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Bali Tour Visa: Your Complete Guide to Entry Requirements in 2026

You have been dreaming about Bali for months — the rice terraces, the temple ceremonies, the warm tropical air that greets you the moment you step off the plane. But before any of that can happen, you need to sort out your bali tour visa. The good news: Indonesia’s visa system for tourists is straightforward once you understand the options. The not-so-good news: the rules shifted in 2025 and 2026, and outdated advice is everywhere online.

This guide covers everything you need to know about getting your bali tour visa sorted — from the eVOA application to extension rules, costs, common mistakes, and the newer long-stay options for those who want more than 30 days on the island. Consider this your single reference before you fly.

What Is the Bali Tour Visa and Do You Need One?

bali tour visa immigration passport control

Indonesia requires most foreign nationals to hold a valid visa before entering the country — and that includes Bali. The bali tour visa is officially called the Visa on Arrival (VOA) or Electronic Visa on Arrival (eVOA), and it grants you an initial stay of 30 days for tourism purposes.

Citizens of approximately 84 countries qualify for the Visa on Arrival. The list includes travelers from the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, most EU nations, Japan, South Korea, India, and many countries across the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America. If your passport is from one of these countries, you can either apply online for the eVOA before you fly or purchase the visa at the airport counter when you land at Ngurah Rai International Airport in Denpasar.

Who Does Not Need a Visa?

Citizens of ASEAN member states — including Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam — enjoy visa-free entry to Indonesia for stays of up to 30 days. A handful of other nations also qualify for visa-free short stays, though the list changes periodically. If you hold a passport from an ASEAN country and you are visiting purely for tourism, you can skip the visa process entirely.

Who Needs a Full Visa Before Arrival?

Travelers from countries not on the VOA-eligible list must apply for an Indonesian visa through their nearest Indonesian embassy or consulate before departure. This process takes longer and requires additional documentation, so plan well ahead if this applies to you.

Bali Tour Visa Options — VOA vs eVOA and Which One to Choose

Traveler using smartphone for online visa application at airport

You have two ways to get your bali tour visa: the traditional Visa on Arrival at the airport counter, or the Electronic Visa on Arrival (eVOA) applied for online before you travel. Both grant the same 30-day tourist stay. The difference is how you get it — and how much time you spend in line after a long flight.

Visa on Arrival (VOA) at the Airport

This is the old-school method. After landing at Ngurah Rai airport, you join the queue at the VOA counter in the arrivals hall, pay IDR 500,000 (approximately USD 35) by credit card or cash (accepted currencies include USD, EUR, AUD, and GBP), and receive a visa sticker in your passport. The process itself takes a few minutes, but the queue during peak arrival times can stretch to 45 minutes or more — sometimes longer during high season between June and September.

Electronic Visa on Arrival (eVOA)

The eVOA is the same visa, applied for online at least 48 hours before your departure through the official Indonesian immigration portal at molina.imigrasi.go.id. You pay the same IDR 500,000 fee by credit card during the application, receive approval within 1 to 3 business days, and walk straight through the autogates at the airport when you arrive. No counter, no queue, no fumbling for cash after 16 hours of travel.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureVOA (Airport Counter)eVOA (Online)
ApplicationAt the airport on arrivalOnline before departure
CostIDR 500,000 (~USD 35)IDR 500,000 (~USD 35)
PaymentCash or card at counterCredit card online
Processing timeImmediate at counter1–3 business days
Airport experienceQueue at VOA counterUse autogates, skip queues
Entry windowSame day90 days from approval
Stay duration30 days30 days

Our recommendation: apply for the eVOA. The cost is identical, and walking through the autogates after a long flight is worth the five minutes of online paperwork. The 90-day entry window also gives you flexibility if your travel dates shift.

How Much Does the Bali Tour Visa Cost in 2026?

Indonesian rupiah currency and passport for bali tour visa costs

Understanding the full cost of your bali tour visa means looking beyond the visa fee itself. Here is everything you will pay as a tourist entering Bali in 2026.

Visa Fee

Both the VOA and eVOA cost IDR 500,000 (approximately USD 35). This covers your initial 30-day stay. There is no difference in price between applying online or at the airport counter.

Bali Tourism Levy

Since February 2024, all international visitors to Bali must pay a one-time Bali Tourism Levy of IDR 150,000 (approximately USD 10). This fee is separate from your visa and must be paid online before arrival through the official Love Bali portal. You will receive a QR code receipt that immigration may ask to see. This levy funds cultural preservation and environmental programs across the island.

Extension Fee

If you decide to stay beyond your initial 30 days, a single extension costs an additional IDR 500,000. This gives you a second 30-day period, for a maximum total stay of 60 days on the VOA/eVOA.

Total Cost Breakdown

FeeAmount (IDR)Amount (USD)Notes
VOA / eVOA visa500,000~3530-day initial stay
Bali Tourism Levy150,000~10One-time, all visitors
Extension (optional)500,000~35Second 30-day period
Total (30-day stay)650,000~45
Total (60-day stay)1,150,000~80

Overstay Penalties

Do not overstay your visa. Indonesian immigration charges IDR 1,000,000 per day (approximately USD 65) for every day you remain in the country past your visa expiry date. Extended overstays can result in detention, deportation, and a multi-year re-entry ban. Set a calendar reminder a week before your visa expires — and either extend or book your departure flight.

Ubud rice terraces at sunrise with morning mist

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Step-by-Step Guide to Applying for Your Bali Tour Visa eVOA

Passport and travel documents for bali tour visa application

The online application for your bali tour visa takes about 10 to 15 minutes. Here is exactly what to do.

What You Need Before You Start

  • Valid passport — minimum 6 months validity from your date of arrival, with at least 2 blank pages
  • Digital passport photo — 3×4 cm, white background, taken within the last 3 months
  • Return or onward flight ticket — proof that you are leaving Indonesia
  • Proof of funds — bank statement showing approximately USD 1,000 or equivalent
  • Credit card — Visa, Mastercard, or JCB for the online payment
  • Accommodation address in Bali — the hotel or villa where you will be staying

Application Steps

  1. Complete the All Indonesia Arrival Card — this is a mandatory digital customs and health declaration form that replaced the paper arrival card in October 2025. It is free to fill out and separate from the visa application. Do this first.
  2. Visit the official immigration portal at molina.imigrasi.go.id — this is the only legitimate site. Avoid third-party visa services that charge extra fees.
  3. Create an account and select “eVOA” as your visa type.
  4. Fill in your personal details — passport number, full name (exactly as it appears on your passport), nationality, travel dates.
  5. Upload your documents — passport bio page scan, passport photo, flight itinerary.
  6. Pay the fee — IDR 500,000 by credit card.
  7. Wait for approval — most applications are processed within 1 to 3 business days. Apply at least 48 hours before your departure, though a week ahead is safer.
  8. Download your approval letter — save it on your phone and print a copy for backup.

When you arrive at Ngurah Rai airport, head straight to the autogate lanes. Scan your passport and your eVOA approval, and you are through immigration in minutes.

If you are planning your first trip to Bali, our complete guide to planning your Bali holiday walks you through everything from flights and accommodation to packing and local customs.

How to Extend Your Bali Tour Visa — 30 Days to 60 Days

Bali rice terraces at golden hour with winding path

Thirty days in Bali often does not feel like enough. The good news: you can extend your VOA or eVOA once, for an additional 30 days, giving you a maximum stay of 60 days. The not-so-good news: since mid-2025, the extension process requires an in-person visit to an immigration office.

When to Start the Extension Process

Begin your extension application 7 to 14 days before your current visa expires. Do not wait until the last day — if there is a backlog at the immigration office, you could end up overstaying while your extension is pending, and that creates complications you do not want.

What the Extension Process Looks Like in 2026

  1. File your extension request online through the immigration portal. You will need to upload the same documentation as your original application plus a recent photo.
  2. Visit the immigration office in person for biometric collection — photographs and fingerprints. This in-person requirement was reintroduced in mid-2025 after a period of online-only processing during the pandemic years.
  3. Pay the extension fee — IDR 500,000.
  4. Wait for processing — typically 3 to 7 working days. Your passport may be held during this period.

Immigration Offices Near Ubud

If you are staying in the Ubud area, the nearest immigration office is the Gianyar Immigration Office (Kantor Imigrasi Kelas II TPI Ngurah Rai has a satellite office in Gianyar). It is less crowded than the main Denpasar office and roughly 30 minutes from central Ubud by car. The main Ngurah Rai Immigration Office in Denpasar handles the highest volume of extensions and can have longer wait times.

If you are considering a longer stay, you will want to think about where to base yourself. Our Ubud vs Seminyak comparison breaks down the differences between Bali’s two most popular areas for extended stays.

Can You Extend More Than Once?

No. The VOA and eVOA allow a single 30-day extension — 60 days total is the absolute maximum on this visa type. After 60 days, you must either leave Indonesia or hold a different visa (more on that below). “Visa runs” — flying to Singapore or Kuala Lumpur for a day and re-entering on a fresh VOA — are technically legal, but immigration officers are increasingly skeptical of travelers who do this repeatedly.

Private infinity pool overlooking Bali jungle canopy

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Staying Longer Than 60 Days — B211A and Digital Nomad Visa Options

Digital nomad working at tropical Bali cafe with rice field view

If 60 days is not enough — and for many people who fall in love with Bali, it is not — Indonesia offers several longer-stay visa options. These are not bali tour visa types in the traditional sense, but they are worth understanding before you travel.

B211A Social and Cultural Visa — Up to 180 Days

The B211A is a single-entry visit visa that grants an initial 60-day stay, extendable up to four times for 30 days each — a total of approximately 180 days (six months). There are two versions: a tourist B211A and a business B211A. Most long-stay travelers use the tourist version.

Requirements:

  • Passport valid for at least 12 months from entry date
  • Recent passport photo (white background)
  • Bank statements showing minimum USD 2,000 balance
  • Proof of onward travel
  • Sponsor letter (from an Indonesian citizen, company, or registered sponsor — visa agents can arrange this)

The B211A must be applied for before you enter Indonesia, either through an embassy or via an authorized visa agent. It is the go-to option for travelers planning a 2- to 6-month stay without working.

E33G Remote Worker Visa — KITAS for Up to 1 Year

Launched in April 2024, the E33G is Indonesia’s dedicated visa for remote workers. It grants a limited stay permit (KITAS), classifying you as a temporary resident rather than a tourist. The visa is valid for up to one year and is renewable.

Key requirements:

  • Minimum annual income of USD 60,000
  • Employment with a company outside Indonesia (you cannot work for Indonesian companies)
  • Health insurance valid in Indonesia
  • Clean criminal record

The E33G is ideal for digital nomads and remote workers who want to stay in Bali legally for an extended period. If you plan to work from your laptop by the pool, this — not the tourist visa — is the correct visa for you.

C5A Content Creator Visa

A newer addition to Indonesia’s visa menu, the C5A is designed for content creators, photographers, videographers, and influencers who are producing content in Bali. If your trip involves any form of professional content creation — even unpaid brand collaborations or portfolio shoots — you technically need this visa rather than a tourist visa.

2026 Enforcement Changes You Should Know About

Indonesia has significantly tightened enforcement of visa rules in 2025 and 2026. In April 2026, Bali established the Dharma Dewata patrol — a 100-person task force that monitors tourist areas and social media for visa violations. Immigration now treats any activity that benefits a business as “work,” including unpaid brand collaborations, sponsored social media posts, and content creation for personal channels.

The penalties are severe: visa cancellation, detention, fines, deportation, and re-entry bans that can last several years — up to a lifetime blacklist in serious cases. If you are coming to Bali to work remotely or create content, get the right visa before you arrive.

Common Bali Tour Visa Mistakes to Avoid

Traveler carefully checking passport details before travel

After covering the rules, here are the mistakes that trip people up most often — and how to avoid every one of them.

Forgetting the All Indonesia Arrival Card

This mandatory digital form replaced the paper customs declaration card in October 2025. It is free, but you must complete it online before arrival. Without it, you may face delays or be turned back at immigration. Fill it out when you apply for your eVOA so it is one less thing to think about at the airport.

Passport Validity Under Six Months

Your passport must be valid for at least six months from your date of arrival. This is non-negotiable — airlines will sometimes deny boarding, and immigration will refuse entry if your passport expires within the six-month window. Check your passport expiry date before you book your flights.

Typos on Your eVOA Application

Your name, passport number, and date of birth on the eVOA must match your passport exactly. Even small discrepancies — a middle name entered differently, a transposed digit in your passport number — can result in rejection at the autogate. Double-check every field before you submit.

No Return or Onward Ticket

Immigration may ask for proof that you are leaving Indonesia. If you do not have a return flight booked, a one-way ticket to a nearby country (Singapore and Kuala Lumpur are popular) will satisfy the requirement. Some travelers book a flexible or refundable ticket specifically for this purpose.

Working on a Tourist Visa

This is the biggest mistake — and the one with the harshest consequences. Working remotely from a cafe in Canggu, teaching a yoga class in Ubud, DJing at a beach club, or creating sponsored content for your Instagram are all considered work under Indonesian immigration law. The Dharma Dewata patrol actively monitors these activities. If you plan to earn money while in Bali, apply for the appropriate work permit or remote worker visa.

Waiting Too Long to Extend

If you know you want more than 30 days, start the extension process during your second week — not your fourth. Immigration offices can have backlogs, and the in-person biometric requirement added in 2025 means you cannot do everything online anymore. Give yourself a buffer.

For more practical tips about navigating your first Bali trip, our Bali travel tips guide covers everything from local etiquette to transportation and money matters.

Your Bali Tour Visa, Sorted — Now Plan the Trip

The bali tour visa process is simpler than it looks from the outside. Apply for your eVOA at least 48 hours before departure, pay the tourism levy, complete the All Indonesia Arrival Card, and walk through the autogates when you land. If you want to stay longer than 30 days, start the extension process early. If you want more than 60 days, look into the B211A or E33G before you fly.

With the paperwork sorted, you can focus on what actually matters — the morning mist over the rice terraces, the sound of the gamelan drifting across the valley at dusk, the smell of fresh tempeh frying in a village warung. Bali does the rest.

If you are building your itinerary, our 10-day Bali itinerary guide is a good starting point — especially if this is your first time on the island. And if you are looking for a base that comes with a full team — chef, housekeeper, villa manager — to hold your entire stay together, take a look at what a staffed villa in Ubud actually feels like.

Notebook on a tropical deck at sunset with Bali breeze

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