Sekaroh peninsula, southeast Lombok
★ 4.7(410 reviews)
Jeeva Beloam Beach Camp is the most remote luxury property on Lombok — 11 traditional Sasak bungalows on a private bay in the Sekaroh peninsula, with rooms from 3,500,000 to 6,500,000 IDR per night including all meals. Reaching it takes 3 hours from the airport across rough roads. The reward is genuine end-of-the-earth seclusion, a private beach you'll share with no one, and unmatched stargazing. It's not for everyone but for the right traveller it's the most distinctive stay on the island.
# Jeeva Beloam Beach Camp: Lombok's Most Remote Luxury
Jeeva Beloam Beach Camp is the third Jeeva property and the most extreme: a tiny eco-luxury beach camp on the Sekaroh peninsula, the southeastern tip of Lombok that almost no tourists reach. Opened in 2010, the property has stayed at 11 bungalows by design and built a small but devoted following among travellers who specifically want to disappear.
Indonesian-owned, eco-luxury positioned, and operated as a deliberately small property. The Beloam location is so remote that the owners had to build the access road themselves; you cannot reach Jeeva Beloam by accident.
A single category, repeated. 11 traditional Sasak bungalows, each ~40sqm, with king bed, indoor-outdoor bathroom, large covered terrace facing the bay, and ceiling fans (no air conditioning). Pricing varies by season: 3,500,000 IDR/night low season, 4,500,000–6,500,000 IDR peak. All rates include breakfast, lunch, and dinner — there's no other dining option within an hour.
There's no upgrade path or premium villa. Every guest gets the same product. This is part of the appeal.
Sekaroh peninsula, the southeastern tip of Lombok. From Jeeva Beloam: 90 minutes to Tanjung Luar (the nearest town), 3 hours to Lombok International Airport, 3.5 hours to Senggigi, 4 hours to Kuta Lombok. The final 25km of access road is unsealed in places and slow.
Jeeva Beloam arranges private SUV transfers from the airport (1,500,000 IDR one-way, recommended) — independent transport is possible but unpleasant. There's also an option to combine the transfer with a stay at sister property Jeeva Klui (3 nights Klui + 4 nights Beloam is a common Indonesia-coast itinerary).
The seclusion is the entire product and it delivers. You will share the bay with the other 10 bungalows of guests and no one else — no day trippers, no neighbours, no boats other than the resort's own. The beach is white sand, palm-fringed, with a fringing reef accessible directly from shore. Snorkelling off the beach you'll see reef fish consistently and turtles within 50 metres of shore most days.
The food operation is the meal plan and it works. Indonesian and seafood menus rotating across the week, with attention to sourcing — fish comes in daily from Tanjung Luar, vegetables from on-site garden and inland villages. Mains are properly cooked and the menu accommodates dietary restrictions on advance notice. Breakfast and lunch are casual; dinner is set-menu with two choices per course.
Stargazing is one of the property's signature features. Zero light pollution within 30km, the Milky Way is visible nightly when conditions are clear, and the staff will set up loungers on the beach for after-dinner stargazing. This alone justifies the trip for many guests.
The eco operation is real rather than greenwash. Solar power runs the property (no diesel generator backup; lights dim if cloudy days run long), on-site composting handles food waste, no single-use plastic, and rainwater collection supplements bathroom water. The lights are deliberately minimal — bring a head torch for paths after dark.
The honest constraints. No air conditioning means hot nights are uncomfortable, particularly in November–December and March–April when humidity peaks. Most nights the sea breeze and ceiling fans cope; some don't. No mobile signal at all anywhere on property — Wi-Fi exists at the main bale only and is satellite-slow (email and WhatsApp text yes; video calls and uploads no). Activity variety is limited — snorkelling, swimming, reading, walking, yoga, board games. Once you've done all of those, you're either fully into the rhythm or counting days.
Book Beloam for travellers who want genuine off-grid disappearance, who'll commit to 4+ nights so the transfer makes sense, who actively want air conditioning-free traditional accommodation, and who'll appreciate dark skies and a private beach. Strong honeymoon choice for the right couple. Strong writer-and-reader retreat. Strong reset trip after intense work periods.
Skip Beloam for any short stay (2 nights minimum is enforced; 4 nights is realistic minimum), for travellers who need air conditioning, mobile signal, or active entertainment, for families with young children (the long transfer is hard on small kids), and for anyone who'll feel anxious about the remoteness.