Bali’s tourism leaders are assuring tourists and drivers that travel chaos will be avoided this festive season.
During Christmas and New Year, 2023/4, travel chaos hit Bali’s roads, with traffic jams backing up for miles and tourists forced to abandon their taxi rides and run down the Bali Mandara Toll Road with their luggage in hopes of catching their departing flights.
The peak travel days in Bali have already been projected for the 2024/5 festive season.
Speaking in late November, Indonesia’s Minister for Human Development and Culture, Pratikno, said, “As we know, we have set the 25th for the Christmas (public) holiday. 26th December 2024 is a joint leave (public holiday), And it is estimated that the peak of homecoming, according to teams from the Ministry of Transportation, the survey is on 24th December; that’s a Tuesday.”
Peak travel days on Bali’s road are forecast to fall on the 21st and 22nd of December, the 24th and 25th of December, and the 31st of December and 2nd of January for the outbound wave of travel.
Though Indonesia is a majority Muslim nation, Christmas and New Year are still observed as public holidays and widely celebrated by the country’s growing Christian and Catholic population.
While almost all foreigners arrive in Bali via I Gusti Ngurah Rai International Airport, the majority of domestic tourists who travel to Bali for the festive holidays travel overland in their own vehicles.
This adds tens of thousands of extra vehicles to Bali’s already congested roads.
In November, one local politician proposed that all non-Bali Province vehicles be banned from entering the island over the holidays to help tackle traffic congestion, though this idea was not motioned further.
The Badung Regency Government, which is responsible for Bali’s biggest tourism resorts, including Kuta, Legian, Seminyak, Canggu, and Uluwatu, has shared how they are preparing to keep the tourists moving safely and efficiently on the roads throughout the holidays.
The Deputy Regent of Badung, I Ketut Suiasa, told reporters, “The end of the year will certainly be a challenge because many people will come to Bali. We have mapped traffic jam-prone areas, especially in the southern Badung area.”
He confirmed that the Badung Regency Government is collaborating with the Provincial Transportation Office and the local police department to handle traffic flow.
He added, “We have coordinated with the police. We also hope that the villages will play a role in the tourist area so that there is anticipation in their own area and there will be no traffic jams.”
Suiasa said that he and his teams are aware that every year, the influx of festive season holidaymakers grows, which also presents a unique set of challenges.
He noted, “There has been an improvement. Yes, if I’m not mistaken, around 15 thousand tourists per day who come to Bali and at the end of this year will definitely increase, but this will have an impact on the economic progress of the community itself.”
Speaking separately, the Head of the Transportation Office of Badung, Anak Agung Ngurah Rai Yuda Darma, said that he will add officers at traffic jam-prone points all across the island.
Places that will be paid special attention include the I Gusti Ngurah Rai Airport area, the Kuta Beach area and its surrounding roads, throughout Nusa Dua, the busy streets of Canggu, and through to the Kapal-Lukluk route, which connects the Denpasar-Gilimanuk highway route.
He confirmed, “We have prepared several schemes such as traffic management, flow engineering, and synergy with the police.”
Tourists traveling from attraction to attraction, from hotel to dinner reservations, or throughout day trips, and especially when returning to the airport, should be mindful to leave double, if not triple, the amount of time journeys would usually take this holiday season.
Even with traffic management systems in place, congestion will still occur, and no one wants to miss their reservations and flights!
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