Clear answers on arrival, costs, documents and compliance
Everything visitors most often ask about Bali visas in 2026 — gathered in one place and answered plainly.
We have collected the questions we hear most, grouped by topic, so you can find a clear answer fast. If yours is not covered below, a specialist is always a message away.
Browse by topic. Figures reflect 2026, and all-in prices are agency service estimates rather than official government fees.
The Visa on Arrival and the online e-VOA both cost IDR 500,000 for a 30-day stay that can be extended once for a further 30 days.
Yes. Every foreign tourist pays a one-time tourism levy of IDR 150,000 through the official Love Bali system, on top of the visa fee.
Usually within minutes to a few hours after payment, though it can take up to three business days during peak periods, so apply a few days before you travel.
Both. You can pay by card at the airport counter on arrival, or apply and pay online beforehand as an e-VOA at the official immigration portal — the online route avoids the queue.
Yes — once, for an additional 30 days, at the Denpasar immigration office. We can manage the whole extension on your behalf.
The Creator / Remote Worker visa suits stays of up to 180 days, while the Digital Nomad KITAS gives a renewable one-year permit for working remotely for overseas clients.
A tourist visa or VOA is for short visits and not for work. A KITAS is a limited-stay permit for longer, lawful stays such as remote work, investment or employment, typically running a year or more.
Both are long-stay routes of five to ten years — the Second Home Visa for those settling in Indonesia, and the Golden Visa for qualifying investors and high-value applicants.
No. Our from-prices are all-in agency service estimates that include our concierge handling. We confirm an exact written quote before any work begins.
It bundles our advice, document preparation, filing and follow-up into one figure, so you are not surprised by piecemeal charges along the way.
Before we submit your application, unused service amounts can typically be refunded. Once a case has been filed with immigration, government and processing costs are non-refundable. We set out the exact terms in your written quote.
Your passport should be valid for at least six months beyond your date of arrival in Indonesia.
Yes. A recent passport-style photograph is required for most applications, alongside the bio-data page of your passport.
For long-stay visas, proof of funds or regular income is often required. The exact threshold depends on the visa, and we tell you precisely what is needed for yours.
Some visas need a sponsor or invitation letter. Where that applies, we advise on and help arrange the correct documentation as part of our service.
Overstaying typically incurs a fine of around IDR 1,000,000 per day, and longer overstays can lead to more serious consequences at departure.
Contact us straight away. We can advise on settling the fine and arranging a compliant departure or, where possible, regularising your stay.
Hold the correct visa for your purpose, respect its conditions, and extend or convert in good time. We track your dates and handle extensions before they fall due.