27 Meters Above the Indian Ocean, They Jumped. Red Bull Cliff Diving Finally Arrives in Bali.

Red Bull Cliff Diving Finally Arrives in Bali.

Red Bull Cliff Diving Finally Arrives in Bali. (Doc:redbull)

At Broken Beach on Nusa Penida, the cliffs rise sharply above the Indian Ocean, carved by wind, salt, and time into one of Bali’s most photographed coastal landscapes.

On Thursday morning, they became something else entirely.

A launch platform.

Twenty-four athletes stood at the edge of the limestone cliffs, looking down at water crashing through the natural archway below. No ropes. No harnesses. Just air, gravity, and the brief calculation that happens before the body leaves solid ground.

Then they jumped.

Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series 2026 has officially arrived in Bali for the first time, bringing one of the world’s most dangerous professional sports to the island’s southern cliffs after years of delay.

For the men, the platform stands 27 meters above the ocean. For the women, 21 meters.

An Olympic platform dive reaches 10 meters.

Here, athletes enter the water at speeds approaching 85 kilometers per hour.

Five Years Late

Bali was originally scheduled to host the event in 2020.

Then the pandemic arrived, international travel collapsed, and the series disappeared from the island’s calendar before a single diver reached the platform.

Five years later, the event finally landed on Nusa Penida.

“This competition is extreme,” said Orlando Duque, Sports Director of Red Bull Cliff Diving, during a press conference in Sanur on Wednesday. “It tests adrenaline. The athletes are international level. The location is also special.”

When asked why Bali was chosen, Duque’s answer was immediate.

“There are so many beautiful cliffs,” he said. “As soon as we said the location was Bali, all the athletes were happy.”

The choice feels almost inevitable in retrospect.

Bali’s coastline has long been marketed through beaches, temples, surf breaks, and sunsets. But Nusa Penida’s cliffs offer something more dramatic: vertical landscapes that appear designed for spectacle.

From above, Broken Beach looks impossibly calm — turquoise water moving through a circular rock formation beneath towering limestone walls. From the platform itself, the distance to the ocean below feels less picturesque.

And far more real.

Red Bull Cliff Diving Sports Director Orlando Duque, Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series 2026 Permanent Athlete Xantheia Pennisi, and Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series 2026 Wildcard Athlete Aidan Heslop. (KOMPAS.com)

The Athletes Who Make a Living Falling

The World Series has gathered some of the biggest names in cliff diving.

Among them is Rhiannan Iffland, the Australian champion who has dominated the women’s competition for seven consecutive seasons. Also competing is Gary Hunt, whose career includes 80 podium finishes across 104 competitions, and Constantin Popovici, who holds the highest score ever recorded in the series.

Younger athletes like Xantheia Pennisi and Aidan Heslop arrived in Bali carrying a different pressure: proving they belong at heights where hesitation can become dangerous in less than a second.

Before each dive, the atmosphere changes.

The cliffs fall quiet. Wind moves across the platform. Athletes stand alone above the water, mentally rehearsing rotations, timing, and body position before stepping forward into open space.

From below, the dives appear almost graceful.

From above, the margin for error feels impossibly small.

Warm Water, Sharp Cliffs

For many of the athletes, Bali offers conditions very different from the colder locations that dominate much of the international circuit.

“When you dive in a cold place, it hurts the body more,” Pennisi said. “But in warm water, it feels very good for the body. The right conditions.”

Heslop, currently returning from injury, described Bali as an ideal stop on the tour.

Warm water may soften the landing slightly, but the sport remains brutally physical. Divers hit the ocean feet-first after twisting through multiple rotations in midair, often absorbing impact forces powerful enough to leave bruising even after clean entries.

The challenge is not simply jumping.

It is maintaining perfect control while falling from a height that instinct tells most people to avoid entirely.

Red Bull Cliff Diving (Doc: Redbull)

Bali Joins the Global Circuit

Nusa Penida now opens the 2026 season before the series moves onward to St. Petersburg, Florida, in June, followed by Copenhagen, Mostar, Polignano a Mare, and Muscat later in the year.

Some of those locations have hosted cliff diving events for more than a decade.

Bali is only just entering the rotation.

But visually, few stops on the calendar rival the setting at Broken Beach, where waves surge through volcanic rock beneath cliffs crowded with spectators and camera crews leaning over the edge to follow each descent.

For years, Bali has sold itself internationally as a destination for escape.

This week, it became a destination for impact.

The Edge Above the Ocean

By late afternoon, sunlight moved across the cliffs while divers continued stepping onto the platform one after another, toes hanging over the edge above the Indian Ocean.

Tourists watched from the limestone ridges with phones raised toward the sky. Boats drifted below in the water. Wind carried the sound of waves upward through the archway carved into the cliffside.

Then another athlete jumped.

For most visitors to Nusa Penida, Broken Beach is a place to stop, take photographs, and leave.

For two days in May, it became the place where the world’s best cliff divers climbed 27 meters above the ocean and deliberately stepped into empty air.

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