Bali · Invest
Invest in Bali
Independent guide to investing in Bali: villas, leasehold vs freehold, PT PMA, real yield and how to avoid the typical mistakes.
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Why Bali makes sense as an investment destination
Lorem ipsum. Bali concentrates sustained tourist demand, an increasingly stable international middle class and infrastructure mature enough to operate rental villas as an investable asset.
Four entry routes
- Buy a finished villa with rental management.
- Buy off-plan with an established developer.
- Buy land and build to specification.
- Invest fractionally in a joint vehicle.
What no one tells you
- Leasehold and freehold solve different problems. Mixing them up costs money.
- The PBG/SLF permit is what allows a villa to legally operate as a holiday rental.
- Operational management makes or breaks real yield. Don’t pick it from a brochure.
Frequently asked questions
Can foreigners own property in Bali? +
Not under hak milik (full freehold). Foreigners use leasehold (up to 80 years) or operate through an Indonesian company (PT PMA). Each path has different fiscal and operational implications.
What's a reasonable minimum investment? +
Depends on area and product. A turnkey 1-bedroom villa in Pererenan or Ubud starts around 180,000 EUR. Below that, you're usually looking at fractional or commercially weak product.
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