Bali Visa for Singapore Citizens 2026 — Visa-Free Entry & Long-Stay
Singapore citizens enter Bali visa-free for up to 30 days in 2026 — no visa fee — as ASEAN members. Visa-free entry is non-extendable; to stay longer, Singaporeans use the Visa on Arrival (IDR 500,000, ~SGD 47, extendable to 60 days) or a long-stay visa like the Digital Nomad E33G or Second Home Visa. All arrivals complete the All Indonesia Arrival Card.
Last updated: 2026 · Status verified against imigrasi.go.id, Direktorat Jenderal Imigrasi. Visa-free policy can change — confirm before travel.
Do Singaporeans Need a Visa for Bali in 2026?
No — for a short trip, Singapore passport-holders do not need a visa for Bali. As fellow members of ASEAN, Singapore citizens enjoy visa-free entry to Indonesia for up to 30 days of tourism, at no visa cost. You simply arrive at Ngurah Rai Airport with a valid passport and the required arrival card; there is no VOA fee to pay for a standard short visit. This makes Bali one of the easiest international getaways for Singaporeans — a short flight, no visa paperwork, no fee.
There is one important limitation: visa-free entry cannot be extended and cannot be converted to a longer permit onshore. The free 30 days is exactly that — 30 days, then you must leave.
So if you want to stay longer than 30 days, you have two choices:
- Buy the Visa on Arrival (VOA) instead of using visa-free entry. The VOA costs IDR 500,000 (~SGD 47) for 30 days but, unlike visa-free entry, it can be extended once to 60 days total. If you know in advance you’ll want more than 30 days, choose the VOA/eVOA from the start.
- Apply for a long-stay visa (KITAS or Second Home) if you intend to live, work or invest in Bali for months or years.
We cover both routes below.
Visa Options for Singaporeans
| Option | Duration | Cost (IDR / approx SGD) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa-free entry (ASEAN) | Up to 30 days | Free (no visa fee) | Short holidays, weekend/long-weekend getaways |
| VOA / eVOA | 30 days, +30 | IDR 500,000 (~SGD 47) gov fee | Stays you may want to extend beyond 30 days |
| B211A Visit Visa | 60 days, extendable | from IDR 1,500,000 (~SGD 140) gov fee | Longer holidays, business meetings |
| Multiple-Entry D1/D2 | 1–5 yrs, 60 days/entry | Contact for quote | Frequent Singapore–Bali travel |
| Digital Nomad E33G | 1 year (not renewable) | Contact for all-in quote | Remote workers earning USD 60,000+/yr |
| Second Home Visa E33 | 5 or 10 years | + IDR 2 billion (~SGD 174,000) 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.
When Singaporeans Should Apply for the eVOA Anyway
Visa-free is great for short trips — but if you might stay beyond 30 days, apply for the eVOA before you fly so your stay is extendable:
- Use the official portal only — evisa.imigrasi.go.id. It is the sole official Indonesian eVOA site; check the URL to avoid scam copies. Apply 90 days to 48 hours before departure.
- Register and select “Visa on Arrival (B1)”, choosing Singapore as your nationality.
- Upload your Singapore passport bio page (valid 6+ months beyond arrival, with a blank page) and a passport-style photo.
- Pay IDR 500,000 by Visa, Mastercard or JCB — your Singapore card is charged the SGD equivalent (about S$47) at your bank’s rate.
- Receive the eVOA PDF by email — print it and keep a phone copy. Up to five applicants per session suits families.
- On arrival, use the eVOA lane, complete the All Indonesia Arrival Card, and pay the tourist levy.
If you’re certain your trip is 30 days or fewer, you can skip this and simply enter visa-free. Ask us if you’re unsure which route fits your dates.
Best Long-Stay Visa for Singaporeans
Singaporeans who base in Bali tend to be remote professionals, business owners and lifestyle/property investors drawn by proximity and lower living costs — so 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.
- Investing in or running a business in Bali? Many Singaporeans set up a PT PMA company and hold an Investor KITAS E28A — Singapore is one of Indonesia’s largest foreign-investment sources.
- Settling for years at any age, or buying property? The Second Home Visa E33 requires an IDR 2 billion (~SGD 174,000) deposit in a state bank within 90 days of arrival, or qualifying property — no employment requirement, no upper age limit.
Note that visa-free or VOA entries cannot be converted to a KITAS onshore; for a long stay you generally enter on a B211A and convert, or apply for the KITAS directly. We’ll map the cleanest route in Singapore dollars.
Singapore Passport — What You Need at Ngurah Rai Airport
Even on visa-free entry, Singaporeans need:
- Passport validity: at least 6 months beyond arrival, with a blank page.
- Entry basis: visa-free (≤30 days) or a VOA/eVOA if you want an extendable stay.
- All Indonesia Arrival Card (AIDC): free, completed at allindonesia.imigrasi.go.id within 3 days before arrival — this applies to visa-free arrivals too.
- Bali Tourist Levy: IDR 150,000 (~SGD 14) per person.
- Onward/return ticket and accommodation booking.
- Proof of funds: be ready to evidence around USD 2,000 (~SGD 2,680) if asked (rare for short visa-free trips, but possible).
The Singapore passport is among the world’s strongest, but the authoritative entry rule is set by Indonesian immigration at imigrasi.go.id — follow it over third-party advice.
Bali Visa Cost for Singaporeans in SGD
Visa-free entry is free. If you choose the VOA for an extendable stay, it’s priced in rupiah at IDR 500,000. Approximate Singapore-dollar figures (your card sets the actual rate):
| Item | IDR | Approx SGD |
|---|---|---|
| Visa-free entry (≤30 days) | — | Free |
| VOA / eVOA (30 days) | IDR 500,000 | ~S$47 |
| VOA extension (+30 days) | IDR 500,000 | ~S$47 |
| Bali Tourist Levy | IDR 150,000 | ~S$14 |
| B211A visit visa (gov fee) | IDR 1,500,000 | ~S$140 |
| Second Home Visa deposit | IDR 2,000,000,000 | ~S$174,000 |
SGD conversions are approximate and move with the SGD/IDR rate; rupiah amounts are fixed. Our pricing page shows the full IDR / USD / AUD table including our service fees.
FAQ — Bali Visa for Singaporeans
Q1: Is Bali really visa-free for Singaporeans in 2026?
Yes — Singapore citizens enter Bali (Indonesia) visa-free for up to 30 days of tourism, as ASEAN members, with no visa fee. The catch is that visa-free entry cannot be extended. If you might stay longer, choose the VOA (IDR 500,000, ~S$47) instead, which extends to 60 days. Visa-free lists are reviewed periodically — confirm at imigrasi.go.id before you fly.
Q2: Can I extend my visa-free stay in Bali?
No. Visa-free entry is a fixed 30 days with no extension and no onshore conversion. To stay longer, you must either have entered on a VOA (extendable once to 60 days) or apply for a longer visa such as a B211A or KITAS.
Q3: Should I use visa-free entry or buy the VOA?
If your trip is 30 days or fewer, use free visa-free entry. If you might want more than 30 days, buy the VOA/eVOA (IDR 500,000, ~S$47) from the start, because only the VOA can be extended to 60 days. You can’t switch from visa-free to a VOA after you arrive.
Q4: How long can Singaporeans stay in Bali?
Visa-free: up to 30 days (no extension). VOA/eVOA: up to 60 days (30 + one extension). For longer, use a B211A, a KITAS, or the Second Home Visa.
Q5: Can Singaporeans work remotely in Bali on visa-free entry?
No. Neither visa-free entry nor the VOA permits any work, and Indonesia is enforcing this in 2026. Singaporean remote workers earning USD 60,000+/year need the Digital Nomad Visa E33G. Read the 2026 rules →.
CTA
Visa-free for a quick getaway — and we’re here when you need more. Whether you want an extendable VOA for a longer Bali trip, or a Digital Nomad, Investor or Second Home Visa to base yourself here, our licensed, English-speaking team handles it with a transparent quote in Singapore dollars.
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“I assumed visa-free meant I could just extend in Bali — it doesn’t. Juara Holding Group explained the difference, set me up on a proper KITAS for my business, and quoted everything in Singapore dollars up front.” — Wei Lin T., Singapore ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
(Illustrative testimonial — representative of a Singaporean client case; real reviews on our testimonials page.)
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