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Indonesia Second Home Visa Processing Time: Realistic Timeline

Indonesia Second Home Visa Processing Time: Realistic Timeline

Information, not advice: Second Home Visa Indonesia is an independent editorial guide — not the Government of Indonesia, not the Directorate General of Immigration, and not a law firm or licensed adviser. The Second Home Visa is a non-working visa; the IDR 2 billion deposit is IDR-set and FX-exposed, rules change by regulation, and figures are "last verified June 2026" — confirm at the e-Visa portal (evisa.imigrasi.go.id) and with licensed Indonesian immigration/tax counsel before acting. We never promise approval. If you engage a partner we introduce, that partner may pay us a referral fee at no cost to you.

Indonesia second home visa processing time is typically around 7–10 working days for the e‑Visa decision, plus up to 4 working days for issuance after approval. This page walks through how long Second Home Visa Indonesia steps really take in practice, what can delay them, and what is and is not under your control.

Short answer: how long does the Indonesia Second Home Visa take?

As of last verification June 2026, and based on current practice (not a guarantee):

e‑Visa (E33F) processing time
~7–10 working days after complete online submission and payment, in “normal” cases.
Post‑approval e‑Visa issuance
Up to ~4 working days from approval to the e‑Visa PDF landing in your email/account.
On‑arrival reporting in Indonesia
Biometrics and proof‑of‑deposit checks can often be completed in 1–3 working days after you arrive and visit the local Kantor Imigrasi.
Total practical timeline
From a “file‑ready” application to stamped Second Home ITAS in your passport: around 3–4 weeks in straightforward cases.

These timeframes are **not codified in law**. The Immigration Law (Law 6/2011), PP 48/2021 on Visa and Stay Permits, and Directorate General of Immigration Circular **IMI‑0740.GR.01.01/2022** define the visa type, deposit and eligibility — they do **not** promise any specific processing time. Every application is discretionary.

This page is information, not advice. We are **Second Home Visa Indonesia**, an independent information platform — **not** the Directorate General of Immigration, **not** a law firm, and **not** a government agent. No one can pay to change what we publish; if you proceed with our partner they may pay us a referral fee at no extra cost to you.

The official rules vs real‑world processing time

What the regulations say (and don’t say)

The Second Home Visa framework comes from:

  • Law 6/2011 on Immigration
  • PP 48/2021 on Types and Tariffs of Non‑Tax State Revenue (Penerimaan Negara Bukan Pajak / PNBP) at Immigration
  • Circular IMI‑0740.GR.01.01/2022 which introduced the Second Home Visa category and the IDR 2 billion deposit condition

These documents:

  • Define the **Second Home Visa (E33F)** and associated stay permits (ITAS/ITAP)
  • Set the **deposit requirement** at **IDR 2,000,000,000** (around USD 120–130k, FX‑rate dependent, last verified June 2026)
  • Detail eligible applicant categories (foreign individuals and their keluarga / family dependants)

They **do not** specify “7 days” or “10 days” processing in any article. Any timeframes you see — here or on agent sites — are based on experience with the current online system and staff workload, not on a legal “right” to a decision in X days.

Practice‑based norms from recent files

Based on tracked cases with vetted partners (last verified June 2026):

  • Routine, clean Second Home e‑Visa files: **7–10 working days** from file submission + payment to a decision (approval or rejection).
  • Post‑approval issuance: **1–4 working days** for the e‑Visa PDF to be generated and emailed.
  • On‑arrival reporting and biometrics: **1–3 working days**, depending on:
    • How quickly you book your appointment
    • Local Kantor Imigrasi capacity (Bali/South Jakarta vs smaller cities)

These are averages, not promises. Outliers — both faster and slower — happen.

Step‑by‑step Second Home Visa Indonesia timeline

1. Pre‑application preparation (1–4 weeks, your speed)

This step is entirely in your hands and largely dictates how quickly the “official clock” can start.

Key components:

  • Valid passport (ideally 36+ months remaining, minimum blank pages as per DGI guidance)
  • Proof of deposit capability:
    • The regulation (IMI‑0740.GR.01.01/2022) requires you to place a **state‑bank deposit of IDR 2,000,000,000** (last verified June 2026).
    • Exact timing of when funds must be in the Indonesian state bank account can vary in practice — some offices expect proof early, others at reporting. [VERIFY with your handling office or partner before initiating.]
  • Clean scans of required documents (passport data page, photos, CV/summary, etc.)
  • Dependants’ documents, if applying together (marriage certificate, birth certificates, translated and legalized as required)

Many delays labelled “Immigration is slow” actually stem from **incomplete or low‑quality documents uploaded**. Build in time to get translations, legalisations, and higher‑resolution scans right.

2. Online e‑Visa (E33F) submission (same day to 2–3 days)

The Second Home Visa is processed as an **e‑Visa** in the official online system. In practice:

  • Your sponsor (if using one) or you/your representative opens an account on the official portal.
  • Form fields are completed; required documents are uploaded.
  • Government visa fee is paid online as per the current PNBP tariff under **PP 48/2021** (check latest figure; last verified June 2026 ranges exist and may change).

If everything is ready, this stage can be finished in a single day. If you are coordinating across time zones or waiting for additional documents, expect a couple of days.

3. e‑Visa processing: decision window (7–10 working days typical)

This is the period most people mean by “how long second home visa Indonesia takes.”

Practice‑based window, not guaranteed:

  • Standard, straightforward Second Home E33F files: **7–10 working days** from payment confirmation.
  • Peak load (e.g. post‑holiday backlogs): **10–15 working days** is not unusual.
  • Files that trigger a query (clarification request / “data kurang lengkap”): the clock effectively pauses until you respond.

During this step, the case officer can:

  • Approve
  • Reject
  • Request additional documents or clarifications (“RFI” in practice)

You cannot see every internal action, but the portal status will usually show whether the file is “in process” or awaiting your input.

4. e‑Visa issuance after approval (up to 4 working days)

Once the application is approved, there is typically a short wait before the e‑Visa (PDF with barcode/QR) is generated.

  • Practice‑based range: **1–4 working days** from approval status to e‑Visa email.
  • Sometimes the PDF appears same or next day; sometimes it takes the full window, especially around system maintenance or public holidays.

You should **not book non‑refundable tickets** assuming “instant” e‑Visa issuance after approval. Build in this small but real gap.

5. Travel to Indonesia & airport experience (1–3 days buffer recommended)

Once the e‑Visa is issued, you can use it to enter Indonesia within its validity (check dates on the PDF).

To keep the timeline realistic:

  • Allow at least **1–3 days** from receiving the e‑Visa to your flight for:
    • Printing and double‑checking the details
    • Aligning with your reporting schedule at the local Kantor Imigrasi
  • On arrival, you use the e‑Visa lane, not a Visa on Arrival queue. Airline staff may still verify the e‑Visa at check‑in.

6. Local immigration reporting, biometrics & ITAS (1–3 working days)

After arrival, Second Home Visa holders must complete:

  • Biometrics (photo and fingerprints)
  • Address confirmation
  • Deposit proof verification at the designated Indonesian state bank branch (if not already confirmed online)
  • Issuance of the electronic stay permit (ITAS) linked to your passport

In most major offices (e.g. Bali Ngurah Rai, Denpasar, South Jakarta), practice‑based timelines:

  • Appointment scheduled and attended within **1–5 working days** of arrival, depending on slot availability.
  • ITAS issuance and digital stamp: usually **same day or within 1–3 working days** after biometrics.

Total realistic span from landing to “fully regularised” in‑country: around a week, often less if appointments are available quickly.

What can delay a Second Home Visa application?

1. Incomplete or unclear documentation

This is the most common and the most avoidable delay.

Examples that often trigger questions:

  • Passport scans that cut off machine‑readable lines or are too low‑resolution.
  • Inconsistent personal data across documents (name order, missing middle names).
  • Marriage or birth certificates for dependants:
    • Not translated into Bahasa Indonesia or English by a sworn translator where required.
    • Not legalized/apostilled according to DGI expectations for family reunification cases.
  • Deposit‑related documents that do not clearly show:
    • The exact amount **IDR 2,000,000,000** (last verified June 2026).
    • The account holder’s name matching the applicant.
    • The bank type (state bank) as currently required under IMI‑0740.GR.01.01/2022.

Every time the officer must ask for clarification, the informal “7–10 working days” estimate stretches.

2. Public holidays and system maintenance

Indonesia’s calendar includes:

  • Idul Fitri (Eid) and end‑of‑Ramadan holidays
  • Christmas/New Year closures
  • National and local holidays

During these periods:

  • Working‑day counts pause or slow.
  • System maintenance or updates sometimes coincide with holidays, briefly affecting uploads or payments.

For applications filed 1–2 weeks before a major holiday, double your mental buffer.

3. High‑risk or complex profiles

While the Second Home category is not explicitly labelled as “high‑risk screening,” some files naturally attract more scrutiny:

  • Applicants with:
    • Frequent Indonesian visa rejections in the recent past.
    • Prior overstay or immigration violations (Indonesia or elsewhere).
  • Cases involving:
    • Multiple dependants with partial documentation.
    • Mixed citizenship families where names and documents span different systems.

This does not automatically mean a rejection, but it does increase the chance of requests for additional explanation, stretching timelines.

4. Bank coordination for the IDR 2bn deposit

The **deposit requirement** is set by Circular **IMI‑0740.GR.01.01/2022** at **IDR 2,000,000,000** per main applicant (last verified June 2026). In practice:

  • The deposit must be placed in a designated **Indonesian state bank** (e.g. BRI, Mandiri, BNI, BTN — check current list; this can change).
  • Depending on the local immigration office, proof may be:
    • Insisted on before e‑Visa issuance, or
    • Checked at the reporting stage after arrival.

Delays occur if:

  • Transferring large amounts from overseas runs into compliance checks or daily limits.
  • Bank staff are unfamiliar with the specific Second Home reference format or letter template requested by Immigration.

Because these are banking, not immigration, delays, they often sit outside the 7–10 day “Immigration processing” window.

5. Internal policy shifts and Circular updates

Visa policies in Indonesia are currently in an active phase of digitalisation and adjustment. For the Second Home route, this means:

  • The core framework (IDR 2bn deposit, 5‑year and 10‑year stay options) is still rooted in IMI‑0740.GR.01.01/2022 (last verified June 2026).
  • Implementation details — including document formats, acceptable translations, and proof‑of‑funds interpretation — can shift via internal memos not always instantly reflected online.

During the weeks when a new memo or system change goes live, staff may process more slowly while aligning practice to updated rules.

Can the Second Home Visa be expedited?

There is no widely published, guaranteed “express lane” for Second Home E33F in the same way some categories in other countries offer premium processing.

In practice, there are only a few levers:

1. File quality and completeness

This is the one speed factor you fully control:

  • Use legible, complete scans.
  • Match names and details exactly across documents.
  • Clarify any non‑obvious items (e.g. name change explanations) proactively in a cover note.

Clean, self‑explanatory files reduce questions and rework.

2. Choice of submission timing

If you can, avoid:

  • Filing just before major holidays (Idul Fitri, Christmas/New Year).
  • Submitting late on Fridays, when “day one” in practice may become Monday.

A Monday–Wednesday submission window in a non‑holiday week tends to track most closely to the 7–10 working day expectation.

3. Experienced handling vs “express fee” myth

Using an experienced, vetted partner can:

  • Reduce avoidable errors.
  • Align your file with current, unwritten preferences at specific offices.

But:

  • No reputable party can truly “jump the queue” in exchange for an unofficial fee.
  • Any promise to “guarantee 3‑day approval” for Second Home should be treated skeptically — the Directorate General of Immigration retains full discretion.

If you want structured help with a realistic timeline for your situation, you can plan your trip with us and our WhatsApp‑based partner team can walk through your expected calendar (information only, not legal advice).

Work rights, tax and how they intersect with timing

Second Home Visa work restrictions

The Second Home Visa is, by design, a **non‑work** residency route.

As of last verification June 2026, based on IMI‑0740.GR.01.01/2022 and the Immigration Law framework:

  • The visa allows you to **live** in Indonesia for a long period (5–10 years) subject to continued compliance.
  • It does **not** grant the right to:
    • Take up a local salaried job.
    • Be registered as a director/commissioner with day‑to‑day operational responsibilities without a compatible work permit (RPTKA + IMTA / current nomenclature).

If you intend to work on‑the‑ground or be involved in operational business activities, you will need to explore other **KITAS** routes (e.g. Investor KITAS, Work KITAS), which have **different processing times**, requirements, and tax positions.

Tax residence timing

While this page does not offer tax advice, there are basic timing facts that matter:

  • Indonesia generally treats individuals as **tax residents** if staying more than **183 days** in a 12‑month period, or if they intend to reside here (check latest Directorate General of Taxes guidance; last verified June 2026).
  • A Second Home Visa holder who spends most of the year in Indonesia may become a tax resident, regardless of whether they work locally.
  • Tax registration and planning may run in parallel with immigration timelines but is governed by different laws and authorities.

Because tax is highly situational and YMYL‑sensitive, speak with a qualified tax professional familiar with Indonesian law and your home‑country rules before relying on any assumption about timing.

Second Home Visa vs other long‑stay routes: timing snapshot

Route Typical e‑Visa / approval time (practice‑based) Key complexity
Second Home Visa (E33F) ~7–10 working days after complete submission (last verified June 2026) High deposit (IDR 2bn) and state‑bank coordination
Investor KITAS Often 10–15 working days (varies by sector and shareholding) Company documentation, BKPM/OSS alignment, share capital
Work KITAS Commonly 15–30 working days across RPTKA + visa steps Manpower approvals, employer compliance, quota
Retirement KITAS Often 10–15 working days Age threshold, accommodation contract, local sponsorship

The Second Home Visa is not the fastest possible route, but it offers a relatively predictable processing band when your finances and documents are straightforward.

Practical planning tips for your Second Home Visa timeline

1. Start backwards from your ideal move‑in date

For a typical main‑applicant file with standard complexity, a conservative backwards count might be:

  • Desired move‑in to long‑term rental in Bali/Jakarta: **Day 0**
  • On‑arrival reporting + biometrics buffer: **+7 days**
  • Flight date: **Day −7**
  • e‑Visa issuance buffer: **−3 days** from flight
  • e‑Visa processing: **−10 working days** from issuance buffer
  • Document prep and bank deposit coordination: **−2–4 weeks**

In plain terms: for a low‑stress experience, start preparing documents and deposit planning **6–8 weeks** before the date you want to be settled in Indonesia.

2. Allow extra time if bringing dependants

Spouses and children can obtain derivative Second Home status, but:

  • Marriage and birth certificates often need:
    • Official translation into Bahasa Indonesia or English.
    • Legalisation or apostille from your home country and possibly additional verification.
  • Different surnames or adoption cases almost always require more explanation.

All this typically adds **1–3 weeks** to the front of your process, before Immigration’s stopwatch even starts.

3. Keep expectations realistic and flexible

Because no regulation guarantees a fixed number of days, build in:

  • At least a **one‑week buffer** on top of the expected 7–10 working days.
  • Flexibility to adjust travel plans if an RFI or bank delay stretches the timeline.

If you need help mapping a realistic Second Home Visa Indonesia timeline to your specific situation, you can plan your trip and request WhatsApp‑based planning support from a vetted partner (information only, no guarantee of approval).

Independence, scope and what this page is — and is not

  • We are an independent information resource on Indonesia’s Second Home Visa.
  • We are not the Directorate General of Immigration, not a government office, and not a law firm.
  • Everything here is based on:
    • Published regulations (Law 6/2011, PP 48/2021, IMI‑0740.GR.01.01/2022)
    • Observed processing practice with vetted partners, last verified June 2026
  • No one can pay to change what we publish; if you proceed with our partner they may pay us a referral fee at no extra cost to you.
  • This is general information, not personal legal, immigration, or tax advice, and it does not guarantee approval or specific processing times for your case.

FAQs on Indonesia Second Home Visa processing time

How long does the Indonesia Second Home Visa take to process?

In practice, a straightforward Second Home e‑Visa (E33F) file takes about 7–10 working days from complete online submission and fee payment to a decision, plus up to 4 working days for the e‑Visa PDF to be issued. This is based on recent cases as of June 2026 and is not guaranteed by regulation.

Can I speed up my Second Home Visa application?

There is no official premium or express service for the Second Home Visa published in the regulations. The only reliable ways to avoid delays are to submit a complete, clear file; coordinate deposit proof carefully; and avoid filing during major public holidays. Any offer to “guarantee” ultra‑fast approval should be treated cautiously.

What are the main reasons Second Home Visa applications are delayed?

Common causes include incomplete or unclear documents (especially family certificates and deposit proofs), public holidays and backlogs, additional scrutiny for complex profiles, and banking delays in placing or evidencing the IDR 2,000,000,000 deposit in an Indonesian state bank. Each of these can push processing beyond the typical 7–10 working days.

Do I have work rights while my Second Home Visa is in process?

No. The Second Home Visa category is a non‑work residency route. It does not grant the right to take a local job or perform operational roles in an Indonesian company. Work rights require a different visa and permit structure, such as a Work KITAS supported by the relevant manpower approvals.

When should I book my flight to Indonesia?

The safest approach is to wait until your Second Home e‑Visa PDF has been issued, then allow a few days of buffer before your departure. Because no regulation guarantees processing within a fixed number of days, avoid non‑refundable bookings based only on estimated timelines. If your schedule is tight, discuss your calendar with a professional before committing and consider a generous margin for unexpected delays.

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