๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australia's Language Learning Hub

๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฉ Indonesian Phrases for Bali โ€” Essential Guide for Australians

Essential Indonesian phrases for Bali โ€” bargaining at markets, ordering food, transport, temple etiquette and getting around. Written for Australian travellers.

Indonesian Phrases for Bali โ€” The Australian Traveller's Essential Guide

Over one million Australians visit Bali every year, making it by far the most visited destination among Australian international travellers. Yet most Australians return having used fewer than ten Indonesian words. That is a shame โ€” because even a small amount of Bahasa Indonesia transforms every aspect of your Bali experience. Locals respond warmly to any genuine attempt at the language, prices at markets become negotiable in a different way, and interactions that would otherwise be transactional become genuinely memorable. This guide covers everything you need.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ A note for Australian travellers

Bahasa Indonesia is the easiest Asian language for English speakers โ€” no tones, Latin alphabet, consistent spelling. You can learn 50 useful phrases in an afternoon. The Balinese also speak Balinese (a separate language) and often some English, but Indonesian is the language of commerce, transport and daily life across the island. It is always the right language to use.

Essential Greetings and Politeness

A few words of polite Indonesian go an extraordinarily long way in Bali. Using these correctly signals respect and genuine engagement โ€” and will immediately improve your experience everywhere from restaurants to surf hire shops.

IndonesianPronunciationMeaningNotes
Selamat pagiseh-lah-mat pah-geeGood morningUsed until about 11am
Selamat siangseh-lah-mat see-ahngGood day11amโ€“3pm
Selamat soreseh-lah-mat so-rehGood afternoon3pmโ€“dark
Selamat malamseh-lah-mat mah-lamGood evening / nightAfter dark
Terima kasihteh-ree-mah kah-seeThank youThe most important phrase
Sama-samasah-mah sah-mahYou're welcomeReply to terima kasih
Permisipehr-mee-seeExcuse mePassing through a crowd
Maafmah-afSorry / I apologiseGenuine apology
Tidak apa-apatee-dak ah-pah ah-pahNo problem / it's okayVery commonly heard
Tolongtoh-longPlease (asking for help)More urgent than biasa

Bargaining at Markets โ€” Bali's Most Useful Skill

Bargaining is expected and enjoyed at Bali's markets โ€” Ubud Art Market, Seminyak markets, Kuta beach vendors. Starting price is typically 3-5 times the final price. Knowing the Indonesian numbers and bargaining phrases transforms you from a tourist into someone worth bargaining properly with. Always smile, never get angry, and be prepared to walk away โ€” that is often when the real price is offered.

IndonesianPronunciationMeaning
Berapa harganya?beh-rah-pah har-gah-nyahHow much does it cost?
Mahal sekalimah-hal seh-kah-leeVery expensive!
Boleh kurang?boh-leh koo-rangCan you reduce the price?
Saya mau... rupiahsah-yah mah-oo... roo-pee-ahI want to pay... rupiah
Terlalu mahaltehr-lah-loo mah-halToo expensive
Harga terakhir?har-gah teh-rah-keerFinal price?
Saya pergi dulusah-yah pehr-gee doo-looI'll go first (walking away)
Oke, deal!oh-keh, deelOkay, deal!
Bisa lebih murah?bee-sah leh-bee moo-rahCan it be cheaper?
๐Ÿ’ก Bargaining numbers in Indonesian: satu (1), dua (2), tiga (3), empat (4), lima (5), enam (6), tujuh (7), delapan (8), sembilan (9), sepuluh (10), dua puluh (20), lima puluh (50), seratus (100), seribu (1,000), sepuluh ribu (10,000), seratus ribu (100,000). A typical sarong costs around 50,000โ€“150,000 rupiah after bargaining.

Ordering Food and Drinks

Bali's food scene is extraordinary โ€” warungs (local restaurants), beach clubs, fine dining and everything in between. Knowing how to order, ask about spice levels and handle dietary requirements in Indonesian makes eating out far more rewarding.

IndonesianPronunciationMeaning
Minta menumin-tah meh-nooCan I have the menu please
Saya mau pesan...sah-yah mah-oo peh-sanI would like to order...
Tidak pedastee-dak peh-dasNot spicy
Pedas sekalipeh-das seh-kah-leeVery spicy
Enak sekali!eh-nak seh-kah-leeDelicious! (very)
Minta air putihmin-tah ah-ir poo-teeWater please (still water)
Minta billmin-tah billCan I have the bill
Saya vegetariansah-yah veh-geh-tah-ree-anI am vegetarian
Tanpa dagingtan-pah dah-gingWithout meat
Sudah kenyangsoo-dah keh-nyahngI'm full (after eating)

Getting Around โ€” Transport Phrases

Bali transport involves motorbike hire, private drivers (usually arranged through your accommodation), Blue Bird taxis, Grab/Gojek rideshare, and boat crossings to the Gilis. Knowing a few transport phrases helps significantly, especially outside the main tourist areas.

IndonesianPronunciationMeaning
Di mana...?dee mah-nahWhere is...?
Ke mana?keh mah-nahWhere are you going?
Saya mau ke...sah-yah mah-oo kehI want to go to...
Berapa jauh?beh-rah-pah jah-ooHow far is it?
Belok kiri / kananbeh-lok kee-ree / kah-nanTurn left / right
Lurus terusloo-roos teh-roosStraight ahead
Berhenti di sinibehr-hen-tee dee see-neeStop here
Minta tolongmin-tah toh-longPlease help me
Sewa motor berapa?seh-wah moh-tor beh-rah-pahHow much to rent a motorbike?

Temple Etiquette Phrases

Bali is a predominantly Hindu island with thousands of active temples. Showing respect at temples โ€” wearing a sarong, not pointing your feet at sacred objects, not entering during menstruation โ€” matters deeply to Balinese people. A few words in Indonesian signal that you understand this and are engaging respectfully rather than treating temples as tourist attractions.

IndonesianMeaningWhen to use
Boleh masuk?May I enter?Asking permission at temple entrance
Di mana bisa pinjam sarung?Where can I borrow a sarong?Most temples loan sarongs at entrance
Boleh foto?May I take a photo?Always ask before photographing ceremonies
Ada upacara sekarang?Is there a ceremony now?Ceremonies happen frequently โ€” plan around them
Terima kasih sudah mengizinkanThank you for allowing meLeaving a sacred site โ€” genuinely appreciated

Emergencies and Health

Most tourists in Bali never need these phrases, but knowing them provides real peace of mind โ€” particularly for water activities, motorbike hire and remote temple visits.

๐Ÿšจ Emergency phrases

Tolong! โ€” Help!
Panggil polisi! โ€” Call the police!
Panggil dokter! โ€” Call a doctor!
Saya sakit โ€” I am sick
Di mana rumah sakit? โ€” Where is the hospital?
Saya alergi... โ€” I am allergic to...

๐Ÿจ Accommodation phrases

Ada kamar kosong? โ€” Any rooms available?
Berapa per malam? โ€” How much per night?
Bisa check in sekarang? โ€” Can I check in now?
AC-nya tidak dingin โ€” The aircon isn't cold
Ada WiFi? โ€” Is there WiFi?
Kunci kamar saya โ€” My room key

Bali-Specific Vocabulary

These words come up constantly in Bali specifically โ€” they are not all standard Indonesian but you will hear and see them everywhere on the island.

Warung

Small local restaurant or shop โ€” always eat at warungs for authentic Balinese food at honest prices

Ojek

Motorbike taxi โ€” Grab and Gojek are app-based ojek and generally safer and fairer priced than street ojek

Pura

Balinese Hindu temple โ€” Bali has over 20,000 pura. Each family compound, rice field and village has its own

Canang sari

Daily offering of flowers, incense and food placed on the ground โ€” step over, never on them

Bule

Foreigner / white person โ€” not offensive when used descriptively, just means tourist/Westerner

Jalan

Road / street โ€” also means "to walk". Jalan-jalan = going for a walk / sightseeing

Want to Learn More Indonesian?

These phrases will transform your Bali trip. If they inspire you to go further โ€” and many Australian travellers do after experiencing how much a few words open up โ€” Indonesian is genuinely the easiest Asian language for English speakers to learn. See our complete Learn Indonesian guide for the full roadmap, our Indonesian Pronunciation guide for getting the sounds right, and our Indonesian flashcard sets to practise the vocabulary from this page in an interactive format. Use our Study Plan Generator to get a personalised Indonesian study schedule โ€” even 15 minutes a day before your trip makes a real difference.