Guide to buying land in Bali covers 14 essential checks including land certificates, foreign ownership rules, zoning, permits, legal, taxes, and utilities to ensure a smooth, compliant purchase.
foreign ownership Bali
This guide clarifies Bali property options for foreigners, explaining leasehold (Hak Sewa), usage rights (Hak Pakai), and PMA company ownership, plus key legal steps and due diligence for safe investment.
This guide explains Bali property ownership: foreigners typically use leasehold (Hak Sewa) up to 25 years; locals hold freehold (Hak Milik). It covers legalities, costs, risks, investment tips, and relocation services.
This guide explains Bali property ownership options, legal checks, permits, zoning, taxes, and contracts for overseas buyers to ensure safe investments and avoid legal issues.
This guide clarifies Bali property ownership: Leasehold (Hak Sewa) suits foreigners for limited terms; Freehold (Hak Milik) offers full ownership to Indonesians. Foreigners can use Hak Pakai or PT PMA structures. Legal due diligence and notary involvement are essential. Bali Freedom Property aids smooth, compliant transactions.
In 2026, foreigners can legally buy Bali villas via Hak Sewa leaseholds or PT PMA companies, ensuring proper visas (KITAS, KITAP) and compliance with zoning, SLF, PBG, and notary due diligence.
Key Bali property legal tips: understand foreign ownership rights (Hak Pakai, Guna Bangunan, Sewa), avoid nominee risks, check zoning/permits (ITR, PBG SLF), perform due diligence with an independent notary.