E33E Child Dependent KITAS 2026: Complete Guide to Bringing Your Children to Indonesia
If you hold a KITAS work visa in Indonesia, the E33E Child Dependent KITAS allows your children to legally reside with you for the duration of your stay. This comprehensive guide covers everything parents need to know about obtaining, maintaining, and renewing dependent KITAS for children in 2026.
What is E33E Child Dependent KITAS?
E33E is the official immigration code for Visa Tanggungan Anak (Child Dependent Visa), allowing children of KITAS holders to live in Indonesia under their parent's sponsorship.
Key Characteristics
- Official name: ITAS (Izin Tinggal Terbatas) for Dependent Children
- Validity: Matches parent's KITAS duration (1-2 years)
- Age limit: Children under 18 years old
- Processing time: 5-7 working days (same as parent's KITAS)
- School enrollment: Required for children aged 6-18
- Legal basis: Keputusan Menteri M.IP-08.GR.01.01/2025
E33E Costs: Complete Breakdown
Bali Zero Pricing (2026)
| Service | Cost (IDR) | Processing Method |
|---|
| Dependent 1yr Offshore | 11,000,000 | New application from outside Indonesia |
| Dependent 1yr Onshore | 13,500,000 | Child already in Indonesia (change of status) |
| Dependent 1yr Extension | 9,000,000 | Annual renewal |
| Dependent 2yr Offshore | 15,000,000 | 2-year validity (offshore) |
| Dependent 2yr Onshore | 18,000,000 | 2-year validity (onshore) |
| Dependent 2yr Extension | 15,000,000 | 2-year extension |
| Dependent KITAP + MERP | 33,000,000 | Permanent residence for child |
What's included:
- VITAS processing (offshore) or status change (onshore)
- ITAS application and sticker
- All government fees
- Agent service fees
- Document preparation and translation
- Immigration liaison
Additional costs:
- Re-entry permit: IDR 500,000-1,000,000 (if child travels)
- SKTT registration: IDR 100,000-200,000
- Document translations: IDR 200,000-500,000 per document (if needed)
- Notarization: IDR 50,000-100,000 per document
- Birth certificate legalization: USD 50-100 (if from abroad)
Total First-Year Cost Estimate
Scenario: One child, offshore 1-year application
- Child KITAS: IDR 11,000,000
- Re-entry permit: IDR 1,000,000
- Document legalization: IDR 1,500,000
- Incidentals: IDR 500,000
- Total: ~IDR 14,000,000 (USD 875)
Scenario: Two children, offshore 1-year applications
- Child 1 KITAS: IDR 11,000,000
- Child 2 KITAS: IDR 11,000,000
- Re-entry permits (×2): IDR 2,000,000
- Documents: IDR 2,000,000
- Total: ~IDR 26,000,000 (USD 1,625)
Who Qualifies for E33E Child Dependent KITAS?
Child Eligibility Requirements
Age Limits
- Under 18 years old: Primary eligibility requirement
- Under 21 (special cases): Unmarried children still in full-time education may qualify with additional documentation
- No upper limit for disabled children: Children with disabilities requiring parental care may qualify regardless of age (medical documentation required)
Relationship Requirements
- Biological children: Birth certificate showing parent's name
- Legally adopted children: Court-approved adoption papers
- Stepchildren: Possible with marriage certificate and custodial documentation
- Not eligible: Grandchildren, nieces/nephews, or other relatives (unless legally adopted)
Parent Requirements
Your KITAS must be:
- Active and valid: At least 6 months remaining
- Work-based: E25B (Director), E23 (Employee), E28A (Investor), or similar
- Sponsored by registered company: PT PMA or approved entity
- Compliant: No immigration violations or overstays
Supported parent visa types:
- E25B (Director KITAS)
- E23 (Employee KITAS)
- E28A (Investor KITAS)
- E26 (Professional KITAS)
- E33G (Remote Worker KITAS - limited)
Not supported:
- Tourist visas (B211A)
- Social/cultural visas
- Temporary visit permits
Requirements by Age Group
Infants and Toddlers (0-5 years)
Documents needed:
- Birth certificate (original + apostille/legalized)
- Passport (valid 18+ months)
- Passport photos (4x6 cm, white background, 6 copies)
- Parent's KITAS and passport
- Parent's marriage certificate
- Health certificate (from Indonesian clinic)
- Sponsor letter from parent's company
Special considerations:
- No school enrollment required
- Childcare arrangements (nanny/daycare) don't need documentation
- Birth certificate must show both parents' names
- If birth certificate only shows mother, father must provide paternity acknowledgment
School-Age Children (6-17 years)
All documents above, plus:
- School enrollment letter: Confirmation of admission or current enrollment
- School information: School name, address, curriculum type
- Education status letter: From school or homeschool program
Acceptable education options:
- International schools (Cambridge, IB, Australian, American curricula)
- National Indonesian schools (public or private)
- National Plus schools (bilingual Indonesian schools)
- Registered homeschool programs (must be formally registered)
- Online schools (must be accredited and registered with immigration)
Immigration expectations:
- Children aged 6-18 should be enrolled in formal education
- School enrollment verification during KITAS renewal
- Education gaps may require explanation (medical reasons, transition periods)
Adolescents (15-17 years)
Additional considerations:
- Immigration may request interview with child (rare, but possible)
- Education continuity documentation (previous school records)
- Parental consent form (notarized)
- Clear plan for post-18 visa transition
E33E Application Process: Step-by-Step
Phase 1: Parent KITAS First
Critical requirement: You must have an active KITAS before applying for dependent visas.
-
Obtain your work KITAS
- E25B, E23, E28A, or other eligible visa type
- Processing time: 3-4 weeks
- Must be approved before starting child applications
-
Confirm sponsorship
- Verify your sponsoring company can support dependents
- Some companies require board approval for dependent sponsorships
- Confirm no restrictions in employment contract
Phase 2: Document Preparation (Week 1-2)
Core Documents Checklist
For each child:
From parent:
For school-age children (6-18):
For adopted children:
Document Legalization
If birth certificate issued abroad:
-
Apostille (Hague Convention countries):
- Obtain apostille from issuing country
- Translate to Indonesian (sworn translator)
- No need for embassy legalization
-
Consular legalization (non-Hague countries):
- Authenticate at Ministry of Foreign Affairs (home country)
- Legalize at Indonesian embassy/consulate (home country)
- Translate to Indonesian
Processing time: 2-6 weeks depending on country
Phase 3: VITAS (Visa Authorization) (Week 2-3)
If applying from outside Indonesia (offshore):
-
VITAS application
- Submit through parent's sponsoring company
- Processed by Direktorat Jenderal Imigrasi Jakarta
- Processing: 2-3 working days
-
Visa sticker at embassy
- VITAS approval sent to Indonesian embassy in child's location
- Visit embassy with child's passport and documents
- Visa sticker issued (valid 90 days, single entry)
- Child must enter Indonesia within 90 days
If child already in Indonesia (onshore):
- Different procedure: direct ITAS application (no VITAS required)
- Child must have valid stay permit (tourist visa, previous KITAS, etc.)
- Higher cost: IDR 13,500,000 vs IDR 11,000,000 offshore
- Processing: 7-14 working days
Phase 4: ITAS (KITAS) Collection (Week 3-4)
Upon arrival in Indonesia (offshore method):
-
Immigration office visit
- Report to immigration office within 7 days of arrival
- Bring: child's passport with VITAS, all original documents, parent
- Biometric data collection (photo, fingerprints for children 6+)
-
ITAS sticker issuance
- Processing: 5-7 working days
- E33E ITAS sticker placed in child's passport
- Validity: Matches parent's KITAS expiry date (cannot exceed)
-
SKTT (Residence Registration)
- Register child's residence within 30 days
- Visit local kelurahan (village office)
- Bring: child's KITAS, parent's KITAS, rental agreement/property deed
- Receive SKTT letter (proof of legal residence)
Newborn Registration: Special Procedures
If your child is born in Indonesia while you hold KITAS, special procedures apply.
Timeline: Act Within 60 Days
Critical deadline: Newborns must be registered for dependent KITAS within 60 days of birth to avoid complications.
Step 1: Birth Certificate (First 30 days)
-
Hospital paperwork
- Obtain birth certificate from hospital
- Usually issued within 1-3 days after birth
-
Dukcapil registration
- Register birth at Dinas Kependudukan dan Catatan Sipil (Dukcapil)
- Location: Dukcapil office in city of birth
- Required: Hospital birth certificate, both parents' passports, marriage certificate, KITAS
- Processing: 1-5 working days
- Result: Indonesian birth certificate (Akta Kelahiran)
-
Embassy/consulate registration (optional but recommended)
- Register birth at your home country's embassy/consulate
- Obtain home country birth certificate
- Important for dual citizenship claims (if applicable)
Step 2: Dependent KITAS Application (Days 30-60)
-
Gather documents
- Indonesian birth certificate (from Dukcapil)
- Both parents' passports and KITAS
- Marriage certificate
- Newborn passport (apply immediately - processing takes 2-4 weeks)
-
Apply for newborn passport
- Visit your embassy/consulate
- Bring: Birth certificate, parents' passports, application form, photos
- Processing time: 2-4 weeks (varies by country)
- Urgent: Some embassies offer expedited processing
-
Submit E33E application
- As soon as newborn passport is received
- Onshore method (child born in Indonesia)
- Cost: IDR 13,500,000 (1-year) or IDR 18,000,000 (2-year)
- Processing: 7-14 working days
What If You Miss the 60-Day Window?
Consequences:
- Child may be considered overstaying
- Potential fines or complications during renewal
- May require explanation letter and additional documentation
Solution:
- Contact Bali Zero immediately
- Prepare explanation letter (medical reasons, embassy delays, etc.)
- May need immigration lawyer involvement
- Possible grace period with medical documentation
Best practice: Start newborn passport application immediately after birth, don't wait for Dukcapil certificate.
School Enrollment Requirements
Why School Enrollment Matters
Indonesian immigration expects school-age children (6-18) to be enrolled in formal education. This is verified during:
- Initial KITAS application
- Annual KITAS renewals
- Random immigration checks
Acceptable Education Types
International Schools
Most common option for expat families:
- Cambridge International curriculum
- International Baccalaureate (IB)
- American curriculum (AP, US Common Core)
- Australian curriculum (AERO)
- British curriculum (National Curriculum for England)
- French, German, Japanese international schools
Required documentation:
- Official enrollment letter (on school letterhead)
- School name, address, contact information
- Grade level and curriculum
- Enrollment start date
National Schools
Indonesian public or private schools:
- Public schools (Sekolah Negeri)
- Private schools (Sekolah Swasta)
- National Plus schools (bilingual, Indonesian + English)
- Islamic schools (Madrasah)
Benefits:
- Lower cost than international schools
- Indonesian language immersion
- Integration with local community
Considerations:
- Primary instruction in Bahasa Indonesia
- Different curriculum than home country
- May require tutoring for non-Indonesian speakers
Homeschool Programs
Acceptable if formally registered:
- Must be registered with Indonesian education authorities
- Requires homeschool registration certificate
- Curriculum plan documentation
- Progress reports or portfolio
Registration process:
- Visit Dinas Pendidikan (Education Office) in your city
- Submit homeschool plan and parent qualifications
- Obtain homeschool registration letter
- Renew annually
Immigration requirements:
- Formal registration letter (not just "we homeschool")
- Curriculum documentation
- Evidence of educational progress
Online Schools
Accredited online programs:
- Must be accredited in home country or internationally
- Examples: K12 International Academy, Connections Academy, Khan Lab School
- Provide enrollment confirmation and curriculum details
Immigration considerations:
- Some immigration offices may request additional documentation
- Emphasize accreditation status
- Have backup documentation ready
What If Your Child Isn't in School?
Valid exceptions:
- Child under 6 years old (not yet school age)
- Medical reasons (provide doctor's letter)
- Temporary gap between schools (provide explanation + upcoming enrollment)
- Educational break approved by parents (rare, requires strong justification)
Not acceptable:
- "We plan to enroll later" without timeline
- Unenrolled for extended periods without reason
- Refusal to provide education (child welfare concern)
Extension and Renewal
Annual Extension Requirements
Child dependent KITAS can be renewed annually, matching your own KITAS renewal cycle.
Timeline:
- Apply 30-60 days before expiry
- Processing: 5-7 working days
- Cost: IDR 9,000,000 (1-year extension)
Documents needed:
- Child's current passport (valid 12+ months)
- Child's current KITAS (about to expire)
- Parent's renewed KITAS (must extend parent's first)
- Updated school enrollment letter (for school-age children)
- Passport photos (4x6 cm, 6 copies)
- Sponsor letter from parent's company
- Health certificate (new, from Indonesian clinic)
Process:
- Extend your KITAS first (parent's KITAS must be renewed before child's)
- Submit child's extension application within 30 days of your renewal
- Biometric update for children 6+ (if required)
- New ITAS sticker issued
- Update SKTT if address changed
Cost: IDR 9,000,000 per child (via Bali Zero)
After 2 Years: New Application Cycle
If your KITAS has 2-year validity, child's dependent KITAS can also be issued for 2 years.
When RPTKA expires (parent's work permit):
- Parent must obtain new RPTKA
- Child's KITAS follows parent's new KITAS cycle
- May require fresh dependent application (not extension)
Cost: IDR 15,000,000 (2-year extension via Bali Zero)
Synchronizing Family KITAS Expiry Dates
Best practice: Align all family member KITAS expiry dates.
Strategy:
- Apply for your KITAS first
- Apply for spouse and children within 30 days
- All dependent visas issued with same expiry date
- Single renewal process for entire family
Benefits:
- One-time document preparation
- Coordinated immigration office visits
- Lower total agent fees (family package rates)
- Less risk of forgetting individual renewals
What Happens When Your Child Turns 18?
Critical transition: E33E dependent KITAS automatically expires on the child's 18th birthday.
Timeline Before 18th Birthday
6 months before:
- Assess child's plans (university, work, return home?)
- Research appropriate visa types
- Begin document preparation
3 months before:
- Apply for new visa type if staying in Indonesia
- Book flights if returning home
- Notify school of transition
1 month before:
- Finalize visa application or exit plans
- Close bank accounts, phone plans, etc. (if leaving)
- Transfer records if continuing education
Visa Options After Turning 18
Option 1: Student Visa (E33A)
If attending university in Indonesia:
- Apply for student KITAS (E33A)
- Requires: University acceptance letter, enrollment confirmation
- Validity: Duration of studies (renewed annually)
- Cost: ~IDR 20-25 million
- Work authorization: No (internships may be allowed)
Best for: Children continuing education in Indonesia
Option 2: Work Visa (E23/E25B)
If offered employment:
- Apply for employee KITAS (E23) or director KITAS (E25B)
- Requires: RPTKA, employment contract, sponsoring company
- Validity: 1-2 years
- Cost: IDR 34.5-36 million (E25B), ~IDR 32-34 million (E23)
Best for: Children starting careers in Indonesia
Option 3: Their Own Investment Visa (E28A)
If financially independent with investment capital:
- Requires: IDR 10 billion investment in PT PMA
- No RPTKA needed
- Passive investor status
- Cost: ~IDR 28.5-30 million
Best for: Children with substantial financial resources
Option 4: Return to Home Country
Most common option:
- Leave Indonesia before or on 18th birthday
- No visa complications
- Can return later on tourist visa or new KITAS
- Avoids overstay penalties
What If They Turn 18 During School Year?
Grace period considerations:
- Immigration may allow temporary extension until end of school year
- Not guaranteed - requires advance application
- Provide: School schedule, exam dates, graduation date
- May need to exit and re-enter on tourist visa
Best practice: Plan transition 6+ months in advance, don't wait until last minute.
Pathway to KITAP (Permanent Residence) for Children
If your family settles long-term in Indonesia, children can eventually qualify for KITAP.
KITAP Eligibility for Children
Requirements:
- Parent holds KITAP (permanent residence)
- Child has held dependent KITAS for 3+ years continuously
- Child under 18 (or 21 if in full-time education)
- Clean immigration record
Or:
- Both parents hold KITAP
- Family has been in Indonesia 5+ years continuously
- Strong ties to Indonesia (education, property, business)
KITAP Benefits for Children
- Validity: 5 years, renewable indefinitely
- No annual reporting: Only renewal every 5 years
- Flexibility: Can remain in Indonesia even if parents leave
- Education continuity: Uninterrupted schooling
- Lower long-term cost: ~IDR 33 million for 5 years vs ~IDR 45 million for 5 years of annual KITAS
Cost (Bali Zero): IDR 33,000,000 (KITAP + MERP)
Process:
- Parent obtains KITAP first (after 3-5 years on work KITAS)
- Apply for child's KITAP after parent's approval
- Submit family documentation
- KITAP issued with 5-year validity
Multiple Children: Family Package Strategies
Cost Comparison: 1 vs 2 vs 3 Children
1-year offshore applications:
| Children | Individual Cost | Total Cost | Savings with Package |
|---|
| 1 child | IDR 11,000,000 | IDR 11,000,000 | — |
| 2 children | IDR 11,000,000 each | IDR 22,000,000 | Possible discount |
| 3 children | IDR 11,000,000 each | IDR 33,000,000 | Possible discount |
Agent packages:
- Some agents offer family discounts (5-10% off for 2+ dependents)
- Bali Zero: Contact for family package pricing
- Simultaneous applications reduce total processing fees
Logistical Strategies
All children processed together:
- Single document preparation
- One embassy visit
- Coordinated arrival in Indonesia
- Same expiry dates
- Lower total agent fees
Staggered applications:
- Only if children are in different locations
- More expensive overall
- Risk of different expiry dates
- More complex renewals
Recommended: Always process all dependents simultaneously.
Common Issues and Solutions
Problem 1: Birth Certificate Not Apostilled
Causes:
- Applied before understanding requirements
- Home country doesn't offer apostille services
- Lost original certificate
Solutions:
- Request apostille from issuing authority (vital records office)
- If non-Hague country: Use consular legalization process
- If lost: Order new certificate, then apostille
- Processing time: 2-6 weeks, plan accordingly
Problem 2: Child's Passport Expires Before Processing Completes
Causes:
- Applied too close to passport expiry
- Longer processing than expected
- Passport validity requirement (18+ months)
Solutions:
- Renew child's passport before starting KITAS application
- Ensure 18+ months validity before applying
- If urgent: Some countries offer emergency passports (limited validity)
- Better to delay application than have passport expire mid-process
Problem 3: School Not Providing Enrollment Letter
Causes:
- School doesn't understand immigration requirements
- Not officially enrolled yet (waitlist, deposit paid but not started)
- Online school without formal letterhead
Solutions:
- Explain immigration requirements to school administration
- Request letter on official letterhead with school stamp
- If not yet enrolled: Provide acceptance letter + deposit receipt + start date
- For online schools: Enrollment confirmation email + curriculum documentation
Problem 4: Only One Parent in Indonesia
Causes:
- Single parent working in Indonesia
- Other parent remained in home country
- Separated or divorced parents
Solutions:
- If married: Notarized consent letter from absent parent
- If divorced: Custody agreement + consent letter
- If single parent: Birth certificate showing sole custody + statutory declaration
- Translation to Indonesian required
- Consular legalization recommended
Problem 5: Adopted Child Documentation
Causes:
- Adoption papers not internationally recognized
- Name change during adoption
- Closed adoption (original birth certificate unavailable)
Solutions:
- Court-approved adoption decree (legalized)
- Adoption must be recognized under Indonesian law
- If name changed: Legal name change documentation
- Explain adoption clearly in cover letter
- May require legal consultation
Problem 6: Child Turns 18 During Processing
Causes:
- Applied too close to 18th birthday
- Unexpected processing delays
Solutions:
- Check processing timelines carefully
- If child will turn 18 during processing: Consider alternative visa type immediately
- Student visa (E33A) may be more appropriate
- Immigration may reject application if child turns 18 before approval
Critical rule: Apply only if processing will complete before 18th birthday.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Can my child work or do internships on E33E KITAS?
No. E33E is a dependent visa without work authorization. Children cannot:
- Accept paid employment
- Sign employment contracts
- Register as freelancers
- Work in family business (even informally)
Exceptions:
- School internships (unpaid, part of curriculum) may be allowed
- Volunteer work (clearly unpaid) usually acceptable
- Check with immigration for specific situation
If child needs work authorization, they must apply for appropriate work visa (E23, E25B).
2. Do both parents need KITAS for child to qualify?
No. Only one parent needs KITAS to sponsor dependent children.
Scenarios:
- One parent with KITAS: Child applies under that parent's sponsorship
- Both parents with KITAS: Child can be sponsored by either parent (choose parent with longest KITAS validity)
- Parents with different companies: Choose parent with more stable employment
Best practice: If both parents have KITAS, coordinate all dependent applications through one parent's sponsor to simplify renewals.
3. Can my child attend multiple schools?
Yes, children can change schools while maintaining E33E KITAS.
Process:
- Notify immigration of school change (during next renewal)
- Provide new school enrollment letter
- No additional fee or application required
- Update documented at annual renewal
Important: Always maintain continuous school enrollment. Gaps between schools should be explained (summer break, transition period, etc.).
4. What if we move to a different city in Indonesia?
E33E KITAS is valid nationwide, but you must update residence registration.
Steps:
- Register at new address within 30 days
- Obtain new SKTT from local kelurahan
- Report change to immigration office at next renewal
- Update school documentation if changed
No additional fee for address change.
5. Can my child open a bank account?
Yes, but it depends on the bank and child's age.
Most banks:
- Children under 17: Joint account with parent
- Children 17+: May open individual account with KITAS
Documents needed:
- Child's KITAS and passport
- Parent's KITAS and passport (for joint accounts)
- SKTT (residence registration)
- Proof of school enrollment (some banks)
Recommendation: Bank Mandiri, BCA, and CIMB Niaga are familiar with expat children's accounts.
6. What happens if my KITAS is revoked or cancelled?
If your KITAS is cancelled, your child's dependent KITAS automatically becomes invalid.
Situations:
- Your company closes
- You resign and don't transfer sponsor
- Immigration violations
- Your KITAS expires without renewal
Child must:
- Leave Indonesia with you within 30 days
- Or transfer to new sponsor if you obtain new KITAS
- Or convert to different visa type (student, etc.)
Important: Dependent visas cannot exist independently - they are always tied to parent's valid KITAS.
No. E33E dependent KITAS is only for:
- Biological children
- Legally adopted children
- Stepchildren (with proper documentation)
Grandparents cannot sponsor grandchildren under E33E.
Alternative: If grandparents have KITAS and legal custody (court-appointed guardianship), they may apply as legal guardians with special documentation.
8. Do children need health insurance?
Health insurance is not legally required for E33E KITAS, but highly recommended.
Why you need it:
- Indonesian hospital costs are significant for expats
- International schools often require health insurance
- Immigration may request proof during renewal (rare, but possible)
Options:
- International health insurance (Cigna, Allianz, Bupa)
- Indonesian health insurance (Allianz Indonesia, AXA Mandiri)
- School-provided health plans
- BPJS Kesehatan (Indonesian national health insurance - available to KITAS holders)
Recommended: International insurance with Indonesia coverage for best quality care.
Working with Bali Zero
Why Use an Agent for Child KITAS?
Child dependent KITAS applications involve:
- Parent's sponsoring company coordination
- Multiple government agencies (Immigration, Dukcapil for newborns)
- Document legalization and translation
- School enrollment verification
- Indonesian language requirements
- Timing coordination with parent's KITAS
Bali Zero advantages:
- ✅ Family package pricing: Discounts for multiple children
- ✅ Coordinated processing: Parent + spouse + children processed together
- ✅ School liaison: Help with school enrollment documentation
- ✅ Newborn expertise: 60-day newborn registration support
- ✅ Fixed pricing: IDR 11-18M all-inclusive, no hidden costs
- ✅ English support: Clear communication throughout
- ✅ Document preparation: Professional translations and notarization
- ✅ Age 18 transition planning: Guidance for visa change when child turns 18
What to Expect
-
Initial consultation
- Free family visa assessment
- Review of parent's KITAS status
- Timeline and cost estimate for all family members
- School enrollment guidance
-
Document collection
- Comprehensive checklist for each child
- Guidance on birth certificate legalization
- School enrollment letter assistance
- Professional document preparation
-
Application submission
- Coordinated with parent's KITAS renewal/application
- VITAS processing for all family members
- Regular status updates
- Embassy coordination (offshore applications)
-
KITAS collection
- Family biometrics appointment coordination
- Passport collection and return
- SKTT registration assistance (all family members)
- Re-entry permits if needed
-
Ongoing support
- Annual renewal reminders for entire family
- School change documentation help
- Age 18 transition planning
- Website: balizero.com
- WhatsApp: [Contact number]
- Email: hello@balizero.com
- Office: Canggu, Bali
Conclusion: Bringing Your Family to Indonesia
The E33E Child Dependent KITAS provides the legal foundation for your children to live, study, and grow in Indonesia alongside your work journey. While the process requires careful documentation and planning, the result is a stable family environment for the duration of your Indonesian employment.
Key success factors:
- Start with parent's KITAS: Ensure your own immigration status is solid before applying for dependents
- Document preparation: Birth certificates must be apostilled/legalized well in advance
- School enrollment: Have school documentation ready for children 6-18
- Coordinate timing: Apply for all dependents simultaneously for aligned expiry dates
- Plan for age 18: Begin transition planning 6+ months before child's 18th birthday
- Professional support: Use experienced agent like Bali Zero for family applications
Timeline overview:
- Preparation: 2-4 weeks (document legalization)
- Application: 3-4 weeks (VITAS → ITAS)
- Total: 5-8 weeks from start to child's KITAS in hand
Cost overview (per child):
- 1-year offshore: IDR 11,000,000
- 1-year onshore: IDR 13,500,000
- Annual extension: IDR 9,000,000
- KITAP (5 years): IDR 33,000,000
Long-term pathway:
- Years 1-2: E33E dependent KITAS (annual renewals matching parent)
- Years 3-5: Continue E33E or transition to student visa if appropriate
- Age 18+: Student visa, work visa, or KITAP if family settles permanently
- Family KITAP: After parent obtains KITAP, children can also apply
Next steps:
- Verify your KITAS is active and valid (6+ months remaining)
- Gather birth certificates for all children
- Begin apostille/legalization process for foreign birth certificates
- Confirm school enrollment or obtain acceptance letters
- Contact Bali Zero for family package assessment
- Start application process 2+ months before intended arrival
With proper planning and professional support, bringing your children to Indonesia is a straightforward process that enables your entire family to experience the richness of Indonesian life together.
Disclaimer: Immigration regulations change frequently. This guide reflects 2026 requirements based on Keputusan Menteri M.IP-08.GR.01.01/2025 and Bali Zero's knowledge base. Always consult with licensed immigration agent for your specific situation. Bali Zero pricing subject to change - confirm current rates before proceeding. Children's visa rules are strictly enforced - ensure all documentation is complete and accurate.
Last updated: February 17, 2026