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Bali Zero handles visas, company setup, tax and property compliance in Indonesia. Ask us directly on WhatsApp.
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Topics
Zantara AI
AI Immigration Advisor
Bali Zero handles visas, company setup, tax and property compliance in Indonesia. Ask us directly on WhatsApp.
Chat with Bali Zero on WhatsAppOverstaying your visa in Indonesia is expensive, stressful, and can result in deportation and re-entry bans. Since 2024, the fine is IDR 1,000,000 per day with a maximum of 60 days before automatic deportation proceedings. If you're reading this because you've overstayed or are about to—don't panic, but act immediately.
This guide covers everything you need to know: fine schedules, detention procedures, how to resolve overstay situations, emergency extensions, and how to avoid overstaying in the first place.
Visa overstay occurs when you remain in Indonesia beyond:
Example scenarios:
Grace periods: There are NO grace periods. Even 1 day over counts as overstay.
Base fine: IDR 1,000,000 per day Maximum fine period: 60 days (IDR 60,000,000 total) Beyond 60 days: Deportation proceedings begin automatically
| Overstay Duration | Fine Amount (IDR) | Fine Amount (USD approx.) | Consequences |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-7 days | 1,000,000 - 7,000,000 | $65 - $455 | Pay fine + immediate exit |
| 8-30 days | 8,000,000 - 30,000,000 | $520 - $1,950 | Pay fine + immediate exit + warning |
| 31-60 days | 31,000,000 - 60,000,000 | $2,015 - $3,900 | Pay fine + immediate exit + risk of ban |
| 61-90 days | Max 60,000,000 + detention | Detention costs | Deportation + 1-year entry ban |
| 91+ days | Max 60,000,000 + detention | Detention costs | Deportation + 2-5 year entry ban |
| Repeat offender (any duration) | Max 60,000,000 + detention | Detention costs | Deportation + 5-year to permanent ban |
Important notes:
Old system (pre-2024): IDR 300,000 per day New system (2024-present): IDR 1,000,000 per day
Why the increase? Indonesian government aims to deter visa abuse and align penalties with regional standards (Thailand: THB 500/day, Malaysia: MYR 300/day, Vietnam: USD 25/day).
Once you exceed 60 days overstay, the situation escalates from "administrative violation" to "immigration case" with detention and deportation.
Step 1: Immigration summons or arrest
Step 2: Case processing (7-30 days)
Step 3: Deportation execution
Facilities vary by location, but generally:
Costs you pay:
Duration: Average 2-4 weeks from detention to deportation, but can extend to 2-3 months in complex cases.
| Offense Type | First Offense | Second Offense | Third Offense |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overstay 1-60 days (resolved voluntarily) | Warning only (no automatic ban) | 1-year ban possible | 2-year ban likely |
| Overstay 61-90 days (deportation) | 1-year ban | 2-year ban | 5-year ban |
| Overstay 91-180 days (deportation) | 2-year ban | 5-year ban | 10-year ban or permanent |
| Overstay 180+ days (deportation) | 5-year ban | 10-year ban | Permanent ban |
| Immigration fraud or criminal activity | 10-year ban or permanent | Permanent ban | Permanent ban |
Key distinctions:
"Warning only" = Immigration officer discretion. If you self-report within 1-30 days overstay, pay fines immediately, and demonstrate genuine mistake (medical emergency, flight cancellation), you may avoid formal blacklisting. But it's not guaranteed.
"Automatic ban" = Triggered by deportation. Once you're deported (61+ days overstay or caught by authorities), the ban is automatic and non-negotiable.
Cannot check directly at airport. If you're blacklisted, you'll be denied boarding at your departure airport or denied entry upon arrival in Indonesia.
If you realize you've overstayed or are about to overstay, follow this process immediately.
Best for: Short overstays where you can still exit voluntarily.
Steps:
Go to nearest immigration office (Kantor Imigrasi)
Report to "Pelanggaran" (Violation) desk
Pay fine at designated bank
Return to immigration office with receipt
Exit Indonesia within 7 days
Timeline: 1-3 days if no complications Cost: Overstay fine + bank fees (~IDR 10,000)
Best for: You realize your visa is expiring in 1-5 days and can't exit in time.
Steps:
Visit immigration office 1-3 days before expiration
Request "emergency extension" (perpanjangan darurat)
Pay emergency extension fee
Exit within extension period
Success rate: 70-80% if you have legitimate documentation Denial: If denied, you must exit immediately (before midnight on expiration day) or face overstay penalties
Best for: Visa expires today or already expired by 1-3 days, but you have proof of unavoidable circumstances.
Force majeure examples:
Steps:
Gather documentation immediately
Go to immigration office with documents
If approved:
If denied:
Success rate: 40-60% depending on evidence quality and officer discretion Critical: Medical emergencies are most likely to be approved; "I forgot" or "I was traveling" are almost never approved.
Scenario: You overstayed, didn't resolve it with immigration office, and show up at Ngurah Rai Airport hoping to "just pay and go."
What actually happens:
Immigration officer scans passport at exit checkpoint
You're escorted to airport immigration office
Immigration officer calculates fine and issues detention notice
If you pay fine:
If you can't pay or exceed 60 days:
Bottom line: Attempting to resolve overstay at airport is high-risk. Immigration officers have less discretion, process is slower, and you may miss your flight even if fine is payable.
You should hire professional help if:
Overstay exceeds 60 days
You're already detained
Repeat offender
Complex circumstances
Recommended services:
What a lawyer CAN do:
What a lawyer CANNOT do:
The best strategy is never overstaying in the first place. Here's how to stay compliant:
Use multiple reminders:
Common mistakes:
Pro tip: Add visa expiration date to your phone lock screen or home screen widget.
Extension timeline:
Why early extension matters:
Never assume "I'll extend tomorrow"—extend as soon as you're eligible.
Flight booking strategy:
Buffer time accounts for:
Common confusion:
Rule: Know your visa's extension eligibility before entering Indonesia. Plan accordingly.
For KITAS holders:
Employer negligence is not a defense: If your employer fails to renew your KITAS on time and you overstay, you're still liable for overstay fines. (You can sue employer later, but immigration will penalize you first.)
No. Once your visa expires, you're in overstay status. You cannot extend an expired visa. You must:
Exception: Force majeure cases (hospitalized, natural disaster) may receive emergency exit clearance, but not visa extension.
Yes and no.
Moral: Even if you pay fines and exit, overstay creates a permanent immigration record.
Technically yes, if:
BUT:
If deported: You cannot return until ban period expires (1-5 years minimum).
Options:
Warning: Do not attempt to leave without paying. You'll be detained at airport and situation worsens.
No. Standard travel insurance does not cover visa overstay penalties because overstay is considered a preventable violation, not an insurable risk.
What travel insurance DOES cover:
Always check policy fine print. Some policies explicitly exclude "immigration penalties" from coverage.
If you're currently overstaying or need immediate assistance:
Main office: Kantor Imigrasi Kelas I Khusus TPI Ngurah Rai Address: Jl. Raya Tuban, Kuta, Bali Phone: +62 361 9351038 Hours: Monday-Friday, 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Class I Immigration Office Jakarta Selatan: Address: Jl. Warung Jati Barat No. 7, Jakarta Selatan Phone: +62 21 7988369
Class I Immigration Office Jakarta Pusat: Address: Jl. HR Rasuna Said Kav. X-6 No. 8, Kuningan, Jakarta Pusat Phone: +62 21 5227107
Direktorat Jenderal Imigrasi: Website: https://www.imigrasi.go.id Call center: 1500-778 (Indonesian only)
Find your embassy: Search: "Embassy of [your country] Jakarta" Service: Consular assistance (cannot override Indonesian law, but can help with repatriation, translation, and legal referrals)
Overstaying your visa in Indonesia is expensive, stressful, and creates permanent immigration records that can affect your travel for years. With fines at IDR 1,000,000 per day and deportation after 60 days, the consequences are severe.
Key takeaways:
✅ Track your visa expiration religiously (multiple calendar reminders) ✅ Extend early (7-14 days before expiration) ✅ Self-report immediately if you realize you've overstayed ✅ Never try to "fix it at the airport"—always go to city immigration office first ✅ Hire a lawyer if overstay exceeds 60 days or you're detained ✅ Avoid overstaying again—repeat offenses lead to permanent bans
If you're currently overstaying: Stop reading and go to the nearest immigration office today. Every day you wait adds IDR 1,000,000 to your fine and increases your risk of detention.
Need help with visa extensions, emergency travel, or immigration compliance? Contact Bali Zero for professional visa services and legal support.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Indonesian immigration law is complex and subject to change. Always consult with a licensed immigration lawyer or your embassy for case-specific guidance. Information accurate as of February 2026.