Skip to main content
An independent, licensed Indonesian visa service
BALI VISAIndonesian visa services

Singapore · 150,000+ arrivals / year

Bali Visa for Singaporeans (2026).

Singaporeans have the easiest Bali entry of any nationality on this site: as ASEAN citizens, Singapore passport holders enter Indonesia visa-free for up to 30 days — no fee, no application, nothing to book. The catch is the fine print: visa-free entry cannot be extended, cannot be converted, and doesn't cover every purpose. If your trip might run past 30 days, or you're going for anything more than tourism and meetings, you need a visa arranged before the 2.5-hour flight from Changi. This page explains when visa-free is enough and when it isn't, with prices in Singapore dollars.

Question 01

Do Singaporeans need a visa for Bali?

No — for trips up to 30 days. Singapore passport holders enter Indonesia visa-free as ASEAN citizens. For anything longer than 30 days, arrange an eVOA or C1 Tourist Visa before you fly.

As an ASEAN member state, Singapore benefits from Indonesia's visa exemption: 30 days on arrival, free, covering tourism, family visits and business meetings. The critical limitation is that visa-free entry is a hard 30-day cap — it cannot be extended at an immigration office and cannot be converted to another visa in-country. Singaporeans planning 31–60 days should enter on an eVOA instead (30 days + one 30-day extension), and stays of 61–180 days need the C1 Tourist Visa (formerly B211A) arranged before departure. Every visitor still pays the IDR 150,000 Bali Tourist Levy regardless of visa status.

When visa-free entry is enough — and when it isn't

Visa-free (30 days) covers the classic Singapore long-weekend and holiday pattern: tourism, visiting friends and family, attending meetings or conferences. It costs nothing and requires no application — just a passport valid 6+ months. It is not enough if: your stay might exceed 30 days (there is no extension — overstaying costs IDR 1,000,000 per day), you want the flexibility to extend, or you're relocating, working or investing. The single most common mistake Singaporeans make is entering visa-free 'to see how it goes' and then discovering at day 25 that the only legal option is flying out.

Staying longer: eVOA and C1 in Singapore dollars

For 31–60 days, enter on the eVOA — government fee IDR 500,000 (about S$47) — which extends once in-country for 30 more days. We handle the extension so you never visit an immigration office. For 61–180 days — a remote-work season, an extended family stay — the C1 Tourist Visa (formerly B211A) grants 60 days on arrival and extends twice; government and sponsor fees run around S$220 with our service. Frequent flyers doing monthly Bali trips can simply keep using visa-free entry; frequent business travellers who need longer per-visit stays should look at the D2 multiple-entry visa (1, 2 or 5 years, 60 days per entry).

The Tourist Levy still applies to Singaporeans

Visa-free does not mean fee-free: every visitor to Bali, including ASEAN citizens and children, pays the IDR 150,000 (~S$14) Bali Tourist Levy through the Love Bali portal at lovebali.baliprov.go.id. Customs at Ngurah Rai checks the QR receipt on arrival. The All Indonesia Declaration Form (allindonesia.imigrasi.go.id) is also mandatory within 3 days before arrival, visa or no visa. Both take minutes online — do them when you check in for your flight.

Working, investing and living in Bali from Singapore

Remote work for a Singapore employer during a visa-free or eVOA stay is tolerated in practice for short periods, but anything structured — relocating while keeping your Singapore job, running a business, investing in property through a PT PMA — should sit on the right permit. The E33G Remote Worker KITAS grants a year of residence for verified foreign-income earners; the Investor KITAS (E28A) suits Singaporeans buying into or founding an Indonesian company. Both are lodged from our Bali office with document checklists sent to your WhatsApp.

Watch-outs

Common mistakes Singaporeans make.

  • Pitfall 01

    Assuming visa-free can be extended

    It can't — 30 days is a hard cap with no extension and no in-country conversion. If there's any chance you'll stay longer, enter on an eVOA instead. At day 31 the meter runs at IDR 1,000,000 per day.

  • Pitfall 02

    Skipping the Tourist Levy because 'no visa needed'

    The IDR 150,000 levy applies to every visitor regardless of visa status, Singaporeans included. Pay on the Love Bali portal before you fly and keep the QR receipt.

  • Pitfall 03

    Passport under 6 months' validity

    Visa-free entry still requires 6 months' passport validity from arrival. ICA renewals are fast, but check before booking — airlines enforce it at Changi.

  • Pitfall 04

    Entering visa-free, then wanting to stay

    The only fix is a flight out and back in on the right visa — Singapore is close, but it's still a wasted day and airfare. Decide your maximum stay before entering, not after.

Help centre

Singapore visa FAQ.

Anything not answered here? WhatsApp our team — typical reply in under an hour during business days.

Ask on WhatsApp
  • Do Singaporeans need a visa for Bali in 2026?

    Not for stays up to 30 days — Singapore passport holders enter Indonesia visa-free as ASEAN citizens. For 31–60 days, enter on an eVOA (extendable once). For 61–180 days, arrange the C1 Tourist Visa before travelling.

  • Can Singaporeans extend the 30-day visa-free stay in Bali?

    No. Visa-free entry is a hard 30-day limit — it cannot be extended or converted in-country. If your trip might run longer, enter on an eVOA instead: same 30 days, but extendable once to 60.

  • Do Singaporeans pay the Bali Tourist Levy?

    Yes. The IDR 150,000 (~S$14) levy applies to every visitor to Bali regardless of nationality or visa status, including children. Pay through the Love Bali portal before flying and show the QR receipt at customs.

  • How much does a Bali visa cost for Singaporeans?

    Visa-free entry costs nothing for stays up to 30 days. The eVOA government fee is IDR 500,000 (about S$47) if you need the extendable option. The C1 Tourist Visa for long stays runs around S$220 in government and sponsor fees with our service.

  • Can I do business meetings in Bali visa-free?

    Yes — meetings, conferences and negotiations are covered by ASEAN visa-free entry, and by the eVOA for longer trips. Local employment or receiving payment from an Indonesian company requires a Working KITAS.

  • What documents do Singaporeans need to enter Bali?

    For visa-free entry: a passport valid 6+ months with blank pages, a return or onward ticket, the Tourist Levy QR receipt and the All Indonesia Declaration Form submitted within 3 days before arrival. The eVOA adds a passport scan and photo.

  • Can Singaporeans work remotely from Bali?

    Short remote-work stints fit within visa-free or eVOA stays. For a structured long stay, Indonesia's E33G Remote Worker KITAS grants 12 months of residence for verified foreign-income earners — we confirm eligibility in a free consultation.

  • What happens if I overstay the visa-free period?

    IDR 1,000,000 (~S$85) per day, payable on departure, with deportation risk for long overstays. Because visa-free can't be extended, plan around the 30-day cap — or enter on an eVOA for breathing room.

Ready when you are

Start your Singapore application today.

Three steps. Pick your visa, share your WhatsApp, and we'll send a secure Stripe payment link plus document upload link within an hour.