Bali Visa for Denmark Citizens 2026 — VOA, KITAS & Long-Stay

Danish citizens are eligible for the Bali Visa on Arrival in 2026, costing IDR 500,000 (~DKK 240 / USD 35) for 30 days, extendable once to 60. For longer stays, Danes commonly choose the Digital Nomad E33G, Multiple-Entry D1, 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. DKK conversions are approximate; the visa is paid in IDR.


Do Danes Need a Visa for Bali in 2026?

Yes — Danish passport-holders need a visa for Bali, but the standard route is simple. Danish citizens are on the Visa on Arrival (VOA) list, so for a normal holiday you do not need to apply in advance at the Indonesian Embassy in Copenhagen. You buy the VOA on arrival at Ngurah Rai (Denpasar) Airport, or — far more reliably — apply for the eVOA (visum) online before you fly.

The VOA grants 30 days from arrival and can be extended once for a further 30 days — a maximum of 60 days in Bali. For a holiday or a first scouting trip, the VOA or eVOA is enough.

A point worth knowing for Danes: although Denmark is in the EU, it holds opt-outs and is not in the Eurozone — but for Indonesia none of that matters. Indonesia treats Denmark as an individual VOA-eligible country, and your Danish passport is what counts. Bali is a favourite winter-sun and gap-year destination for Danes, with a steady community of remote workers and families settling for longer. The long-stay visas below apply, quoted in kroner and dollars.


Visa Options for Danes

Visa Duration Cost (IDR / approx DKK) Best for
VOA / eVOA 30 days, +30 IDR 500,000 (~DKK 240 / USD 35) gov fee Holidays, first scouting stays up to 60 days
B211A Visit Visa 60 days, extendable from IDR 1,500,000 (~DKK 720) gov fee Longer holidays, gap-year stays
Multiple-Entry D1/D2 1–5 yrs, 60 days/entry Contact for quote Danes flying in and out of Bali repeatedly
Digital Nomad E33G 1 year (not renewable) Contact for all-in quote Remote workers earning USD 60,000+/yr
Family KITAS E31 1 year, renewable Contact for quote Spouses/children of a KITAS holder
Second Home Visa E33 5 or 10 years + IDR 2 billion (~USD 130,000) deposit Long-term residents, any age 19+

Government fees shown; our service fee is itemised separately. See the full price list in IDR / USD / AUD.


How Danes Apply for the eVOA — Step by Step

We recommend Danish travellers apply for the eVOA online before departure so the airport process is fast and your stay is extendable:

  1. Use the official portal only — evisa.imigrasi.go.id. This is the sole official Indonesian eVOA site; check the URL to avoid scam copies. Apply 90 days to 48 hours before departure.
  2. Register and select “Visa on Arrival (B1)”, choosing Denmark as your nationality.
  3. Upload your documents — the bio page of your Danish passport (pas), valid 6+ months beyond arrival with a blank page, plus a passport-style photo. If you’re travelling as a family, prepare each person’s passport.
  4. Pay IDR 500,000 by Visa, Mastercard or JCB. Your Danish card is charged the krone equivalent at your bank’s rate; Danish cards rarely have issues, but tell your bank anyway.
  5. Receive the eVOA PDF by email — print it and keep a phone copy. Up to five applicants per session — handy for a Danish family travelling together.
  6. On arrival, use the eVOA lane, complete the All Indonesia Arrival Card, and pay the tourist levy.

If you’d prefer we handle it for the whole family, message us and we’ll prepare or submit the eVOAs for you.


Best Long-Stay Visa for Danes

Danes who base in Bali range from remote professionals and entrepreneurs to families taking a year abroad and lifestyle residents. The long-stay choice usually comes down to:

  • Working remotely for an overseas employer? 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.
  • Bringing your family? If one partner holds a KITAS, the other and the children can apply for a Family KITAS E31 as dependants — a common route for Danish families relocating for a school year or longer.
  • Coming and going seasonally? A Multiple-Entry visa (D1/D2) — valid 1, 2 or 5 years with up to 60 days per entry — fits a flexible pattern.
  • Settling for years at any age, or buying property? The Second Home Visa E33 requires an IDR 2 billion (~USD 130,000) deposit in a state bank within 90 days of arrival, or qualifying property — no employment requirement, no upper age limit.

Many Danes start on a B211A and convert to a KITAS onshore. We’ll map the cleanest legal path, in kroner and US dollars.


Danish Passport — What You Need at Ngurah Rai Airport

Arriving in Bali on a Danish passport, you should have:

  • Passport validity: at least 6 months beyond arrival, with a blank page (each family member).
  • Your visa: VOA on arrival or a pre-approved eVOA.
  • All Indonesia Arrival Card (AIDC): free, at allindonesia.imigrasi.go.id within 3 days before arrival — one per traveller, including children.
  • Bali Tourist Levy: IDR 150,000 per person.
  • Onward/return ticket and accommodation booking.
  • Proof of funds: be ready to show around USD 2,000 equivalent and roughly three months of bank statements.

The authoritative source is Indonesian immigration at imigrasi.go.id — follow the Indonesian rule over third-party advice. Denmark’s EU membership and opt-outs do not change Indonesian requirements.


Bali Visa Cost for Danes in DKK

The VOA is priced in rupiah at IDR 500,000. Approximate krone figures below (your card sets the actual rate):

Item IDR Approx DKK Approx USD
VOA / eVOA (30 days) IDR 500,000 ~DKK 240 ~USD 35
VOA extension (+30 days) IDR 500,000 ~DKK 240 ~USD 35
Bali Tourist Levy IDR 150,000 ~DKK 72 ~USD 10
B211A visit visa (gov fee) IDR 1,500,000 ~DKK 720 ~USD 95
Proof of funds (suggested) ~IDR 32,000,000 ~DKK 15,300 ~USD 2,000
Second Home Visa deposit IDR 2,000,000,000 ~DKK 960,000 ~USD 130,000

DKK conversions are approximate and move with the DKK/IDR rate; rupiah amounts are fixed. Our pricing page shows the full IDR / USD / AUD table including our service fees.


FAQ — Bali Visa for Danes

Q1: Is Bali visa-free for Danish citizens in 2026?
No. Denmark is not on Indonesia’s visa-free list, but Danes are VOA-eligible: IDR 500,000 (~DKK 240 / USD 35) for 30 days, extendable once to 60. EU membership and Denmark’s opt-outs don’t apply — Indonesia treats Denmark individually. Apply for the eVOA online or buy the VOA on arrival.

Q2: Can a Danish family apply for the eVOA together?
Yes. One eVOA session covers up to five applicants, so a family can apply in a single transaction — each person still needs their own valid passport and AIDC. We often handle the whole family’s eVOAs for Danish clients. Message us to arrange it.

Q3: We want a school year in Bali — what visa do we need?
A year abroad needs a long-stay visa, not a tourist entry. Typically one parent holds a KITAS (e.g. Digital Nomad or Investor) and the rest of the family applies for a Family KITAS E31. Children attend international schools on this basis. We’ll plan the full family setup.

Q4: How long can Danish citizens stay in Bali?
On the VOA/eVOA, up to 60 days (30 + one 30-day extension). For longer, use a B211A, a Multiple-Entry D1, a KITAS, or the Second Home Visa.

Q5: Can Danes work remotely from Bali legally?
Only on the right visa. The VOA and B211A prohibit work, and enforcement is active in 2026. Danish remote workers earning USD 60,000+/year need the Digital Nomad Visa E33G. Read the 2026 rules →.


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From a quick VOA to a full family year abroad, we make Bali simple for Danes. Our licensed, English-speaking team handles the paperwork — including whole-family eVOAs and Family KITAS — with a transparent quote in kroner and US dollars.

🟢 WhatsApp Us Now · 📞 +62 811 3941 4563 · ✉️ bd@juaraholding.com

“We took a year in Bali with two kids. Juara Holding Group sorted my Digital Nomad KITAS and Family KITAS for my wife and children, handled everyone’s arrival cards, and quoted it all in kroner. They made a complicated family move feel easy.” — Mads J., Ubud (from Aarhus), Denmark ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
(Illustrative testimonial — representative of a Danish client case; real reviews on our testimonials page.)

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