
Do Bali Taxis Have Car Seats? What Every Parent Needs to Know
The short answer is no. Here's why standard Bali taxis and ride-hail cars don't provide child seats, what the risks are, and how to get a safe ride for your family.
If you're searching "do Bali taxis have car seats?" before your family trip, you're already thinking about the right things. The answer is straightforward: no, standard taxis and ride-hail cars in Bali do not provide child car seats. Here's what you need to know and what to do about it.
Why don't Bali taxis have car seats?
Indonesia does not require child restraints in taxis or ride-sharing vehicles. This means Blue Bird taxis (the most reputable metered fleet in Bali), airport rank taxis, and app-based cars from Grab and Gojek all operate without child seats. It's not a service gap — it's a regulatory and market reality. Drivers serve dozens of passengers daily and carrying child seats for different age groups isn't practical for general taxi fleets.
What about Grab and Gojek?
Neither Grab nor Gojek offers a child-seat vehicle option anywhere in Indonesia. When you request a ride, you get a standard sedan. There is no way to filter for vehicles with child restraints in the app. Some parents bring their own travel seat, but installing it in an unfamiliar car, on a busy road, after a long flight, is stressful and error-prone.
What happens at the airport?
At Ngurah Rai (Denpasar) Airport, the official taxi counter will assign you a prepaid car. None carry child seats. The drivers are professional, but they are not equipped for child passenger safety. You'll either need to hold your baby on your lap — which is unsafe at any speed — or have arranged an alternative in advance.
The real risk
Holding a child on your lap in a vehicle feels safe because of proximity and instinct. It is not. In a sudden stop at just 40 km/h, the force on your arms is equivalent to holding several hundred kilograms. Your grip will fail. A properly fitted child seat reduces fatal injury risk by up to 70% for infants. This is not a marginal difference — it's the difference between protection and none.
Bali's roads add additional risk: narrow lanes, scooter traffic, sudden stops, and unfamiliar driving patterns for visitors. The journey from the airport to Seminyak or Ubud is 30–90 minutes. That's a long time for an unrestrained child.
The solution: pre-book a transfer with a child seat
Dedicated family transfer services provide exactly what standard taxis don't: a vehicle with a pre-installed, age-appropriate child seat, driven by someone who knows how to fit it correctly.
When you book with Bali Family Travels, you select the seat type (infant capsule, toddler seat, or booster), share your child's age and weight, and arrive to find a clean car with the seat fitted and checked. Your driver meets you at arrivals — no queueing, no negotiating, no compromise.
It's the simplest way to close the safety gap that Bali's standard transport network leaves wide open.
What to do for rides during your stay
Airport transfers aren't the only journeys you'll make. Day trips to Ubud, beach runs to Uluwatu, restaurant outings in Seminyak — every car journey with your child needs a seat. You can book a private driver with child seat for day tours, or arrange individual transfers between locations. The same safety logic applies whether it's a 15-minute hop or a 90-minute drive.
Summary
Bali taxis — including Blue Bird, airport taxis, Grab, and Gojek — do not have car seats. There is no regulation requiring them, no app filter to find them, and no realistic way to source one on arrival. If you're travelling with a baby, toddler, or young child, pre-book every car journey with a dedicated family transfer service that provides fitted child restraints. It's the single most important transport decision for your trip.