Bali Visa for Austria Citizens 2026 — VOA, KITAS & Long-Stay
Austrian citizens are eligible for the Bali Visa on Arrival in 2026, costing IDR 500,000 (~EUR 32) for 30 days, extendable once to 60. For longer stays, Austrians commonly choose the Digital Nomad E33G, Retirement E33F, or Second Home Visa E33. All arrivals must complete the All Indonesia Arrival Card before travel.
Last updated: 2026 · Figures verified against evisa.imigrasi.go.id and imigrasi.go.id, Direktorat Jenderal Imigrasi. EUR conversions are approximate and move with exchange rates.
Do Austrians Need a Visa for Bali in 2026?
Yes — Austrian passport-holders need a visa for Bali, but it is one of the simplest tourist visas in the world to obtain. Austrian citizens are on the Visa on Arrival (VOA) list. For a holiday you do not need to apply at the Indonesian Embassy in Vienna beforehand (the official term in German is “Visum”). You either buy the VOA when you land at Ngurah Rai Airport, or — the smoother route — apply for the eVOA online before flying from Vienna.
The VOA gives you 30 days from arrival and can be extended once for another 30 days — up to 60 days in Bali. For a typical Austrian trip — a holiday, a honeymoon, a diving or wellness trip, or a winter escape from the Alpine cold — the VOA or eVOA covers everything. Bali is a popular tropical antidote to the long Austrian winter, with many travellers coming for several weeks between December and March.
If you plan to stay beyond 60 days — for remote work, retirement, or a long stay — you will need a longer visa arranged in advance, covered below. A practical note for detail-minded Austrian travellers: Indonesia’s requirements are precise and change frequently, so it pays to prepare documents exactly to the current 2026 rules — getting one detail wrong (passport validity, photo format, the Arrival Card window) is the usual cause of problems.
Visa Options for Austrians
| Visa | Duration | Cost (IDR / approx EUR) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| VOA / eVOA | 30 days, +30 | IDR 500,000 (~EUR 32) gov fee | Holidays and winter escapes up to 60 days |
| B211A Visit Visa | 60 days, extendable | from IDR 1,500,000 (~EUR 95) gov fee | Longer winter stays, business meetings, “try before KITAS” |
| Multiple-Entry D1/D2 | 1–5 yrs, 60 days/entry | Contact for quote | Austrians flying in and out repeatedly |
| Digital Nomad E33G | 1 year (not renewable) | Contact for all-in quote | Remote workers earning USD 60,000+/yr |
| Retirement E33F | 1 year, renewable | from IDR 1,000,000/yr stay permit | Austrian nationals aged 55+ retiring in Bali |
| Second Home Visa E33 | 5 or 10 years | + IDR 2 billion (~EUR 125,000) deposit | Long-term residents, any age 19+ |
Government fees shown; our transparent service fee is itemised separately. See the full price list in IDR / USD / AUD.
How Austrians Apply for the eVOA — Step by Step
We recommend Austrian travellers apply for the eVOA online before departure:
- Go to the official portal — evisa.imigrasi.go.id (the only official Indonesian eVOA site, in Indonesian and English; beware German-language lookalike “Bali Visum” scam sites). Apply between 90 days and 48 hours before departure.
- Create an account and select “Visa on Arrival (B1)” — choose Austria as your nationality.
- Upload your documents — your Austrian passport bio page (valid 6+ months beyond arrival, with a blank page) and a passport-style photo, as a clear colour scan that meets the portal’s exact size and format rules.
- Pay the IDR 500,000 fee with a Visa, Mastercard or JCB card — your Austrian debit or credit card works fine for the EUR-equivalent charge; your bank converts at its own rate.
- Receive your eVOA by email as a PDF — print it or keep it on your phone. Up to five applicants per session suits families and friend groups.
- On arrival, use the eVOA lane at Ngurah Rai, complete the All Indonesia Arrival Card and pay the tourist levy.
Prefer to hand it off? Our team prepares and submits your eVOA for you, checks every document against the current rules so nothing is rejected, and confirms it before you board. Message us to start.
Best Long-Stay Visa for Austrians
Austrian long-stayers in Bali are typically remote professionals, winter-escaping retirees and lifestyle relocators, so the long-stay choice usually comes down to three permits:
- Working remotely for an overseas employer or clients? The Digital Nomad Visa E33G gives one year if you earn USD 60,000+/year and hold an overseas employment contract. It is not renewable — you exit and re-apply to continue.
- Aged 55 or over and retiring (or overwintering long-term) in Bali? The Retirement KITAS E33F requires USD 3,000/month income, health insurance, and a Bali rental — popular with Austrian retirees escaping the Alpine winter for several months or settling permanently.
- Settling for years at any age, or buying property? The Second Home Visa E33 requires an IDR 2 billion (~EUR 125,000) deposit in a state bank within 90 days of arrival, or qualifying property — no employment requirement, no upper age limit.
Some Austrian clients begin on a B211A for a long winter season, then convert to a KITAS onshore if they decide to stay. We will map the cheapest legal path, with figures in euros.
Austrian Passport — What You Need at Ngurah Rai Airport
When you land in Bali on an Austrian passport, the entry process expects:
- Passport validity: at least 6 months beyond your arrival date, with at least one blank page.
- Your visa: a VOA bought on arrival or, ideally, a pre-approved eVOA PDF.
- All Indonesia Arrival Card (AIDC): complete it free at allindonesia.imigrasi.go.id within 3 days before arrival — required for every Austrian arrival.
- Bali Tourist Levy: IDR 150,000 (~EUR 9) per person, via the Love Bali app or on arrival.
- Proof of onward/return travel and accommodation details.
- Proof of funds: immigration may ask for evidence of around USD 2,000 (~EUR 1,850) or equivalent, plus roughly three months of bank statements — rarely checked for short holidays, but have it ready.
The authoritative source is Indonesian immigration at imigrasi.go.id. The Austrian Foreign Ministry (BMEIA) travel advice echoes these requirements, but where it conflicts, follow the Indonesian rule.
Bali Visa Cost for Austrians in EUR
The VOA is always priced in Indonesian rupiah at IDR 500,000. Approximate euro figures for the key items (your bank sets the actual rate):
| Item | IDR | Approx EUR |
|---|---|---|
| VOA / eVOA (30 days) | IDR 500,000 | ~EUR 32 |
| VOA extension (+30 days) | IDR 500,000 | ~EUR 32 |
| Bali Tourist Levy | IDR 150,000 | ~EUR 9 |
| B211A visit visa (gov fee) | IDR 1,500,000 | ~EUR 95 |
| Proof of funds (suggested) | ~IDR 31,000,000 | ~EUR 1,850 |
| Second Home Visa deposit | IDR 2,000,000,000 | ~EUR 125,000 |
EUR conversions are approximate and move with the euro–rupiah exchange rate; the rupiah amounts are fixed. Our pricing page shows the full IDR / USD / AUD table including our service fees.
FAQ — Bali Visa for Austrians
Q1: Is Bali visa-free for Austrian citizens in 2026?
No. Austria is not on Indonesia’s visa-free list — but it is VOA-eligible, which is nearly as easy. You pay IDR 500,000 (~EUR 32) for 30 days and can extend once to 60 days. No need to visit the Indonesian Embassy in Vienna for a normal holiday.
Q2: Can I use my Austrian bank card for the eVOA payment?
Yes. The official portal evisa.imigrasi.go.id accepts Visa, Mastercard and JCB, so most Austrian debit and credit cards work for the IDR 500,000 (~EUR 32) charge. Your bank converts to euros at its own rate and may add a foreign-transaction fee. If a card is declined, we can submit on your behalf.
Q3: I want to escape the Austrian winter in Bali for a few months — which visa?
The VOA covers 60 days (30 + extension). For a longer winter season of around 90 days or more, a B211A visit visa (60 days, extendable) is the usual choice, and it can be converted to a KITAS if you decide to stay on. We’ll help you plan the whole season’s visa from the start.
Q4: How careful do Austrians need to be with the documents?
Very — Indonesia’s requirements are exact and change often, and a single mismatch (passport validity under 6 months, a non-compliant photo, or missing the 3-day Arrival Card window) is the most common cause of delays. We check every document against the current 2026 rules so your application is right first time.
Q5: How long can Austrian citizens stay in Bali?
On the VOA/eVOA, up to 60 days (30 days plus one 30-day extension). For longer, Austrians use a B211A, a KITAS (1–2 years), or the Second Home Visa (5–10 years).
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Escaping the Alpine winter for Bali? We make the visa effortless. Whether you need a quick eVOA for a few weeks of sun or a B211A for a full overwintering season, our licensed, English-speaking team checks every detail against the current rules and handles it start to finish, with a transparent quote in euros.
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“I’m a stickler for getting paperwork exactly right, and Indonesia’s rules kept changing. Juara Holding Group confirmed every requirement for 2026, arranged our eVOAs, and there was not a single hiccup at the airport.” — Thomas H., Vienna, Austria ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
(Illustrative testimonial — representative of an Austrian client case; real reviews on our testimonials page.)
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