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The Rooms The rooms are consistently described as large, spacious, and Balinese in character — think two-story brick houses with glass front walls (with curtains), private balconies or terraces looking out over a well-tended garden, king beds, strong AC, and large bathrooms. Each room comes with an en-suite bathroom, air conditioning, and free WiFi. Several reviewers highlighted a genuine sense of luxury from the room size and AC quality alone — one solo sabbatical guest described their room as feeling "luxurious" because of its size, strong AC, large bathroom, and glass front walls that open onto a private porch overlooking the garden. That said, it's not a boutique resort. One reviewer noted the room was "slightly older" but still spacious, with a lovely balcony and a nice view. An outlier 1-star review flagged animal droppings, mould in the shower, and broken AC — though this appears to be an isolated incident and the majority of reviews do not share this experience. The Property & Grounds The setting is one of the most praised aspects across every platform. Accommodations are in small, two-story buildings set within a compound with a beautiful, well-tended garden and a small pool. A communal kitchen and seating area open onto the garden. One long-staying guest described it as "a fantastic place for those seeking tranquility and privacy" — with a neighborhood full of greenery, a shared pool, a shared workspace, and an outdoor kitchen. The pool comes up repeatedly as a nice feature, though a few reviews mention occasional maintenance issues (one noted a dirty pool, another a broken tile). Location The Nyuh Kuning neighborhood is the consistent crown jewel in reviews. It's a small village with a school, playing field, and communal temple — with far less motorized traffic than central Ubud — yet everything a traveler needs is within a 15-minute walk. Reviewers rave about the local café scene: spots like Mother and Blend for breakfast, Rajarani for chai and dosas, Old Friends for coffee, and 2 BULAN for Thai food get name-dropped repeatedly. The location sits far enough from central Ubud to avoid the hustle and bustle, while still being close to amenities. You can walk through the monkey forest straight into Ubud Center in about 14 minutes, and the back entrance to the famous Yoga Barn is nearby. The coworking space is 700m away — walkable, though some reviewers flagged that in rainy season the walk feels less convenient. The Coworking The coworking layout was described by one digital nomad as "thoughtfully designed" — with a quiet library downstairs for focused work and a vibrant social area upstairs for calls and networking. The facility includes 3-4 private offices and 4-5 bookable video call rooms. WiFi is a recurring topic — mostly positive, occasionally not. The internet was reliably fast and the environment naturally facilitated connections with other professionals and creatives. The coworking space has 200Mbps shared bandwidth with a dedicated backup line. However, a few guests noted that WiFi in the coliving rooms themselves could be weaker, especially in rooms farther from the office — and at least one reviewer spent a week complaining before it got fixed. One digital nomad noted that the room desk setup isn't ergonomically designed for long work sessions. The weekly unlimited cowork pass was noted as strong value at around 650k IDR (~$40 USD). Staff Staff may be the single most praised aspect of the entire property. The staff — including long-time property manager Ragu — are described as lovely, helpful, efficient, and "creating a good feeling." Multiple reviewers singled out Ragu specifically, noting he helped arrange scooter rentals, taxi rides, SIM cards, and could solve any issue quickly. One guest noted that for Valentine's Day, the staff left a rose, a personalized card, and chocolates in the room. The warmth is consistent enough across years of reviews that it's clearly a defining part of the Outpost Ubud identity. Community & Events One reviewer wrote that Outpost "is not just a place to stay — it's a place to connect and share," and that the sense of community is incredible. Events range from workshops and yoga classes to cocktail mixers and monthly adventures like climbing Mount Batur or island-hopping in Nusa Penida. Wednesday and Friday community lunches are highlighted as easy, organic ways to meet fellow digital nomads and entrepreneurs. That said, the coliving.community platform notes that the community at the Nyuh Kuning property is somewhat unfacilitated — nobody organizes communal gatherings on-site, though members coordinate themselves via a WhatsApp group, and events happen at the separate coworking space. This is an important nuance: the community magic is real, but it lives more at the cowork than passively in the coliving compound itself. Food & Café Current – Social Club & Kitchen, the café attached to Outpost, is praised for its great food, particularly the healthy breakfast options. One reviewer specifically called out the banana pancakes. The coffee was described as "genuinely some of the best I've had" — an unexpected highlight for long work sessions.
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