For most founders, the Bali visa path in 2026 looks like this: arrive on the e-VOA (30 days, extendable to 60), then, if you are staying, upgrade to a 60-day tourist visa with extensions, a multiple-entry visit visa, or the one-year remote worker KITAS. Here is how the options compare, what they cost, and the mistakes that get people fined.
The options at a glance
| Visa | Stay length | Rough cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| e-VOA (visa on arrival) | 30 days, one 30-day extension | ~IDR 500k (~$32) plus extension fee | First trips, scouting visits |
| Tourist visit visa (single entry) | 60 days, extendable in-country | Roughly $100–$300 with agent fees, depending on extensions | Stays of 2–6 months |
| Multiple-entry visit visa | Long validity, limited days per entry | Varies; arrange through an agent | Founders who fly in and out for business |
| Remote worker KITAS (E33G) | 1 year | Higher; income proof required (around US$60k/year from abroad has been the benchmark) | Committed long stays with clean legal status |
| Investor KITAS | 1–2 years | Requires setting up or investing in an Indonesian company (PT PMA) | Founders building businesses in Indonesia |
The typical founder path
- Trip one: e-VOA. Apply online before you fly or pay on arrival. Thirty days to decide whether Bali works for you, extendable once without leaving.
- Deciding to stay: before your e-VOA runs out, talk to an agent about a 60-day visit visa with extensions. Many founders string this to around six months of continuous stay.
- Going long-term: the remote worker KITAS gives a full legal year and removes the extension treadmill, in exchange for paperwork and income proof. Founders operating in Indonesia itself look at the investor KITAS instead.
Mistakes that actually cost people
- Overstaying. Fines are charged per day of overstay and serious cases can lead to deportation and bans. Set a calendar reminder two weeks before every expiry.
- Cheap agents. Visa agents vary enormously. Ask other founders in Bali for a referral rather than picking the cheapest search result; a botched application costs far more than the difference in fees.
- Ignoring the 183-day rule. Long stays can make you an Indonesian tax resident. If you are approaching six months in a rolling year, get tax advice.
- Working on the wrong visa. Employment in Indonesia on a tourist visa is illegal. Remote work for your own foreign company is the common gray zone; the KITAS routes are how people make long stays clean.
FAQ
What visa do most founders use in 2026?
The e-VOA to start (30 days, one extension, ~$32), then a 60-day tourist visa with extensions, a multiple-entry visa, or the remote worker KITAS for a full year.
Can I work remotely on a tourist visa?
Employment in Indonesia is not permitted on visit visas. Remote work for a foreign company is a widely inhabited gray zone; the compliant long-stay route is the E33G remote worker KITAS. Confirm current rules with a licensed agent.
When does tax residency kick in?
Generally at 183 days in Indonesia within 12 months. Get professional advice before crossing that threshold.