
Health insurance for digital nomads in Bali, done properly, means one
of two structures: a dedicated nomad insurance plan (roughly
$50–150/month) for stays of one to six months, or full international
private health insurance ($150–500+/month) for anyone making Bali a
primary base — and in either case, the two clauses that actually matter
are medical evacuation cover and the motorbike
exclusion. High earners routinely over-insure on trip trinkets
and under-insure on the six-figure scenario: an evacuation to Singapore.
This guide explains the structures, the traps, and the checklist I share
with every client before they fly.
Disclaimer first, because this topic deserves it: I
am Saskia Vandermeer, founder of Bali Digital Nomad
Luxury — a stay curator, not an insurance broker, doctor or lawyer.
Nothing below is financial, medical or legal advice; it is orientation
drawn from six years of living here and preparing hundreds of clients
for month-long stays. Verify every policy detail with the insurer and,
where relevant, official Indonesian sources before relying on it.
Why Bali changes the
insurance calculation
Bali’s private healthcare in the main corridors is competent for
everyday needs, and serious international-standard facilities exist
around Denpasar and Nusa Dua. But for major trauma or complex cardiac
and neurological events, the standard of care that affluent Westerners
expect frequently means evacuation to Singapore — a
flight and admission scenario that can run into six figures without
cover. This is not a hypothetical: evacuation clauses are the single
most important line in any policy you buy for Indonesia. The U.S. State
Department’s Indonesia page (travel.state.gov) makes the same point
bluntly, advising travellers to confirm insurance that covers medical
evacuation, because serious cases are routinely referred out of the
country.
The second Bali-specific reality is the scooter. Road traffic
injuries are the island’s dominant foreigner-injury category, and
insurers know it — which is why the motorbike fine print exists.
Structure 1:
nomad insurance plans (1–6 month stays)
The subscription-style nomad insurers (the category built by
SafetyWing, Genki, World Nomads and peers) offer monthly-rolling travel
medical cover designed for location-independent workers. For a typical
month-long luxury stay — the format we specialise in on our month-long stays pillar — this tier
is usually rational.
Strengths: fast online purchase, monthly billing,
emergency medical and evacuation included at meaningful limits,
multi-country coverage as you move.
The five clauses to read before paying:
- Evacuation limit and trigger. Look for $100k+
evacuation cover and read who decides — insurer-approved
evacuation is standard; self-arranged flights are rarely
reimbursed. - The motorbike clause. Most plans cover two-wheel
accidents only if you hold a valid motorcycle licence
from your home country and an International Driving Permit with
the motorcycle category, and you wore a helmet. Riding a 155cc
scooter on a car licence can void your claim entirely. If you will ride,
align your licences before departure — or use drivers, as most of my
senior clients do anyway. - Adventure sport carve-outs. Surfing is usually
covered; freediving depth limits, canyoning and martial arts sparring
often are not. Match the exclusions list to your actual hobbies. - Outpatient vs inpatient scope. Cheap plans are
hospital-only; a $90 GP visit for dengue testing may be yours to pay.
Speaking of which — dengue is endemic in Indonesia (the WHO, at who.int,
classifies Indonesia among the high-burden dengue countries), and a bad
season fills clinics. Cover that includes outpatient diagnostics earns
its keep. - Pre-existing conditions and age bands. Standard
exclusions apply and premiums step up at 40/50/60.
Structure
2: international private health insurance (the base-in-Bali tier)
If Bali becomes your primary residence — a quarter or more per year,
an E33G remote-worker visa in your passport — the calculus shifts from
travel cover to international private medical insurance
(IPMI): Cigna Global, Allianz Care, April, and similar. Expect
$150–500+/month depending on age, deductible and whether you include the
US.
What the premium buys: direct-billing relationships
with the better Indonesian facilities, genuine inpatient + outpatient +
specialist cover, cancer and chronic-condition treatment, guaranteed
renewability (a travel plan can decline to renew after a big claim; IPMI
generally cannot), and evacuation as a coordinated service rather than a
reimbursement fight.
Also worth knowing: holders of Indonesian stay
permits may interact with the national BPJS Kesehatan system depending
on their permit and employment structure — treat BPJS as a
legal-compliance and local-clinic layer, not a substitute for private
evacuation-grade cover, and verify current obligations via official
channels (bpjs-kesehatan.go.id) or a licensed agent. Visa structure
questions themselves belong with licensed professionals — our remote work visa guide is orientation
only.
The high-earner
failure modes I keep seeing
- “My platinum card covers travel.” Card cover is
trip-based, often capped low, and typically excludes stays beyond 60–90
days and any motorbike scenario. Read the certificate, not the
marketing. - Insuring the laptop, not the airlift. Gadget cover
is emotionally satisfying and financially trivial. Evacuation is the
opposite. - Letting cover lapse between plans. Gaps void
continuity on anything that later looks pre-existing. - No local orientation. Know your nearest 24-hour
facility from your villa before you need it — it is part of the
arrival briefing we build into every placement, alongside the practical
layers in my family logistics
playbook and the training-life map
of Canggu.
My pre-flight checklist (copy
this)
- Evacuation cover ≥ $100,000 with insurer-coordinated transport —
confirmed in writing. - Motorbike clause matched to your actual licences, or a decision not
to ride. - Outpatient + dengue-relevant diagnostics included.
- Hobby exclusions checked against your real plans.
- Policy certificate downloaded offline; insurer emergency number
saved to phone and shared with your villa manager. - For 3+ month bases: IPMI quotes compared, BPJS obligations verified
via official sources.
The bottom line
For a month in a villa with a driver, a quality nomad plan with
strong evacuation cover is usually proportionate. For a Bali base, step
up to international private cover and treat the premium as
infrastructure, like your fibre line. Either way, the expensive mistakes
are all in the fine print you can read tonight in twenty minutes.
Insurance is your broker’s lane; everything else about a flawless
month in Bali is mine. Tell me your dates and requirements via the stay inquiry page or WhatsApp wa.me/6281139414563, and your
arrival briefing will include the nearest 24-hour facility to your villa
— because preparedness is a luxury feature too.
Sources: U.S. Department of State — Indonesia International
Travel Information (travel.state.gov) on medical evacuation; World
Health Organization — dengue fact sheets (who.int); BPJS Kesehatan
(bpjs-kesehatan.go.id). This article is general information only and not
insurance, medical, legal or tax advice; confirm all terms with licensed
providers.