Bali’s Soaring Sky:
11.4 Million Passengers in 2025 Signal a Golden Era for Property Investment
Bali’s heartbeat grows stronger, and this time, it’s echoing through the skies.
In the first half of 2025 alone, I Gusti Ngurah Rai International Airport welcomed an astounding 11.4 million passengers, marking a steady 1% increase from the same period last year. It means, Bali’s tourism and by extension, its property market, continues to thrive with remarkable consistency.
General Manager Ahmad Syaugi Shahab revealed that from January to June 2025, the airport handled 11,424,245 passenger movements and 68,891 flights. Of these, 7.2 million were international travellers, a clear reflection of Bali’s enduring global appeal.
A World Arriving in Waves
At the top of the arrival charts, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, and Melbourne remain Bali’s busiest international routes, while Jakarta, Surabaya, and Labuan Bajo dominate the domestic scene.
Australia, unsurprisingly, continues to lead as Bali’s most loyal visitor base, over 777,000 Australians have landed on the island this year, followed by growing numbers from India and China. This mix of cultures, creativity, and economic momentum is precisely what fuels the island’s property renaissance.
Growth That Flies Beyond the Numbers
The 2025 passenger milestone tells a deeper story, one of resilience and reinvention. Nine new or reactivated flight routes were introduced this year, including Palangkaraya, Guangzhou, Bangkok, Darwin, and Adelaide. With 62 active routes and 51 airlines now connecting the island, Bali is accessible and unstoppable.
This steady influx fills hotel rooms and sustains a dynamic ecosystem that supports high-yield property investments, luxury villa rentals, and art-driven developments such as Uma La Lang in Cemagi, where Three Crowns Property redefines what it means to live beautifully in Bali.
From Travel to Timeless Living
As flight numbers rise, so too does Bali’s reputation as a global lifestyle destination, one where luxury meets culture, and homes are living artworks rather than static investments.
For investors, these numbers matter. More arrivals mean more rental demand, stronger tourism infrastructure, and sustainable growth in property value, especially in emerging, culturally rooted areas like Cemagi and Mengwi, where serenity and sophistication meet.
The Art of Investing in a Living Island
At Three Crowns Property, we see this growth as statistics and a story, a canvas where art, architecture, and investment merge. Bali’s balance between tourism vibrancy and cultural depth continues to draw design collectors, dreamers, and global investors who understand that real estate here is more than a transaction, it’s a curatorial act.
The skies above Bali tell us one thing clearly: the island’s story is still ascending.
And for those seeking to invest in rare, meaningful, and high-performing properties, this is the moment to take flight.




