
Visa, KITAS & Long-Stay Surf Logistics in Bali
From a 30-day VOA to a 1-year KITAS — the realistic visa pathway for surfers who keep extending their stay.
Most surfers arrive on the 30-day Visa-on-Arrival, fall in love, and then panic when day 27 comes. Here's the path most long-stayers actually take.
30-day Visa-on-Arrival (VOA)
USD 35 cash at DPS arrivals. Extendable once to 60 days at any immigration office for ~IDR 750k. After that, you must leave the country.
B211A Social Visa (60–180 days)
Apply through a Bali-based agent (~IDR 3-4M for the full 6 months). Multi-entry option available. Best for surf seasons (May–Oct).
KITAS — for actual residents
If you're working remotely, married to an Indonesian, or buying property, the KITAS gives you 1-year residency. Costs IDR 12-20M with an agent. Required for opening Indonesian bank accounts and owning a scooter.
Pro tip
Don't overstay. Indonesian immigration fines are IDR 1M PER DAY plus a deportation/blacklist if you go too far. There are no exceptions.
Practical timing for surf seasons
- April–November: SW swell prime, B211A 6-month is ideal
- December–March: smaller crowds, east-coast (Keramas/Sanur) shines, 60-day VOA usually sufficient
Frequently Asked Questions
→How long can I stay on a Visa-on-Arrival?
30 days, extendable once to 60 days at any immigration office for ~IDR 750k. After 60 days you must leave Indonesia. Don't try to rebook a return VOA on day 60 — you'll be flagged at immigration.
→Is the B211A Social Visa worth it for a 3-month surf trip?
Yes. The B211A 6-month visa costs IDR 3-4M through a Bali agent and lets you stay continuously for prime SW-swell season (May-Oct). It's significantly cheaper than two consecutive 60-day VOAs plus the visa run flight.
→What happens if I overstay?
IDR 1,000,000 (about $65 USD) per day in fines, paid in cash at immigration on departure. Beyond ~60 days overstayed it escalates to deportation and a multi-year blacklist. There are zero exceptions; even one day costs the full daily fine.
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