Off north-west Lombok, Indonesia
Gili Islands
The Gili Islands for UK travellers: which of the three to pick (party Trawangan, honeymoon Meno or family Air), how the fast boats from Bali and Bangsal actually work, why there are no cars or scooters, and the GOV.UK drink-spiking warning to take seriously.
In short
Gili Islands at a glance
The Gilis are three tiny car-free islands off the north-west tip of Lombok, and picking the right one matters more than picking the right hotel โ they are barely an hour's walk around but completely different holidays. Gili Trawangan is the big, lively one with the bars, dive shops and the late-night crowd; Gili Meno is the smallest and quietest, the honeymoon-and-do-nothing island with a salt lake in the middle; Gili Air is the middle ground, with a village, families and a few low-key beach bars but no real nightlife. None of them has a single motor vehicle โ you walk, cycle or take a cidomo (a small horse-drawn cart), so pack light and don't expect to roll a suitcase far across the sand. Getting there is the part UK visitors underestimate: from Bali it's a 1.5-2.5-hour open-sea fast boat from Padang Bai or Serangan that gets cancelled or rough in bad weather, and from Lombok it's a short public boat from Bangsal harbour near the airport. Two safety points are not optional reading: GOV.UK specifically flags the Gilis for high reported levels of drink-spiking and sexual assault, and for methanol poisoning from counterfeit spirits. Get the island choice and the boat plan right and the rest is hammocks and snorkelling with turtles.
The Gilis are three specks of white sand off the north-west corner of Lombok, and the decision that shapes your whole trip isnโt the hotel โ itโs which of the three you sleep on. They sit within sight of each other and each takes under an hour to walk right around, yet they are three different holidays. Gili Trawangan (โGili Tโ) is the big, lively one: the dive schools, the night market and the only real bar scene are all here. Gili Meno is the smallest and quietest, a do-nothing honeymoon island with a salt lake in the middle and almost no nightlife. Gili Air splits the difference, with a proper village, a relaxed line of beach bars and good food but no heavy partying. Pick wrong and youโll spend the boat fare hopping to the island you should have booked in the first place.
The thing that catches UK visitors out is the getting there, not the being there. From Bali itโs a 1.5-2.5-hour open-sea fast boat from Padang Bai or Serangan that costs roughly Rp 600,000-900,000 return (about ยฃ25-38) and genuinely gets rough or cancelled in bad weather โ so book a reputable operator and never put the crossing on your fly-home day. From Lombok itโs far cheaper: the public boat leaves Bangsal harbour, about 1.5 hours by car from Lombok International Airport, and reaches the nearest Gili in 15-30 minutes. Once you land, there isnโt a single car or scooter on any of the three โ by local rule you walk, cycle (a bike is a couple of pounds a day) or take a cidomo horse cart, so pack light and agree the cart fare before you climb in.
Two safety points are not optional reading. GOV.UK specifically names the Gili Islands for high reported levels of drink-spiking and sexual assault, so watch your drink and travel back with people you trust, especially out of the Trawangan bars. It also warns about methanol poisoning from counterfeit spirits โ you cannot taste or smell it and it can kill, so steer clear of cheap local โarakโ and unbranded bottles and stick to sealed, branded drinks. There are no police on the smaller islands and limited medical care, so anything serious means a boat back to Lombok or Bali; comprehensive insurance with medical evacuation is essential, and your GHIC does nothing in Indonesia. Get the island choice, the boat plan and those two warnings sorted, and the rest is hammocks, turtles and sunsets over Mount Agung.
The route
A 5-night plan that treats the Gilis as a slow-down, not a sightseeing race โ because there is genuinely nothing to 'do' here beyond snorkel, cycle and eat, and that's the point. The only real logistics are the boats and which island you sleep on, so this builds a Trawangan-for-arrival, island-hop-by-day, Air-or-Meno-to-wind-down rhythm. Crossing times below are real Gili figures: the inter-island hopping boat between the three takes 10-20 minutes, not the 1.5-2.5 hours of the Bali open-sea fast boat.
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Days 1-2
Arrive on Gili Trawangan
Take the morning fast boat from Bali (Padang Bai or Serangan, 1.5-2.5 hours) or the short public boat from Bangsal on Lombok, and base on Gili Trawangan for the first nights while you've got energy โ it has the most rooms, the dive schools and the only proper nightlife. Walk the 20-minute width to the west side for sunset over Bali's Mount Agung, snorkel the turtle-heavy reef straight off the beach, and book a fun dive or course for the next morning if you're diving. Set up an eSIM and offline maps before you leave Bali, as signal is patchy out here.
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Day 3
Snorkel-hop the three islands
Join a half-day public snorkelling boat (~Rp 150,000-200,000, ~ยฃ6.50-8.50) that loops all three Gilis โ the turtle point off Gili Meno, the coral gardens and the half-submerged 'underwater statues' between Meno and Trawangan. Bring reef-safe sun cream and your own mask if you have one; rental kit is tired. Back for a beach-bar dinner and an early night if you're moving islands tomorrow.
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Days 4-5
Slow down on Gili Air or Gili Meno
Hop the inter-island boat (10-20 minutes) to quieter ground. Gili Air keeps a bit of life โ a village, beach bars and good food โ while Gili Meno is the do-nothing honeymoon island with a salt lake in the middle and almost no nightlife. Hire a bicycle for a couple of pounds and circle the island, swim off the eastern beaches at high tide (the west can get shallow and rocky), and watch the sunrise back towards Lombok's Mount Rinjani. Leave a full buffer day before any onward flight in case the fast boat is cancelled by weather.
Where to base yourself
Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.
Gili Trawangan ('Gili T')
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe biggest and liveliest of the three: the most hotels and hostels, all the dive schools, the night market and the only real bar scene, concentrated on the south-east. The west and north sides stay quieter and more upmarket. The obvious base for divers, first-timers wanting choice, and anyone who wants some nightlife โ but it's also where GOV.UK's drink-spiking warning bites hardest, so mind your drink.
Best for: Divers, first-timers and nightlife
Gili Air
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe middle-ground island, closest to Lombok: a real village, a relaxed strip of beach bars and good restaurants, plenty of families and a calmer pace than Trawangan without Meno's total quiet. The sensible all-rounder if you want some life and food but not a party, and the easiest of the three to reach from Bangsal harbour.
Best for: Families and a relaxed all-rounder
Gili Meno
ยฃยฃยฃ premiumThe smallest and quietest of the three, with a salt lake in the centre, a turtle hatchery and barely any nightlife โ the classic honeymoon-and-hammock island. Choose it to genuinely switch off, but bring everything you need: it has the fewest shops, ATMs and restaurants, and you'll cross to Trawangan or Air for variety.
Best for: Honeymooners and total quiet
Getting around Gili Islands
There are no cars or scooters anywhere on the Gilis โ by local rule the islands are motor-vehicle-free, so you get around on foot, by bicycle or by cidomo, the small horse-drawn cart that doubles as the local taxi. Each island is small enough to walk right round in 45 minutes to an hour, so most people just walk; a hired bicycle (~Rp 50,000-75,000/day, ~ยฃ2-3.20) makes the flatter loops easy, though deep sand on parts of the path forces you to push. Cidomo carts handle luggage from the harbour to your hotel โ agree the price before you climb in, as there are no meters and the going rate is steep for tourists. To move between the three islands, a public hopping boat runs a couple of fixed times a day (about 10-20 minutes, ~Rp 35,000-100,000 each way depending on the route), or you charter a private boat for more flexibility. Reaching the islands in the first place is the bigger decision: from Bali, fast boats run from Padang Bai or Serangan and take roughly 1.5-2.5 hours across open sea โ book a reputable operator, as smaller boats get rough or cancelled in bad weather, and don't put the crossing on your fly-home day. From Lombok, the cheap public boat leaves Bangsal harbour (around 1.5 hours by car from Lombok International Airport) and reaches the nearest island in 15-30 minutes. Pull cash before you come: ATMs are scarce and unreliable on the islands, especially on Meno, and many smaller places are cash-only.
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