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Bali Kids Healthcare 2026: Best Clinics, Costs & Emergencies

In Bali without insurance, take sick kids to BIMC Hospital Kuta for emergencies (open 24/7, English-speaking, ER visit USD 80–150) or Kasih Ibu Hospital Denpasar for non-urgent paediatric care (specialist consultation IDR 250,000–400,000, roughly USD 15–25). A standard GP consultation at any expat-facing clinic runs USD 20–35.


The Reality of Kids' Healthcare in Bali

When you first arrive, Bali's healthcare landscape looks intimidating. The hospital names are unfamiliar. You don't know who's expat-friendly, who charges the bule price, and who is actually good with kids at 2am when your child spikes a 40°C fever.

Most newcomers get it wrong in one of two directions: they over-panic and head straight to the most expensive clinic for every sniffle, or they wait too long for something that needed same-day attention. Neither serves your kid.

Bali has a functional, layered healthcare system. The expat-facing hospitals are genuinely competent for most paediatric situations: tropical fevers, infections, minor injuries. They're not equipped for complex paediatric surgery or oncology (RSUP Sanglah in Denpasar, or Singapore, for that). Knowing which tier to use, and when, is the skill you need to build in your first month here.

One thing nobody warns you about: always carry cash or have an Indonesian bank card. Deposits are required upfront at most hospitals, and your foreign card may get declined at 3am.


Vetted Clinics & Hospitals for Kids in Bali

BIMC Hospital Kuta

BIMC is the go-to for expat families when things feel serious. Experienced Bali families consistently recommend BIMC above all others for paediatric emergencies: the 24-hour emergency department has English-speaking doctors and nurses, and the paediatric staff know their way around tropical illnesses — dengue, typhoid, hand-foot-mouth, respiratory infections. Consultations start around USD 70–100. An ER workup with bloodwork runs USD 150–300. With a reputable expat health insurance policy, most of this is cashless. Without insurance, you pay upfront. It's not cheap, but the communication is clear, the facility is clean, and they won't dismiss your concerns.

Best for: Emergencies, dengue monitoring, situations where you need English and fast answers.

Kasih Ibu Hospital Denpasar

Every Bali Expat Families Facebook thread about hospitals mentions Kasih Ibu. According to local expat communities, it's the best-value option for families without comprehensive insurance who need actual hospital infrastructure — not just a clinic. It offers a real hospital experience: inpatient wards, lab work, paediatric specialists, at prices that won't destroy your wallet. A specialist paediatric consultation runs IDR 250,000–400,000 (USD 15–25). It's not close to Kuta or Seminyak, so Canggu families need to factor in 30–45 minutes of traffic. The care quality is solid and the cost difference versus BIMC is significant for uninsured families.

Best for: Non-emergency sick visits needing a paediatrician, follow-up care, families without comprehensive insurance who need actual hospital infrastructure.

Siloam Hospitals Bali Kuta

Siloam sits in the middle of the spectrum. It's part of a reputable Indonesian hospital network with consistent standards. The paediatric ward has grown in 2024–2025, and one practical advantage: waits are typically shorter than BIMC during peak tourist season when the ER fills up with sunburnt tourists and motorbike accidents. Consultations run IDR 450,000–700,000. English is generally available but can be patchier than BIMC at odd hours.

Best for: Mid-level concerns, when BIMC has a long wait, families who want a balance of accessibility and cost.


Pro-Tips: What the Locals Know

  • Save these numbers before you need them. BIMC Kuta: +62 361 761263. Kasih Ibu: +62 361 222036. Siloam Kuta: +62 361 779900. Add them to your phone the week you arrive.
  • Dengue is the illness to watch most closely. Bali records thousands of dengue cases annually, with peak transmission running November through April (Indonesian Ministry of Health surveillance data). Early symptoms mimic a bad flu. If your child has a fever for more than 48 hours, get a CBC blood test. It's IDR 100,000–200,000 and rules dengue in or out fast.
  • Bring your own paracetamol and ibuprofen from home. Indonesian pharmacies carry them, but dosing info is in Indonesian and the liquid suspensions are unfamiliar brands. Having your trusted versions reduces one variable at 2am.
  • Ask for the "International Patient" desk at BIMC. It exists specifically for expats and makes the admin significantly smoother.
  • For non-emergency GP visits, local clinics (klinik) are often excellent and cost IDR 80,000–150,000 total. Your neighbours or school community will know the trusted ones near you.
  • Bali is not the place to skip travel vaccinations. Japanese Encephalitis, Hep A, Typhoid: verify your kids are up to date before arrival. Rabies PEP is available at BIMC but expensive and time-sensitive. Any animal bite needs same-day attention.
  • International SOS and Allianz are the most commonly used expat health insurers here. If you're staying longer than three months, get coverage. The maths are obvious.
  • Keep a basic home kit: digital thermometer, oral rehydration salts (Oralit, available at any Indomaret), antihistamine, and wound antiseptic. Most Bali kid illnesses start as a fever and GI issue, and being able to manage the first 12 hours at home matters.

A Conscious Note

Bali's public health system, the Puskesmas network, serves millions of Balinese families every day at near-zero cost. When expats and nomads crowd into the same private hospitals and drive up prices, we affect the ecosystem. Use local pharmacies. Support Indonesian-owned clinics when appropriate. If your child recovers smoothly, consider a small donation to one of the local paediatric foundations in Denpasar. Yayasan Bumi Sehat has supported community health in Bali for over two decades. Treading lightly here means being a good neighbour inside the healthcare system, not just reducing plastic.


Quick-Reference FAQ

Which hospital is best for a child with dengue fever in Bali? For dengue fever in a child, experienced Bali families and local expat communities consistently point to BIMC Kuta and Kasih Ibu Denpasar as the two best options. Both can manage dengue monitoring and hospitalisation if needed. BIMC has the clearest English communication and fastest diagnostic turnaround; Kasih Ibu is significantly more affordable for inpatient stays, with daily ward rates running roughly 40–50% lower than BIMC. If platelet counts are dropping fast, don't wait — go directly to whichever ER is closest.

How much does a paediatric consultation cost in Bali without insurance? Without travel or expat health insurance, a paediatric consultation in Bali ranges from IDR 80,000–150,000 (USD 5–10) at a local GP clinic, to IDR 250,000–400,000 (USD 15–25) for a specialist at Kasih Ibu Denpasar, to USD 70–100 at BIMC Kuta — before any labs or medication. An ER workup with bloodwork at BIMC typically runs USD 150–300 all in. Siloam Bali Kuta sits in between at roughly IDR 450,000–700,000 for a consultation. Budget for these costs in cash, as foreign cards sometimes fail at hospital payment counters overnight.

What do I do if my child is bitten by a dog or monkey in Bali? A bite from any animal in Bali — dog, monkey, or bat — must be treated as a potential rabies exposure and handled as a medical emergency, regardless of how minor the wound looks. According to both WHO guidelines and experienced expat families living in Bali, the protocol is: wash the wound immediately with soap and running water for at least 15 minutes, then go directly to BIMC or Siloam for rabies post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP). The first dose must be given within 24 hours of the bite. Do not wait to see if symptoms develop — once rabies symptoms appear, survival is virtually impossible. PEP is fully effective when started promptly.