Kelimutu (Inspiration Point)

Facts

  • Elevation: 1,647 m (5,404 ft)
  • Prominence: 48 m
  • Ribu category: Spesial
  • Province: Nusa Tenggara Timur
  • Google Earth: kml
  • Rating: 1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (13 votes) Add your rating
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  • Other names: none
  • Eruptions: 1865, 1938, 1968

Photos

Bagging It!

Famous for its three exotic coloured lakes, Kelimutu is the most famous natural tourist attraction on the island of Flores, apart from the staggering beauty of the whole island itself. The Spesial place on Kelimutu is the so called “Inspiration Point”, which is the viewpoint from where you can see all three of the coloured crater lakes.

The lakes are Tiwu Ata Bupu (black/brown, “Lake of Old People”, Danau Abutu on the Bakosurtanal map), Tiwu Ata Polo (previously red but now blue, “Enchanted Lake”, Danau Alapolo on the Bakosurtanal map) and Tiwu Ko’o Fai Nuwa Muri (turquoise, “Lake of Young Men and Maidens”, Danau Kootainuamuri on the Bakosurtanal map) although the colour of the lakes changes and there are several spellings of each name.

If like most people travelling through Flores you have a copy of the Lonely Planet guidebook, you will be expecting something very special from Kelimutu. Unfortunately the Lonely Planet description of Kelimutu is wildly over-the-top and in our opinion Kelimutu is a worthwhile diversion on the Flores itinerary, but don’t set your expectations too high. As a Spesial, Kelimutu does not come close as a natural attraction to Bromo or Papandayan in Java.

You should aim to visit Inspiration Point for sunrise, which means staying overnight in the pleasant village of Moni (732m). Leave Moni at 4:30 am with your driver or a motorbike taxi (ojek) and you’ll be at the National Park gates (1,234m) when they open at 5 am; from there it’s a short drive to the carpark (1,522m). From the carpark it is 20 minutes walk along a paved track following the signs to the “puncak” – as you walk the light should be building for sunrise. There are steps to the fenced area that is the puncak, or Inspiration Point. This is not actually the highest point on Kelimutu, but it is the only hiking destination on the mountain – you should not attempt to leave the paths or fenced areas because the steep slopes are dangerous.

From Inspiration Point you can also see the actual Ribu in the area, which is 12 km to the north of Kelimutu and easily spotted because it has a Telkom mobile phone tower on the top. This Ribu is called Keli Lepembusu and it’s our recommended destination after Kelimutu because you can bag it by motorbike, you can be there and back in less than 2 hours from Moni.

The highest peak on the Kelimutu range itself is a couple of kilometres west of the lakes, and labelled Keli Soke (1,716m) on the Bakosurtanal map. There appears to be no trail from the Kelimutu side.

As soon as you’ve had your fill of coloured lakes, return the same way. Whatever you do, don’t follow the Lonely Planet advice of walking down from the carpark. This strikes us of desperation to make Kelimutu more interesting or fill up more of the day than required. If you do decide to do this, get your driver to drop you off at the forestry office (Dephut) which is 1 km down the road from the National Park office. The descent to Moni from Dephut is worthwhile if you haven’t been through many kampung (villages) in Indonesia. However, we recommend having breakfast in Moni and then heading off to bag the Ribu of Keli Lepembusu, where you are bound to meet some locals and get off the usual tourist trail.

Bagging information by Andy Dean

Trail Map

Peta Jalur Pendakian Gunung Kelimutu
For a high quality PDF version of this and other trail maps, please download from our Trail Maps page.

Local Accommodation



Booking.com

Practicalities

  • Getting there: You will most likely be travelling across Flores – the turning to Kelimutu National Park is about 5 minutes outside the village of Moni on the way to Ende. It’s about 30 minutes drive up the road to the car park.
  • Guides and GPS Tracks: Want a PDF version for your phone? Looking for a guide? Need GPS tracks and waypoints? Gunung Kelimutu information pack can be downloaded here.
  • Trip planning assistance: Would you like Gunung Bagging to personally help you in arranging your whole trip? Please contact us here.
  • Permits: Foreigners even if resident in Indonesia pay Rp. 150/225,000 (weekday/weekend) entry at the National Park gates, locals pay a fraction of that.
  • Water sources: There are several food stalls at the carpark, and you can buy muddy coffee, tea and ginger tea from some charming old men who do great business at Inspiration Point.

Local Average Monthly Rainfall (mm):

ende

Location

Links and References

Wikipedia English
Wikipedia Indonesia

15 thoughts on “Kelimutu (Inspiration Point)”

  1. John Hargreaves

    I made my third visit to Kelimutu in December 2023. Starting out by ojek from the Hidayah homestay in Moni at 08.00, we reached the car park at 08.55 and the summit at 09.25. All three lakes were clearly visible although clouds were drifting across the mountain tops, preventing a proper view of Keli Lepembusu.

    On two previous visits I’ve followed the popular sunrise schedule, but weather was cold and misty on both those occasions. After conferring with local people, I would suggest that the hours between 07.00 and 09.00 gives just as good a chance of getting clear views as 05.00 to 06.00, with less need for hot ginger to keep you warm at the top.

    Entry ticket for foreigners is still Rp150,000 on weekdays and Rp225,000 on weekends. The road up is being gradually widened all the way up to the car park, and much of it is a now a broad asphalt ‘highway’, albeit with some quite sharp hairpin bends. The lake area at the top is also being developed, with features I have not seen before, such as a large wooden platform over a valley on the left for taking photographs up toward the summit.

    The stone monument at Inspiration Point remains uninspiring. However, I did feel inspired by seeing a man climbing up to the ridge overlooking the black lake, and decided to follow him for a walk up to the high point in the pine forest (which seems to be the highest point in the area immediately around the lakes). The man told me that he was an employee of the vulcanology department making a daily check of the seismometers on the ridge, and warned me that the forest area was off limits for visitors.

    The western lake remains deep green/black, while the two eastern lakes are a similar shade of turquoise, though the northerly one also has a green-brown algae-like coating across about 5% of its surface.

    On the way back down the main road we stopped at the roadside ‘air tiga rasa’, a river where bathing in the pools is supposed to be medicinal, but it was overcrowded and unappealing. Much better was the Kolorongo Hot Spring, a small, pleasantly warm pool hidden in a dip in the rice fields: just a 2 minute walk from the road, but strangely, I had it all to myself.

    As on the previous day’s outing to Keli Lepembusu, a rain storm started around lunch time and lasted through the afternoon, putting an end to any further exploration. We took shelter in Mopi’s Kopi in Moni; they have good espresso-based drinks and a varied menu with plenty of vegetarian options.

  2. Just had a look at the Bakosurtanal map for the area to find the highest peak of the Kelimutu range. Obviously it isn’t Inspiration Point, but we wanted Inspiration Point to be the Spesial when we first made the list as it is the obvious viewpoint for the lakes and anyone jumping the fence is putting themselves in danger and maybe encouraging others to do something foolish. Plus….. it’s not as if the highest point seems anything less than an hour’s trek away anyway on what is quite an expansive massif……

    It turns out there are a few points a kilometre or two west of the westernmost lake that are over 1,700m (but none as high as neighbouring Keli Lepembusu which is the Ribu that lies several km to the north). Probably best accessed from elsewhere, if possible at all. Highest figure for the Kelimutu range on the map is 1,716m, about 1km north of what is labelled Keli Soke (1,679m). The Bako maps are not flawless, but definitely the best source of data for now. Will be interesting if any longer treks around this range become the norm at any point in the future, or if folk are going to be stuck with a very regimented concrete experience (but with a nice view next to some folk selling snacks).

    In recent years, Indonesia has not done ‘nature tourism’ well at all in my opinion, with massive selfie signs, overcharging foreigners, multiple tickets to get into a place instead of one which covers all the different local taxes and insurance or whatever, and the encouragement of folk selling things to you when you are trying to enjoy not being pestered by people. It is not alone in this, of course, but I really hope they realise that the beauty of these places is exactly found in the lack of shops, crowds, roads, concrete, signs, and all the rest of it, which only detract from the experience.

    A Trans-Flores long-distance trekking route would be a great project to start, from Labuanbajo all the way to Larantuka, taking in a few mountains like Kelimutu en-route.

  3. We stayed in Moni at the Palm Cottages (150 000 per night for two people, including breakfast). We didn’t do the ‘dawn thing’ instead sauntered up there at about 9am. It was a beautiful clear morning with a couple of local tourists on top and an old lady selling coffee. Look, I’m glad I went and had a look but as others have said, it wasn’t ‘spectacular’. I spoke to the coffee lady and she said that in June/July there can be 200 people at the lookout…glad I missed that.
    Anyway, we strolled back down the track before the National Park payment booth and chatted to a few locals in the villages, had a couple more cups of coffee then hit the road…
    Would I go out of my way to see Kelimutu? Na, probably not.

  4. Current fee is 150000rp in weekdays and 225000rp in weekends. I was not interested in paying that, so just woke up early and left Moni by foot at 1am and at the time I reached security gate there was still noone there (near the Rainbow cafe there is a shortcut that firstly passes waterfall and then joins the paved road after some time).
    I don’t enjoy sneaking in, but Kelimutu is not that great to pay amount they are asking for. It must have been a nice hike before paved road was build, but now – really nothing special.
    There are ways to improve the hike. After you visit Kelimutu, instead of walking down or driving back on a paved road, just look at opencyclemaps for a path which is south-west from the main road. If you walk back from the top – that path will be on your right side. You can fallow that path (always keep right direction, at one point that path almost reenters main road. You might need gps to find the beggining of the path) and you will have a pleasant hike down to the Moni. That path avoids security gate, so it might be possible to walk up in day time without paying ticket fee too.

    1. Hello Karolis,

      Would you possibly be able to mark out the route you took by foot from Moni on maps? And if we reach the security gate before 4am can we avoid paying up?

    1. Loved your write up of your travels through Flores… It has given me inspiration to return and hike a few more peaks 🙂

  5. As more and more tourists make it to Flores these days (May 2014), Kelimutu was very crowded in the morning I visited. Some turlocs (Indonesian travellers) were extremely loud and took hundreds of selfies. Also, the guard at the top was extremely rude and unprofessional.
    The current fees are: 30000 for a foreigner, 3000 for a scooter, 50000 for a photo camera (no charge for your mobile, more for a video camera). Charging a camera fee at a tourist attraction is as ridiculous as it is and it is possible to avoid it.

    Most certainly other volcanoes are more spectacular (Egon, Iya, Ili Api), but still Kelimutu is nice with the three lakes and it is interesting that they change colour (although it doesn’t happen overnight of course)…

  6. Richard Langford

    Just went up today. I also agree that Kelimutu is nowhere near as good as the volcanoes on Java, Bali or Lombok. Against the recommendation here, I went off the track up the side of the southern lake. From there I had an alternative view of the 2 turquoise lakes. Certainly dangerous if you go too close to the edge (but less risky I think than climbing way up the mast on Kelilepumbusu)!

  7. chris whiting

    just got back from a interesting trip with dan. after visiting kelimutu for the second time it is fair to say i was underwhelmed.i feel sorry for people who make the trip to ende solely on seeing kelimutu as their are far more impressive places to see. as dan metions above, iya and egon are more impressive.

  8. I was a little disappointed with Kelimutu actually. It probably would have been great decades ago when it was wilder. If you build a road and cement path to the top of a natural beauty it kind of takes away from the experience. It’s definitely worth a visit but I agree with Andy that it’s over-rated, especially if you compare it to Iya or even Egon.

  9. chris whiting

    hi sonja

    dans the man to figure out flights.i got lucky when i went to flores.i just showed up at bali domestic airport and they happened to have a flight going to labuanbajo(flores) within the hour.
    my trip, i started from labuanbajo in the west and finished in lembata in the east and it took around ten days.but i did spend about three days around komodo island area.( which was great ). but if you dont fancy overgrown lizards then i think it is possible to do most of flores in five days. i would suggest two options. one would be is to go from labuan and finish in maumere or ende depending on flights.you would have enough time to do kelimutu and easliy another ribu. either inierie or ebulobo are both baggable. bajawa is a nice town to hang out.
    the other option would be is to start in the east like lembata( you can fly there via kupang timor) and work your way back to ende.this part of nusa is my favourite with stunning volcanos.check out ill boleng and lewotolo.you could bag them as well.
    good luck

  10. Hi Chris, hi to all the others,

    I want to go to Kelimutu in August. But I still don´t know what is the best way to get to Flores. I just heard from Trans Nusa and that they have flights to Ende. But how can I book? Can you recommend a travel agency? And is it easier to start in Ende or maybe better Maumere? I will have about 5 days for this trip. Would this even be enough for a flores round trip?

    Thanks for your advice,

    Sonja

  11. Hi Sonja
    I’ll be in Flores the first week of August actually. Arranging tickets in advance is a real pain! However, Batavia fly from Denpasar to Maumere and back (usually via Timor I think) and that’s the way we’re coming back. You can book those in advance. For Transnusa, you can only book one month in advance, and even then not online. Merpati is the other option but they don’t exactly have the finest safety record and I’ve heard plenty of reports of flights cancelled if there aren’t enough passengers. So I’d say stick to Transnusa and Batavia.

  12. this is a very easy 10 minute hike to the top assuming you get a local to give you a ride to the park entrance.great views of the three lakes but the colours are not what they used to be.but still worth it.if you have come this far into flores i urge you to make the effort to go on the east coast an take a ferry to the island of lembata. crystal clear water and volcanos galore around there.stay at ille ille.theres a dutch guy called jim.he has a more dvds than the whole of thailand put together and has great advice about what to do.

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