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VISA POLICY TO INDONESIA
Tourist visas are only intended for tourists
who are visiting Indonesia. Citizens of the following countries are expected
from applying visa in their home countries. They can directly travel to one of
the check point to immigration obtain VOA (Visa-on-Arrival). The countries
expected are:
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia,
Canada, Cyprus, Denmark, Egypt, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece,
Hungary, Iceland, India, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Laos,
Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Maldives, Malta, Mexico, Monaco, the Netherlands, New
Zealand, Norway, Oman, People's Republic of China, Poland, Portugal, Qatar,
Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, Sweden,
Suriname, Taiwan, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, and the United States.
The cost of the 30-day (only) tourist visa is
US$ 25/person for a 30-day visa and US$ 10/person for a 7-days visa.
Visitors from countries with visa-on-arrival
facility will have to go to a special counter to have their passports stamped
with the on-arrival visa before going to the immigration clearance desk. The VOA
visa is NOT EXTENDABLE OR RENEWABLE. A visa issued on arrival can be extended
only in extraordinary circumstances such as natural disasters, accident, or
illness. If you want to stay in Indonesia longer than the 30 days you must exit
and re-enter the country on a new tourist visa.
Visa purchasing takes 15-30 minutes per
applicant, depending on the number of persons applying. Payment counters, a bank
counter, and a money changer have been set up to process payments. Passport must
be valid for at least six months from the date of arrival. Payment must be made
on arrival. An onward or return trip ticket must be shown on arrival.
The visa on arrival facility is only available
at the following international gateways:
Airports:
Medan, Pekanbaru, Padang, Jakarta, Surabaya,
Bali, Manado, Halim Perdana Kusuma in Jakarta, Adisucipto in Yogyakarta,
Adisumarmo in Solo, Selaparang in Mataram, Lombok, Sepinggan in Balikpapan,
Kalimantan, Hasanudddin in Makasar, Sulawesi, and Eltari in Kupang, Timor.
Seaports:
Batam, Tanjung Uban (Bintan), Belawan (Medan),
Sibolga (Sumatra), Dumai, Teluk Bayar (Padang, Sumatra), Padang Bai (Bali), and
Jayapura (Papua), Teluk Bayar in (Padang, Sumatra), Bitung, Tanjung Balaikarimun,
Tanjung Mas (Semarang),Tenau (Kupang), Pare Pare (Sulawesi), Bintang Pura (Tanjung
Pinang), and Soekarno-Hatta (Makassar, Sualwesi)
Visa-free facility is granted to the
citizens of 11 countries whose governments also extend their visa free facility
to Indonesian nationals would continue to enjoy short visa-free stays.
Included in the 11 countries and
administrative districts that are granted the 30-day visa-free facility are:
Brunei Darussalam, Chile, Hongkong Special
Administrative Region, Macau Special Administrative Region, Malaysia, Morocco,
Peru, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Visitors with the visa-free facility will be
able to proceed directly to the immigration clearance counter after deplaning.
Passport must be valid for a minimum of six months from the date of arrival.
Onward or return tickets must be shown on arrival.
Citizens of other countries not on the visa
on arrival or visa free lists will be required to apply for a visa overseas (in
their home country) before entering Indonesia.
Citizens of any country wishing to stay more
than 30 days must also apply for an appropriate visa (cultural visit or
business) at their nearest Indonesian Embassy or Consulate before traveling to
Indonesia.
Tour Agents are able to arrange express
handling for groups at no additional charge by presenting the completed
immigration cards, passports and applicable visa fee. Passengers who overstay
their visa period for a short period of time can be processed immediately at the
airport by paying US$ 20 for every day they overstayed their 30-day visa.
Airlines that experience technical difficulties or delayed flights can apply for
their passengers to be exempted from paying any overstay penalties.
The current tourist visa policy cuts the
length of stay for tourist visas from the previous 60 days to 30 days. It is NO
LONGER possible to stay in Indonesia more than 30 days on a tourist visa.
Caution (30-day counting)
The way they immigration officials count the
30-day period is: you arrive on the 1st day with, for instance, a 30-day visa,
and you must leave on the 30th day (not the 31st or the first of the next month,
as you might think). This is actually their policy for how to count the days.
and, after getting burned once and learning my lesson, I see their point and
follow their definition of 30 days.
If you want to stay in Indonesia LONGER than
30 days, you must leave the country and re-enter on a new tourist visa. People
commonly fly to Singapore or Timor for this. There is no stipulation on the time
you must stay outside Indonesia, in fact, you can return the same day if you
want and be issued a new visa upon your arrival in Indonesia.
Overstaying your Visa
Overstaying a tourist visa (or any visa) is a
serious offense in Indonesia. You will be blacklisted (can not enter Indonesia
again for a year or more) and fined $20-30/day for every day you overstayed your
visa and then deported once you have paid the fine. The maximum fine for
overstaying a visa (more than 60 days) is Rp 25 million and 5 years in jail. You
will be kept at the immigration quarantine until you have paid the fee and/or
the decision has been made to deport you. Please take this seriously as this is
not one of those problems that you can easily bribe your way out of.
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