
The core rule for digital nomad taxes in Bali is this: under
Indonesian income-tax law, a foreigner who is present in Indonesia for
more than 183 days within any 12-month period — or who resides in
Indonesia with intent to stay — generally becomes an Indonesian tax
resident, taxable on worldwide income, subject to the relief provided by
double-tax treaties and specific exemptions. Stay under 183
days and you generally remain a non-resident for Indonesian tax
purposes, with Indonesian tax touching only Indonesian-sourced income
(which, as a compliant remote worker on foreign income, you shouldn’t
have). That threshold — not your visa class — is the line that matters
most.
Now the careful part, and please read it: I am a stay
curator, not a tax professional. This article is general information to
help you ask the right questions — it is not tax advice.
Cross-border tax turns on your citizenship, your home country’s rules,
treaties, and your personal facts. Every guest I’ve seen handle this
well did one thing in common: they hired a cross-border accountant
before their stay crossed 90 days. Consider that the actual
recommendation of this article.
The rules, from the primary
sources
Three anchor points, all verifiable against official sources:
- The 183-day residency test. Indonesia’s Income Tax
Law (as consolidated through the Harmonisation of Tax Regulations Law,
HPP Law No. 7/2021) defines a resident taxpayer to include individuals
present in Indonesia for more than 183 days in a 12-month period, or
present and intending to reside. The Directorate General of Taxes (DJP)
publishes guidance at pajak.go.id. - Worldwide vs territorial taxation. Resident
taxpayers are taxed on worldwide income at progressive rates (5%–35%
across brackets in 2027). Non-residents are taxed only on
Indonesian-sourced income, generally by withholding. - The four-year foreign-expertise carve-out. Since
the 2021 reforms, Indonesia offers qualifying foreign citizens who
become residents a territorial option — taxation on Indonesian-sourced
income only — for up to four years, subject to skill/expertise criteria
and DJP process. Whether a given remote worker qualifies is exactly the
kind of question a professional should answer against current
implementing regulations.
Layered on top: tax treaties. Indonesia has treaties
with 70+ countries; a treaty tie-breaker can keep you resident of your
home country even past 183 days of presence, depending on your permanent
home, centre of vital interests and other facts. This is where generic
internet answers fail and personal advice earns its fee.
What this means at each
stay length
- Under 60 days (the classic premium month): no
Indonesian tax residency question arises for practically anyone. Enjoy
your villa; your tax life stays exactly as it was at home. - 2–5 months: still under the threshold, but start
counting properly — the 183 days accrue across any 12-month
window, not a calendar year. Two long stays ten months apart can add up.
Keep a precise day log (your passport stamps and airline history are
your evidence). - 6+ months, or an E33G year: you are now planning
around the line, not under it. Cross 183 days and the default position
is Indonesian tax residency — with an NPWP (taxpayer number)
registration, annual filing obligations, and worldwide-income exposure,
moderated by any treaty and possibly the four-year territorial option.
Simultaneously, your home country’s exit rules decide whether
you’ve stopped being taxable there; plenty of nomads discover they’ve
become tax resident nowhere cleanly, or in two places at once. Both
discoveries are expensive if made late.
Note carefully: the E33G visa does not create tax residency
by itself, and it does not exempt you from it. Visa status and
tax status are separate systems that happen to count the same days. I
keep the visa side documented in my E33G requirements guide
and the comparison of routes in E33G vs
B211A, but the day-count runs regardless of which permit is in your
passport.
The questions to bring
to a professional
From watching dozens of guests do this properly, the productive
engagement with a cross-border accountant covers:
- Day-count strategy: where does my 12-month window
sit, and what does my travel calendar do to it? - Home-country exit: what does my country
require before it stops taxing me (tie-breakers, deemed-residency rules,
exit taxes for some nationalities)? - Treaty position: does the Indonesia treaty with my
country change the default outcome? - The territorial option: do I plausibly qualify for
the four-year Indonesian-source-only regime, and is electing it wise in
my facts? - Structure hygiene: does my LLC/Ltd/BV create a
“permanent establishment” risk in Indonesia if I manage it from a villa
in Pererenan for a year? (This one surprises founders most.) - Compliance calendar: NPWP registration, annual
return deadlines (generally 31 March for individuals), and what records
to keep.
Budget US$500–$2,000 for proper initial advice depending on
complexity. Against the cost of a premium Bali year — see my full cost of living
breakdown — it is the cheapest insurance in the entire budget.
The honest framing
Most nomads I host stay well under 183 days and their tax life never
touches Indonesia. Those building a real Bali chapter — the E33G year,
the family relocation — treat tax planning as part of the move, do it
early with professionals, and report that the system is navigable and
the outcomes reasonable, especially with the treaty network and the
territorial option in play. The people who end up with horror stories
are almost always the ones who let the days accumulate while assuming
tourism rules applied to a working life. Don’t be the third kind; the
fix costs one email to an accountant in month two.
For how taxes sit inside the whole legal picture — permits,
durations, family status — the Bali
remote work visa pillar is the map I keep current.
Disclaimer, once more and plainly: this is general
information, not tax, legal or financial advice. Rules and implementing
regulations change; your facts decide everything. Verify against
pajak.go.id and your home authority, and engage a qualified cross-border
tax professional before making residency decisions.
The part I can take
off your plate
Your tax adviser handles the 183 days; I handle making every one of
the days you do spend here exceptional — verified 300Mbps+ villas, real
workspaces, honest monthly pricing. Send your dates and budget band
through the reserve page and I’ll shortlist
personally verified options, or message me on WhatsApp with your
plan — including “I’m structuring a sub-183-day year; which two seasons
should I take?” (A genuinely fun question. October–November and
April–June, usually.) Start at Bali Digital Nomad
Luxury.
Reflects Indonesian tax law and DJP guidance as publicly
available at pajak.go.id, February 2027. Not advice. Hire the
accountant.