
A 3-star beachside hotel in Lovina, North Bali, a minute from Banyualit Beach, with an outdoor pool, a spa and massage centre, a restaurant and its own tour desk for snorkelling and dolphin trips.
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Suma Beach Hotel is a relaxed 3-star hotel on the quiet, black-sand coast of Lovina in North Bali, just a one-minute walk from Banyualit Beach. It suits couples and independent travellers looking for an easygoing seaside base, well away from the crowds of the south, with the calm Bali Sea and its famous dolphin waters on the doorstep.
Rooms are arranged around a tropical garden and an outdoor pool, each with a TV, a mosquito net and a balcony or terrace opening onto garden, pool or sea views. Some come with a minibar and tea and coffee facilities, and every room has its own en suite bathroom.
Beyond the pool, the hotel runs a small spa offering massages and beauty treatments, a restaurant serving Indonesian, Chinese and international dishes, and a tour desk that arranges snorkelling, diving, fishing and dolphin trips. Free parking, free WiFi and a 24-hour front desk round out an unhurried, good-value stay.

Suma Beach Hotel offers four room types, all built around the same easygoing beach-hotel formula: a private en suite bathroom, air conditioning, a mosquito net and a balcony or terrace looking onto the garden, the pool or, in the higher categories, the sea. Most rooms sleep two, and the flexible bed layouts mean you can usually choose between a large double or a twin arrangement.
From there the categories build on each other. The Superior and Standard rooms measure around 20 m² and keep things simple, while the 30 m² Deluxe rooms add extra space, a bathtub and tea and coffee facilities. At the top, the Deluxe room with sea view trades garden outlooks for a terrace facing the Bali Sea, so there is a fit whether you want a straightforward base near the beach or a room with a view to wake up to.




For a relaxed three-star beach hotel, Suma Beach Hotel keeps a genuinely useful line-up of facilities. The centre of it all is the outdoor pool, framed by a garden, a sun terrace and loungers, with a separate kids' pool and pool towels provided. A 24-hour front desk handles arrivals at any hour and is backed by a tour desk, lockers and a safety deposit box.
The on-site restaurant serves Indonesian, Chinese and international dishes, with a bar, a snack bar, a coffee house and in-room breakfast available. Getting around is easy thanks to free private parking, an airport shuttle and car, motorbike and bicycle hire. On the wellness side, the spa offers full-body, foot, back and head massages along with facials, manicures and other beauty treatments. Rooms are air-conditioned and non-smoking, with free WiFi throughout, while the tour desk can set up snorkelling, diving, fishing and hiking, plus water-sport facilities right on site.
Suma Beach Hotel sits on Jalan Laviana in Kalibukbuk, the lively heart of the Lovina area on Bali's north coast. Lovina is a string of quiet villages along a black-sand shore, a world away from the surf and nightlife of Kuta and Seminyak in the south. The mood here is calm and unhurried, and the sheltered Bali Sea is what draws most people: the water is usually flat and easy for swimming, and the coast is famous for its wild dolphins.
The hotel is a one-minute walk from Banyualit Beach and a short drive from Kalibukbuk's small centre, where you'll find the beachfront restaurants, warungs and dive shops, plus the Lovina dolphin monument. The single best-known experience is the early-morning dolphin trip: local boats set out around dawn, roughly between 5 and 6 am, to look for pods offshore, and the same operators run snorkelling and fishing outings over the calm reefs.
Inland, an easy day trip strings together some of North Bali's highlights. The warm, sulphur-rich pools of Banjar Hot Springs and the hillside Brahma Vihara Arama, Bali's only Buddhist monastery, are both around a 20-minute drive, while Gitgit Waterfall lies about 30 minutes away in the hills toward Singaraja. To get around you'll want your own wheels: the hotel hires out cars, motorbikes and bicycles, and can arrange a driver.
The best time to come is the dry season, roughly April to October, when the sea is calmest and skies are clearest for boat trips and snorkelling. Ngurah Rai International Airport in the south is about a 90-minute drive across the central mountains, a scenic route that passes lakes and rice terraces on the way north.
