–Jan 2 window generally — not a connectivity tip, but the practical reality of Bali’s busiest fortnight.
Common questions
Will my eSIM work for a New Year’s Eve countdown video call?
Almost certainly, in the main tourist belt — just expect it to be slower right at midnight when every network is at peak load simultaneously. If the call is important, consider making it 15–20 minutes before or after the exact countdown.
Does any eSIM work well on Nusa Penida?
Coverage is genuinely patchy everywhere on Nusa Penida regardless of network, though Telkomsel-routed options fare somewhat better than Indosat-routed ones (ours included) away from the main port town. Treat it as a partially-offline day either way.
Should I just buy a SIM at Denpasar airport instead?
You can — kiosks in arrivals sell Telkomsel and other local SIMs. During the December peak, expect longer queues than usual after a long-haul flight. An eSIM installed before you fly skips that queue entirely and activates the moment you land.
The bottom line
For a December trip centred on Bali’s main tourist belt — Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Uluwatu, Nusa Dua — a Travelren eSIM on Indosat holds up fine through the Christmas–New Year crowds, same as most of the year. If Nusa Penida, the quieter Gilis, or north Bali’s waterfalls are a big part of your itinerary, know that Telkomsel has better reach there than the network we route on, and plan your connectivity expectations — and your offline maps — accordingly.
See the full Travelren Bali/Indonesia eSIM range →