There are resorts that host events, and then there are destinations that are built around them. AYANA Bali has always belonged to the second category — a 90-hectare clifftop estate above Jimbaran Bay where the scale of the property has never been incidental, but intentional. From September 2026, that intention takes its most ambitious form yet with the commercial launch of its new Grand Ballroom.
Designed by global architecture and design firm Gensler, the ballroom spans 1,850 square metres of pillarless space beneath nine-metre ceilings, accommodating up to 2,300 seated guests. But the numbers, impressive as they are, tell only part of the story. What sets the space apart is what surrounds it — a Veranda opening onto 270-degree ocean views, 20 breakout rooms many bathed in natural light, a dedicated foyer for registration and networking, and direct access to AYANA Bali’s ocean-facing outdoor event spaces. Conferences flow into sunset cocktails. Gala dinners open onto the Indian Ocean. The indoor and the outdoor exist not as separate choices, but as a single, continuous experience.
That continuity is, in many ways, the defining character of AYANA Bali as a whole. With 993 guest rooms across four hotels — the largest accommodation capacity of any integrated MICE destination in Bali — the resort brings together 31 dining venues, 14 swimming pools, the award-winning AYANA Spa, and a resort-wide tram system that moves delegates across the property without friction. For event planners, this integration removes the logistical complexity that typically comes with large-scale gatherings. Everything — accommodation, dining, wellness, entertainment — exists within one estate.
The accommodation offering reinforces this further. AYANA Bali’s four hotels — AYANA Resort Bali, AYANA Segara Bali, AYANA Villas Bali, and RIMBA by AYANA Bali — each bring a distinct character to the estate, from classic Balinese elegance to contemporary indoor-outdoor living and private villa retreats. For event organisers hosting delegations with varied preferences and budgets, this internal diversity is a genuine advantage. Groups arrive at one address and find, within it, the breadth of a destination.
The Grand Ballroom’s architectural concept draws from Bali’s ancient Sanga Mandala philosophy, creating a considered relationship between people, place, and environment. It is an approach that runs through the resort’s broader identity, rooted in the Balinese principle of Tri Hita Karana — harmony between people, nature, and spiritual wellbeing. For organizations increasingly guided by ESG commitments, AYANA Bali’s EarthCheck Gold certification and its integrated model, which reduces transportation requirements and event-related emissions, add a layer of relevance that goes beyond aesthetics.
Beyond the boardroom and ballroom, AYANA Bali extends its event proposition into the kind of experiences that leave a lasting impression on attendees. A secluded beach, cliff-edge dining venues, the iconic Rock Bar perched above the Indian Ocean, and one of the world’s largest hydrotherapy seawater pools at AYANA Spa offer a range of settings for social programmes, team experiences, and private celebrations. These are not peripheral amenities — they are, for many delegates, the moments that define the trip. It is this layering of the professional and the personal, the formal and the unforgettable, that places AYANA Bali in a category of its own.
With early interest already building for Q4 2026 and 2027, AYANA Bali is more than just opening a ballroom. It is making a considered statement about what a world-class event destination in Bali can — and should — look like.