🇮🇩 Indonesia — Visas & Immigration

Indonesia visas 2026 —
the honest version.

From the 30-day VOA to the 10-year Second Home Visa. The Bali tourism levy everyone forgets to pay. The E33G digital nomad visa that launched in 2024 and started getting aggressively enforced in 2026. And the drug laws that are not theoretical. All of it, verified for June 2026.

📅 Updated June 2026
🗂️ 7 topics covered
💱 Rate: ~17,850 IDR/USD

Visa on Arrival — 97 countries, IDR 500,000

Most Western travelers enter Indonesia on a Visa on Arrival — a 30-day stamp obtained at the airport or, ideally, applied for online in advance as an e-VoA. The e-VoA is strongly recommended: same fee, same 30 days, skip the airport queue entirely.

✅ Recommended — Apply Before You Fly

e-VoA — Electronic Visa on Arrival

The e-VoA is the same 30-day Visa on Arrival, applied for online before travel. Same fee, same rights — no queue at the airport, and you can use the faster e-gate lanes at immigration.

  • Apply at: evisa.imigrasi.go.id
  • Apply at least 48 hours before arrival (72+ hours recommended)
  • Fee: IDR 500,000 (~USD 28) paid by international card
  • Valid: you must enter Indonesia within 90 days of issue
  • Stay: 30 days from entry date, extendable once for 30 more
  • Use the e-gate lane on arrival — considerably faster
30 daysSkip the queue~USD 28
Also Available — Longer Queue

VoA — On Arrival at the Airport

Available at all major international airports and select land and sea borders. Same fee, same 30 days — but you join the physical queue to pay and get your stamp. At Bali's Ngurah Rai, this queue runs 45–90 minutes when multiple wide-body flights arrive simultaneously.

  • Available at: Denpasar (DPS), Jakarta (CGK/HLP), Surabaya, Yogyakarta, Lombok, and more
  • IDR 500,000 cash or card accepted at most counters
  • Requires: passport (6+ months valid), onward ticket, accommodation address
  • You cannot use e-gates with a physical VoA stamp — standard lane only
30 daysPossible long queue~USD 28

Entry rules by passport type

CategoryCountriesMethodDurationExtension?
Visa-Free Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Timor-Leste, Suriname, Colombia, Hong Kong SAR No visa needed Up to 30 days Not extendable
VoA / e-VoA US, UK, EU (all members), Australia, Canada, NZ, Japan, South Korea, India, China, and 80+ others — 97 countries total VoA or e-VoA 30 days from entry One extension for 30 more days (60 total)
Embassy visa required Nationalities not on VoA list (incl. Afghanistan, Israel, North Korea, and others — full list at imigrasi.go.id) Embassy visa Varies by type Depends on visa issued
Filter Free

The e-VoA is one of the best things Indonesia's immigration system has done in recent years. Before it existed, the Bali airport VoA queue — especially when multiple long-haul flights landed at once — was genuinely unpleasant: 45–90 minutes standing in a warm hall after an overnight flight. The e-VoA lane bypasses that entirely. Apply at evisa.imigrasi.go.id, minimum 48 hours before you land, and you're done in under a minute at the airport. The only scenario where the physical VoA makes sense is a genuinely last-minute trip — and even then, the physical and electronic VOA cost the same. Plan ahead and apply online.

The Bali Tourism Levy — what it is and how to pay it

Since February 14, 2024, all foreign nationals entering Bali pay a provincial tourism levy of IDR 150,000 (~USD 8.40). This is separate from your visa — it's a Bali provincial government charge, not Indonesian immigration. It applies on every entry into Bali regardless of what visa you hold.

✅ Recommended — Pay Online Before You Travel

Pay at lovebali.baliprov.go.id

The Bali government's Love Bali platform lets you pay the levy online before departure. You receive a QR code to scan at the dedicated levy counter at DPS — usually fast, completely separate from immigration.

  • Website: lovebali.baliprov.go.id
  • Also via the Love Bali app (iOS and Android)
  • Pay by international card — no IDR needed
  • QR code delivered instantly — screenshot it and save offline
  • Can be paid up to 90 days before arrival
Fast at the airportQR code on phone
Also Available — Slower

Pay on arrival at DPS or port

Cash and card counters are available at Ngurah Rai airport before immigration. During busy arrivals this adds 10–20 minutes before you even reach the immigration queue.

  • IDR 150,000 cash or card accepted
  • Located before the main immigration counters at DPS
  • Also available at Gilimanuk (Java–Bali ferry) and Padangbai (Lombok–Bali)
  • Keep your payment receipt — may be requested on entry
Adds airport waitIDR 150,000 cash ready

Who is exempt from the Bali levy?

Indonesian citizens

The levy applies to foreign nationals only. Indonesian citizens — including those with dual nationality entering on an Indonesian passport — are not charged the levy.

KITAS / KITAP holders

Holders of Indonesian long-stay residence permits (KITAS and KITAP) are exempt. The levy targets visitors, not legal residents. Applies to all KITAS types including Retirement and Investor KITAS.

E33G & Second Home Visa

Holders of the E33G Remote Worker Visa and the Second Home Visa are exempt from paying the levy each time they re-enter Bali — they hold KITAS status.

Filter Free

IDR 150,000 is about USD 8.40 — this is not a financial burden. What it is, though, is one more thing to have sorted before you land. The smart move is to arrive at Bali with three things pre-sorted: the Love Bali levy QR code, your e-VoA approval, and your All Indonesia arrival card. All three available on your phone. With those done you clear the entire Ngurah Rai arrival process in under 20 minutes. Miss any one of them and you're joining queues in a hot hall after a long flight. Fifteen minutes of prep before you leave home saves an hour on arrival.

Staying longer than 30 days — your options

The VoA gives you 30 days, extendable once to 60. After that, the B211A social/cultural visa is the most commonly used route for 60–180 days without the full KITAS commitment.

VoA Extended
Easiest — one extension
60 Days
IDR 500K VoA + IDR 500K extension (~USD 56 total)
30-day VoA + one 30-day extension
Extension at nearest immigration office (in person)
No further extensions after 60 days
No work rights
E33G Remote Worker
Best for nomads — legal work
12 Months
~USD 530–700 self-process · USD 1,100–1,600 with agent
12-month KITAS status
Legal remote work for overseas employer
USD 60,000/year minimum income
Annual exit-and-reapply for renewal

B211A / C1 Visit Visa — the 180-day route

The B211A (also called the C1 Visit Visa) is the go-to for those wanting 2–6 months in Indonesia without the full KITAS process. Applied at an Indonesian Embassy before arrival, it starts with 60 days and extends twice in-country for 60 days each — 180 days total.

1

Apply at an Indonesian Embassy or Consulate — before travel

The B211A must be applied for before you arrive — it cannot be obtained on arrival. Apply at the nearest Indonesian Embassy with your passport, passport photo, bank statement (typically showing ~USD 2,000+), proof of accommodation, travel itinerary, and a letter of sponsorship from an Indonesian individual or registered entity. Processing: typically 5–10 working days. The e-visa portal (evisa.imigrasi.go.id) may process this category — check availability before attending in person.

~USD 50–150 consular fee depending on nationality
2

Enter Indonesia — 60-day stay begins

Present your B211A/C1 visa on arrival. Your 60-day stay begins from the entry date. Set a reminder 14 days before expiry — extension processing takes time and now requires an in-person visit.

3

First extension — adds 60 days (total: 120 days)

Apply at any Indonesian Immigration office before your permit expires. Circular Letter IMI-417 (June 2025) now requires all foreigners to attend in person for extensions — biometric registration is part of the process. Bring passport, current visa/permit, passport photo, and the extension fee. Typically 3–7 working days processing. Denpasar (Bali) immigration can have significant queues during peak season — go early in the day.

IDR 500,000–1,000,000 (~USD 28–56) per extension
4

Second extension — adds 60 more days (total: 180 days maximum)

Same in-person process as the first extension. After 180 days total, this visa is exhausted. To stay longer you must exit Indonesia and re-enter with a new visa, or have started a KITAS application through proper channels before this point.

Maximum 180 days total on B211A/C1

Digital nomads in Indonesia — the legal reality in 2026

Bali is one of the world's benchmark digital nomad destinations. Indonesia also now has a formal remote worker visa. Here's what's available, what it actually costs, and the honest picture on what's changed in 2026.

✅ The Legal Route — Launched April 2024

E33G — Remote Worker Visa (KITAS)

Indonesia's dedicated remote worker permit. 12-month KITAS status with the right to work remotely for a foreign employer or clients registered outside Indonesia.

  • Duration: 12 months (KITAS) from entry date
  • Minimum income: ~USD 60,000/year from a foreign employer or international clients
  • Employment proof: Employment contract or documented freelance agreements with international entities
  • Health insurance: International coverage mandatory — travel insurance not accepted
  • Passport validity: 18 months recommended
  • Enter within: 90 days of visa issuance
  • Multi-entry: Yes — can leave and re-enter during validity
  • Renewal: Annual — requires exit and reapplication (non-extendable in-country)
  • Work restriction: Foreign employer/clients only — no Indonesian companies, no local clients
12 monthsLegal remote workUSD 60K income
E33G Costs — 2026

What the E33G Actually Costs

Government fees are fixed; agent fees vary widely. Self-processing is possible but requires navigating the immigration portal carefully.

  • PNBP (government visa fee): IDR 7,000,000 (~USD 392)
  • KITAS card + MERP (on arrival): ~IDR 1,600,000 (~USD 90)
  • EPO permit: ~IDR 100,000 (~USD 6)
  • Self-process total: ~USD 530–700
  • With licensed agent: USD 1,100–1,600 total
  • Processing time: 7–14 working days
  • Annual renewal: Similar cost + exit flight/accommodation
  • International health insurance: USD 80–400/month (required separately)
IDR 7M gov fee~USD 530–700 self~USD 1,100–1,600 agent
Filter Free

The honest picture on freelancers: the E33G requirement is "a contract with a company outside Indonesia." Immigration processes this with a corporate mindset — they want a formal employment contract with a single employer. Freelancers with multiple income streams have gotten through by consolidating documentation and presenting their income clearly, but it takes preparation and often an agent who knows how to frame it. The USD 60K threshold is also genuinely non-trivial. If you don't meet it, the B211A social visa is still available — but that visa authorizes exactly zero work of any kind. The era of "work on a tourist visa, nothing will happen" has ended in Bali.

KITAS, KITAP, and the long-stay permit landscape

The KITAS (Kartu Izin Tinggal Terbatas — Limited Stay Permit) is Indonesia's primary long-term residency permit. Multiple pathways exist — retirement, investment, Second Home, and remote work. Here's how each compares.

KITAS TypeWho It's ForDurationKey Financial Req.Work Rights?
Retirement KITAS Age 55+ retirees 1 year, renewable (KITAP after 4 yrs) USD 50,000 deposit in state bank None
Second Home Visa (KITAS) HNWIs, younger retirees, investors 5 or 10 years IDR 2B (~USD 112K) state bank deposit None (remote OK)
E33G Remote Worker (KITAS) Remote workers for foreign employers 1 year (annual reapply) USD 60K+/year income from abroad Foreign only
Investor KITAS (PT PMA) Foreign business owners 1–2 years, renewable PT PMA setup (IDR 2.5B+ paid-up capital) Own business
KITAP (Permanent Stay) After 3–4 years continuous KITAS 5 years, renewable indefinitely Established by prior KITAS history Same as prior KITAS type

Second Home Visa — the headline long-stay option

Introduced in 2022 under Government Regulation No. 48/2021, the Second Home Visa is Indonesia's most significant immigration reform in decades. It offers genuine multi-year residency without needing a local employer or business entity.

💰 Financial Requirement

The headline requirement is IDR 2,000,000,000 (~USD 112,000–130,000 at current rates) held in a designated Indonesian state bank — BNI, BRI, Mandiri, or BTN. Alternatively: proof of owning property in Indonesia valued at minimum IDR 5 billion (~USD 280,000+).

The deposit remains in your own account — it earns interest at the bank's savings rate and is fully refundable when you leave. It is a financial commitment, not a fee. You prove it within 90 days of arriving in Indonesia, not before you apply.

  • 5-year KITAS: Lower deposit threshold may apply (verify with immigration)
  • 10-year KITAS: IDR 2B deposit is the confirmed requirement
  • Property alternative: IDR 5B+ Indonesian property
  • Base government fee: IDR 13,000,000+ (base; add agent fees)

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Family and Benefits

The Second Home Visa is one of the most family-inclusive visa structures in Southeast Asia. The primary holder's IDR 2B deposit covers the entire family application — no separate financial requirement per dependent.

  • Dependents eligible: Spouse, children, and parents of the primary holder
  • Dependent KITAS validity: Same duration as primary holder
  • KITAP pathway: After 3 years continuous KITAS, eligible to convert to KITAP (permanent residency)
  • Hak Pakai property: Second Home KITAS holders can hold Hak Pakai (Right of Use) property title in their own name — up to 80 years total
  • Work restriction: Cannot work for Indonesian entities — but remote work for overseas employer is permitted

Retirement KITAS — the age-55+ route

📋 Requirements

  • Age 55 or older
  • Passive income proof — pension, Social Security, investment income. Mixed freelance/business income often rejected
  • Minimum income: ~USD 1,500/month (confirm current threshold — reviewed periodically)
  • USD 50,000 deposit in an Indonesian state bank
  • Health insurance covering Indonesia required
  • Must hire at least one local domestic employee (driver, housekeeper, etc.)
  • Clean immigration history in Indonesia

⚠️ What You Cannot Do on Retirement KITAS

The Retirement KITAS is strictly for retirement. No employment, no business operations, no managing rental properties commercially.

A common pitfall: retirees who own a Bali villa and manage it as a short-term rental. Even passive-seeming villa management can be classified as commercial activity requiring a different permit structure. If you own property in Bali and want to rent it out, you need a proper PT PMA corporate structure — speak to an Indonesian corporate lawyer before setting this up.

Overstay, drugs, and what gets people deported

Indonesia is a beautiful, welcoming country. It also has some of the strictest drug laws in the world and enforces overstay rules consistently. This covers both — not to alarm, but because the consequences are serious enough that "I didn't know" is not a useful defense after the fact.

Overstay fines and the 60-day threshold

Overstay DurationFine (per day)ConsequenceNotes
1 day IDR 1,000,000 (~USD 56) Fine at departure Paid at the airport or during any immigration interaction. One day counts.
2–60 days IDR 1,000,000/day (~USD 56/day) — accumulates up to 60 days Fine + record Maximum fine: IDR 60,000,000 (~USD 3,360). Must be paid before departure.
Over 60 days Fines + formal deportation proceedings Detention + deportation Detained at immigration detention centre. Deported at own expense. Re-entry ban enforced. Potential lifetime ban for severe cases.

✅ If you're approaching your visa expiry

  • Start the extension process at least 14 days before expiry — immigration offices have queues and processing delays
  • Extensions now require in-person attendance (Circular IMI-417, June 2025) — plan ahead for this
  • On B211A approaching 180 days: book your exit flight before you hit the limit
  • A bridging visa (ITAS bridging) is available if you are switching visa types or awaiting KITAS approval — this keeps your status legal during processing
  • Never assume you can sort it at the airport departure desk — they will process formal penalties

⚠️ If you've already overstayed

  • Go to the nearest Immigration Department office proactively — before attempting to travel
  • Contact an Indonesian immigration lawyer — essential for overstays approaching 60 days
  • Do not attempt to exit through a minor or less-monitored border hoping to avoid detection — the system is electronic and flagged departures are caught
  • Overstay history can prevent future KITAS, E33G, and Second Home Visa applications

Indonesia's drug laws — among the strictest in the world

🚫 What is illegal — no exceptions for tourists

  • Possession of any quantity of marijuana, cocaine, heroin, MDMA, or methamphetamine
  • Trafficking any quantity of narcotics — death penalty is the stated maximum
  • Bringing narcotics into Indonesia — including in checked baggage
  • "Personal use" amounts are not a mitigating factor in the way they may be in Western jurisdictions
  • Prescription medications that are controlled substances — see the Documents & Visas hub for guidance on traveling with medication to Indonesia

⚠️ The Bali reality

Drugs are visibly offered in Bali's tourist areas — around clubs in Seminyak and Canggu particularly. Indonesian police conduct regular operations and tourists are not exempt. Undercover officers operate in some tourist zones. Someone offering to sell you drugs in Bali may be working with police. The risk profile is genuinely different from what many Western travelers are accustomed to at home.

  • Police operations in tourist areas are regular, not occasional
  • Entrapment scenarios are documented and well-known
  • Embassy assistance is limited once charges are filed under Indonesian law
  • Cases take years to resolve — the Indonesian justice system moves slowly
Filter Free

Every few years, a Western national makes international news after being arrested in Bali on drug charges. The legal consequences are severe, the process is slow, and being from a Western country provides essentially zero meaningful protection once charges are filed under Indonesian law. The embassy can provide consular access and a lawyer list. That's the limit of what they can do. Bali's surf, food, culture, and community are extraordinary reasons to visit and stay. This is the equally extraordinary reason to treat Indonesian drug law with complete seriousness. There is no negotiation on this point.

Embassies in Indonesia — and Indonesian missions abroad

Foreign embassies in Jakarta for citizen emergencies, consulates in Bali for the large Western expat community, and Indonesian Embassy locations for visa applications before travel.

Foreign embassies and consulates in Indonesia

🇺🇸

US Embassy Jakarta

Jakarta · US Consular Agency in Bali

Jalan Medan Merdeka Selatan 3–5, Jakarta 10110. American Citizen Services, emergency passports, notarial services. US Consular Agency Bali at Jalan Hayam Wuruk 188, Denpasar handles routine citizen services for Bali-based Americans.

id.usembassy.gov →
🇬🇧

British Embassy Jakarta

Jakarta · Honorary Consulate in Bali

Jalan Patra Kuningan Raya Blok L5–6, Jakarta 12950. British citizen services and emergency travel documents. British Honorary Consulate in Bali for non-emergency matters.

gov.uk/world/indonesia →
🇦🇺

Australian Embassy Jakarta

Jakarta · Consulate General in Bali

Jalan H.R. Rasuna Said Kav. C15–16, Jakarta 12940. Australian Consulate General in Bali at Jalan Tantular 32, Renon, Denpasar — handles much of Bali-based citizen assistance.

indonesia.embassy.gov.au →
🇨🇦

Canadian Embassy Jakarta

Jakarta · No permanent Bali office

World Trade Centre, 6th Floor, Jalan Jend. Sudirman Kav. 29–31, Jakarta 12920. Citizen services and emergency consular assistance for Canadians. Jakarta handles all Bali-based cases — no permanent Bali presence.

international.gc.ca →
🇩🇪

German Embassy Jakarta

Jakarta · Honorary Consulate in Bali

Jalan M.H. Thamrin No. 1, Jakarta 10310. Passport services, notarial services, and consular assistance. German Honorary Consulate in Bali for non-emergency matters.

jakarta.diplo.de →
ℹ️

Find your country's embassy

Not listed above?

Most Western countries maintain a full embassy in Jakarta. Many also have a consular presence in Bali given the large expat community. Full list at Indonesia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and at imigrasi.go.id.

kemlu.go.id →

Indonesian missions abroad — for visa applications before travel

🇺🇸 Indonesian Embassy — Washington D.C.

2020 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington DC 20036. Visa services for US applicants including B211A/C1 and KITAS-related applications. Indonesian Consulates General also in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Houston, and Chicago.

🌐 Official E-Visa Portal

The e-VoA and All Indonesia arrival card: evisa.imigrasi.go.id and allindonesia.imigrasi.go.id respectively. Some longer-stay visa categories can also be applied for online. For KITAS and complex visa applications, an in-person Embassy appointment or licensed sponsor process is still generally required.

🇬🇧 Indonesian Embassy — London

38 Grosvenor Square, London W1K 2HW. Full visa services for UK applicants including B211A and Retirement KITAS applications.

🇦🇺 Indonesian Embassy — Canberra

8 Darwin Avenue, Yarralumla ACT 2600. Full visa services. Indonesian Consulates General also in Sydney, Melbourne, and Perth for regional applications.

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