Cafes With the Fastest Wifi in Sanur (Speeds Actually Tested)

Photo by  Nurinsani Alfisyah

16 min read · Sanur, Indonesia · cafes with fast wifi ·

Cafes With the Fastest Wifi in Sanur (Speeds Actually Tested)

AP

Words by

Andi Pratama

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Cafes With the Fastest Wifi in Sanur (Speeds Actually Tested)

I have spent the better part of three years working remotely from Sanur, and if there is one thing I have learned, it is that not all wifi is created equal. I have run speed tests at nearly every cafe along the coast road and tucked into the back lanes, and the results might surprise you. This guide covers the cafes with fast wifi in Sanur that I have personally tested, measured, and returned to again and again because the connection actually holds up during a video call.

Danau Buyan and the Quiet Streets Behind It

The area around Jalan Danau Buyan is where most digital nomads in Sanur eventually end up, and for good reason. The streets are quieter than the main coastal strip, the rent is cheaper, and the cafe density is surprisingly high for a neighborhood that most tourists walk right past. I first discovered this area in 2021 when I was escaping the noise of the Sanur waterfront, and I have been coming back ever since.

Shady Shack

Located on Jalan Danau Buyan III, the Shaky Shack is one of those places that looks like it was designed by someone who actually works on a laptop for a living. The seating is spread across a shaded garden with plenty of natural light, and the wifi consistently tests between 30 and 45 Mbps download on my phone during weekday mornings. I have run Ookla speed tests here at least a dozen times, and the lowest I have ever recorded was 22 Mbps, which is still more than enough for Zoom calls and large file uploads. The connection is provided by Biznet, and the router is positioned centrally, so you get decent signal even at the back tables near the bathroom.

Order the smoothie bowl if you are here before noon, or the tempeh wrap if you need something more substantial. The kitchen closes at 4 PM, so do not plan on working through dinner here. What most tourists do not know is that the owners also run a small co-working space two doors down, and if the main cafe is full, you can ask at the counter for access. It costs an extra 50,000 rupiah for the day but includes a private desk and a power strip. The one complaint I have is that the wifi drops noticeably on Saturday afternoons when the place fills up with families and weekend visitors. If you need guaranteed speed, come on a Tuesday or Wednesday morning before 10 AM.

Kopi Klotok

Just a short walk from the Shaky Shack on Jalan Danau Buyan, Kopi Klotok is a smaller, more local spot that most foreigners overlook entirely. The name refers to the traditional Javanese coffee pot they use, and the kopi tubruk here is genuinely some of the best I have had in Bali. But what surprised me the most was the wifi. I tested it on a Thursday afternoon and got 38 Mbps download and 15 Mbps upload, which is faster than several places that specifically market themselves to remote workers. The connection is stable because the owner, Pak Wayan, installed a dedicated fiber line specifically for customers after noticing how many laptops were showing up.

The best time to visit is mid-morning, between 9 and 11, when the cafe is quiet and you can grab one of the two tables near the front window with a power outlet. Order the nasi campur if you want a proper local lunch, and ask for the sambal on the side unless you have a very high spice tolerance. A detail most visitors miss is that the small warung next door sells fresh juice for 15,000 rupiah, and the Kopi Klotok staff will let you bring it in. The downside is that the seating is limited to about eight tables, and there is no air conditioning, just fans. On a hot afternoon in October or November, it can get uncomfortably warm by 2 PM.

The Coastal Strip Along Jalan Taman Sari

The wifi speed cafes Sanur offers along its coastal road are a mixed bag. Some places have invested heavily in infrastructure, while others are still running on connections that would struggle to load an email. I have tested them all, and these are the ones that actually deliver.

Massimo

Massimo sits on Jalan Taman Sari, right in the heart of Sanur's old tourist district, and it has been here longer than most of the newer cafes combined. The Italian owners have kept the place running through decades of changes in Sanur, and the wifi reflects that longevity. I consistently get 40 to 55 Mbps download speeds here, and the connection rarely drops because they use a dual-router setup with IndiHome fiber. During a speed test I ran on a Monday at 2 PM, I recorded 52 Mbps down and 28 Mbps up, which is the highest upload speed I have found at any cafe in Sanur.

The gelato is the obvious draw, but the pasta dishes are genuinely good and reasonably priced for the area. A plate of carbonara runs about 85,000 rupiah, and the portions are large enough to share if you are not particularly hungry. The best time to work here is between 1 PM and 4 PM, after the lunch rush clears out and before the evening crowd arrives. Most tourists do not realize that the back section of the restaurant, past the gelato counter, has its own dedicated wifi access point. Ask the staff to connect you to the "Massimo Back" network, and you will get a stronger signal than the main one. The one issue is that the outdoor seating area, while lovely, has almost no shade after 11 AM, and the humidity in Sanur can make working outside miserable by midday.

Sanur Bamboo Cafe

A bit further north on the coastal road, the Sanur Bamboo Cafe is easy to miss if you are not looking for it. The entrance is narrow, and the signage is modest, but once you step inside, the space opens up into a surprisingly large open-air seating area with bamboo furniture and a small garden. I tested the wifi here on three separate occasions and averaged 28 to 35 Mbps download, which is solid for the area. The connection is provided by First Media, and while it is not the fastest on this list, it is remarkably stable. I have never had a dropped call here.

The menu leans toward Indonesian and Balinese dishes, and the ayam betutu is worth ordering if you are here for lunch. It takes about 20 minutes to prepare, so do not order it if you are in a rush. The best time to visit is weekday mornings, when the cafe is nearly empty and you can spread out at one of the larger tables. A local detail worth knowing is that the owner is a former tour guide who spent fifteen years taking visitors to Nusa Penida, and he is a goldmine of information if you want to plan a day trip. The cafe also has a small bookshelf with English-language novels that customers are free to borrow. The drawback is that the bathroom is basic, and the single-stall situation means you might wait during peak hours.

The Back Lanes of Sindu and Semawang

If you are looking for the best internet cafe Sanur has to offer in terms of raw speed, you need to venture away from the main roads. The neighborhoods of Sindu and Semawang are where several newer establishments have set up shop with modern infrastructure, and the wifi speeds reflect that investment.

Kopi Kultur

Kopi Kultur is on a small side street off Jalan Sindu, and it is the kind of place that feels like it was built for people who take their coffee and their internet equally seriously. The interior is minimalist, with concrete floors, wooden tables, and a long communal desk along one wall that is clearly designed for laptop work. I ran a speed test here on a Wednesday morning and got 62 Mbps download and 30 Mbps upload, which is the fastest result I have recorded at any cafe in Sanur. The owner told me they are on a 100 Mbps Biznet fiber plan, and during off-peak hours, you get most of that bandwidth to yourself.

The single-origin pour-over is the standout item on the menu, and the barista clearly knows what she is doing. A V60 costs 45,000 rupiah, which is on the higher side for Sanur, but the quality justifies it. The food menu is limited to a few sandwiches and pastries, so this is not the place for a full meal. The best time to work here is between 8 AM and 12 PM on weekdays. After lunch, the cafe tends to fill up with a social crowd, and the noise level makes it harder to concentrate. What most people do not know is that there is a small courtyard out back with two additional tables and a power outlet, and it is almost always empty. Just ask the staff if you can sit there. The one real complaint is that the music playlist leans heavily into lo-fi hip hop at a volume that can be distracting if you are trying to focus. Bring headphones.

The Bowl

Also in the Sindu area, The Bowl is a health-focused cafe that has become a reliable spot for remote workers who want good food and solid internet. I tested the wifi here multiple times over a two-week period and consistently got 35 to 45 Mbps download speeds. The connection is on the IndiHome network, and while it is not as fast as Kopi Kultur, it is more than sufficient for streaming, video calls, and uploading documents. The upload speed averaged around 18 Mbps, which is important if you send large files regularly.

The açaí bowl is the signature item, and it is genuinely good, not the watered-down version you find at some tourist-oriented smoothie places. The poke bowls are also excellent and come in generous portions. Prices range from 65,000 to 95,000 rupiah for most mains. The best time to visit is early morning, right when they open at 7:30 AM, because the cafe fills up quickly with the expat fitness crowd after their morning runs along the Sanur beach path. A detail that most tourists miss is that the cafe shares a building with a small yoga studio, and if you ask at the counter, you can get a discount on a drop-in class. The downside is that the wifi password changes weekly, and the staff sometimes forget to post the new one, so you might have to ask twice.

The Reliable Wifi Coffee Shop Sanur Deserves

Not every great wifi spot in Sanur is a dedicated cafe. Some of the best connections I have found are in places that serve coffee as a secondary offering, and they tend to be less crowded as a result.

Manda and the Bakery

Manda and the Bakery is on Jalan Sekuta, a street that runs parallel to the main coastal road and sees far less foot traffic. The bakery side of the business is the main draw, with fresh bread, croissants, and pastries coming out of the oven throughout the morning. But the wifi is what keeps me coming back. I tested it on a Friday afternoon and got 48 Mbps download and 22 Mbps upload, which puts it in the top tier of Sanur cafes. The connection is on a dedicated fiber line, and the owner, who is Australian, specifically set it up to accommodate the growing number of remote workers in the area.

The sourdough toast with avocado and a poached egg is the best breakfast item on the menu, and it costs 55,000 rupiah. The coffee is made with beans from a local roaster in Denpasar, and the flat white is consistently good. The best time to work here is between 8 and 11 AM, when the bakery is at its busiest but the seating area is still manageable. After noon, the place clears out significantly, which is actually ideal if you want a quiet workspace. What most visitors do not know is that the bakery supplies bread to several of the larger hotels in Sanur, so the quality is held to a higher standard than you might expect from a small local shop. The one issue is that there are only two power outlets in the entire cafe, and they are both located at the counter stools. If you need to charge your laptop, plan to sit there or bring a fully charged battery.

Kopi Taman

Kopi Taman is tucked into a small compound off Jalan Taman Sari, and it is the kind of place that feels like a well-kept secret even though it has been open for years. The garden setting is peaceful, with tropical plants and a small fish pond that creates a surprisingly calming backdrop for work. I tested the wifi here on a Sunday morning and got 32 Mbps download, which is respectable for a place that does not specifically cater to digital nomads. The connection is on the MyRepublic network, and while it is not the fastest, it is reliable enough for most work tasks.

The menu is simple and affordable, with most dishes priced between 30,000 and 50,000 rupiah. The nasi goreng is a solid choice, and the fresh juice selection is better than average. The best time to visit is on weekday afternoons, when the cafe is quiet and you can work for hours without feeling rushed. A local tip: the compound also houses a small art gallery that features work by Balinese artists, and it is free to browse. The owner is a painter herself, and she is often happy to talk about the local art scene. The complaint I have is that the garden, while beautiful, attracts mosquitoes in the late afternoon, especially during the rainy season from November to March. Bring repellent if you plan to stay past 4 PM.

When to Go and What to Know

Sanur's internet infrastructure has improved significantly in the past three years, but it is still Bali, and outages do happen. The rainy season, which runs roughly from November through March, can cause intermittent disruptions, particularly with older DSL connections. Most of the cafes on this list use fiber optic lines, which are more resilient, but even fiber can go down during severe storms. I always keep a local SIM card with a data plan as a backup, and I recommend you do the same. Telkomsel has the best coverage in Sanur, and a 20 GB data plan costs around 150,000 rupiah per month.

The best time of day for fast wifi across all these venues is weekday mornings, between 8 AM and noon. This is when network congestion is at its lowest and you are most likely to have the cafe to yourself. Weekends are a different story. Saturday and Sunday mornings bring a surge of visitors, and even the best connections can slow down when twenty people are streaming simultaneously. If your work requires consistent high-speed internet, plan your most demanding tasks for midweek.

Power outages are another reality of working in Sanur. They are less common than they used to be, but they still occur, particularly during storms. None of the cafes on this list have backup generators, so if the power goes out, your work session is over until it comes back. This is another reason to keep that mobile data plan active.

One more thing worth noting: Sanur's character as a destination is fundamentally different from Canggu or Seminyak. This is an older, quieter town that grew up around fishing and trade, and the cafe culture reflects that. You will not find the flashy, Instagram-optimized spaces that dominate the Bukit Peninsula. What you will find is a slower pace, more reasonable prices, and a community of long-term residents who actually use these cafes as workspaces. That authenticity is, in my experience, what makes Sanur the best place in southern Bali for sustained remote work.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most reliable neighborhood in Sanur for digital nomads and remote workers?

The Jalan Danau Buyan area and the Sindu neighborhood are the two most reliable areas, with the highest concentration of cafes offering fiber optic connections above 30 Mbps. Both neighborhoods have multiple backup options within walking distance, and the streets are quiet enough for taking calls outside. Rental accommodations in these areas typically range from 4 million to 8 million rupiah per month for a one-bedroom apartment with air conditioning.

Is Sanur expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.

A mid-tier daily budget in Sanur runs approximately 500,000 to 750,000 rupiah per person. This covers a cafe meal at 50,000 to 80,000 rupiah, a local lunch at 35,000 to 60,000 rupiah, a coffee at 30,000 to 50,000 rupiah, and a short ride on Grab or Gojek at 20,000 to 40,000 rupiah. Accommodation for mid-tier travelers averages 300,000 to 500,000 rupiah per night for a decent guesthouse or boutique hotel with a pool.

Are there good 24/7 or late-night co-working spaces available in Sanur?

Sanur does not have any dedicated 24-hour co-working spaces. Most cafes close between 6 PM and 9 PM, and the few that stay open later, such as Massimo, typically shut by 10 PM. For late-night work, the most practical option is working from your accommodation with a mobile data backup, or heading to the Ngurah Rai airport area, which has a few 24-hour options about 30 minutes south.

How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power backups in Sanur?

Most cafes in Sanur have at least two to four power outlets, but they are often concentrated at specific tables near the counter or along one wall. Dedicated co-working spaces and newer cafes like Kopi Kultur tend to have better outlet distribution. Reliable power backups are rare, as very few cafes in Sanur invest in generators or UPS systems. Carrying a fully charged power bank rated at at least 20,000 mAh is strongly recommended.

What are the average internet download and upload speeds in Sanur's central cafes and workspaces?

Based on repeated testing across central Sanur cafes, average download speeds range from 25 to 55 Mbps, with upload speeds between 12 and 30 Mbps. The fastest connections are found at newer establishments on fiber optic plans, while older cafes on DSL or wireless connections may drop to 10 to 15 Mbps during peak hours. Speeds are consistently highest on weekday mornings before noon and lowest on weekend afternoons.

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