Working from a tiny island in the Bali strait comes with trade-offs, and internet is the biggest one on Nusa Lembongan. Fixed broadband averages 49 Mbps island-wide, but most connections rely on microwave transmitters beaming signal from Sanur rather than fiber, so speeds fluctuate with weather and congestion. The five best laptop-friendly cafes average 32 Mbps WiFi, with mornings between 8am and 1pm offering the most reliable window before tourist usage peaks. Coffee runs about $2.60 at work-friendly spots and $3.00 at specialty cafes, and the main clusters of laptop-compatible venues sit around Jungut Batu harbor and Mushroom Bay.
The nomad community on Lembongan is small but self-selecting — people come here specifically for the laid-back island pace, world-class surfing, and manta ray diving rather than coworking meetups. English proficiency is medium, sufficient for daily interactions at cafes and restaurants. At $1,100 per month total cost of living, it runs slightly cheaper than Canggu while offering something mainland Bali cannot: a car-free environment where scooters cruise potholed roads past daily Hindu canang sari offerings and turquoise water appears around every corner. Indonesia's digital nomad visa is available for those earning over $60,000 annually, granting a full year stay.
ATMs are the island's logistical nightmare — only two accept foreign cards and they regularly run dry or go offline during power cuts, so bring plenty of rupiah from Bali before crossing on the 30-minute ferry. There are no dedicated coworking spaces beyond Coworksurf's coliving setup, and bandwidth-heavy tasks like live video calls should ideally be scheduled for mainland Bali trips. The wet season from November through February brings rough seas that can cancel boat services entirely, trapping you on the island with limited supplies. Lembongan works best for nomads whose work is largely asynchronous — writing, design, coding — rather than those requiring constant high-bandwidth connectivity.