Updated: May 2026
Contact Baliem Valley Highlands Society
Contact Baliem Valley Highlands Society
Send us a brief about your trip and we will respond within 24 hours with a draft itinerary or specific questions. Bali on Wikipedia
Direct channels
Email: bd@juaraholding.com
WhatsApp / Phone: +62 811 3941 4563
WhatsApp link: https://wa.me/6281139414563 Bali tourism portal
What to include in your enquiry
- Travel month/year (or window)
- Group size (number of adults, children if any)
- Specific interests (diving, cultural, photography, conservation, etc.)
- Budget tier (Smart $1-3K / Atelier $3-8K / Reserve $8K+ per person)
- Any health, dietary, or accessibility considerations
Office
PT Juara Holding Group
Jl. Pantai Pererenan No.27, Pererenan, Kec. Mengwi, Kabupaten Badung, Bali 80361, Indonesia
Hours: Mon-Sat 09:00-18:00 WITA (UTC+8) Subak (UNESCO heritage)
For urgent matters during a trip in progress, our 24/7 emergency line is shared with all booked clients.
Trip planning timeline
For peak-season travel (December, July-August): book 6-9 months ahead.
For shoulder season (April-May, October-November): 3-5 months ahead.
For off-peak: 6-8 weeks ahead is usually enough.
Last-minute (under 30 days): we will try, but availability is limited.
Languages
We respond in English, Bahasa Indonesia, and (with notice) Mandarin or Japanese.
The Allure of the Baliem Valley Highlands: An Untouched Frontier for Luxury Exploration
Imagine a land where time seems to slow, where emerald valleys cradle ancient traditions and the rhythm of life echoes through mist-shrouded peaks. This is the Baliem Valley Highlands, a destination that stands in stark contrast to the familiar beaches and rice paddies of Bali, offering an unparalleled journey into the heart of authentic indigenous culture. Nestled deep within the rugged interior of West Papua, this remote haven remains one of Indonesia’s last true frontiers, accessible primarily by air, lending an immediate sense of exclusivity and adventure to any visit. For the discerning luxury traveler, it represents not just a trip, but an expedition into a living ethnographic museum, where the Dani, L