Bali Multiple-Entry Visa (D1/D2) 2026 — 1, 2 & 5-Year Options
The Indonesian D1 (tourism) and D2 (business) multiple-entry visas allow repeated entries to Bali over 1, 2 or 5 years, with up to 60 days per visit. They suit frequent travelers, business owners, and yacht owners who want to come and go without reapplying. A sponsor and proof of funds are required.
Last updated: 2026 · Figures verified against evisa.imigrasi.go.id, Direktorat Jenderal Imigrasi.
What Is the Indonesian Multiple-Entry Visa?
The multiple-entry visit visa lets you enter Indonesia as many times as you like during its validity period, instead of using up a single-entry visa on one trip. It is built for people whose lives or businesses involve regular travel to Bali — and it removes the biggest frustration of single-entry visas: having to reapply (or do a “border run”) every time you leave and want to return.
There are two main types, identified by their visa codes:
- D1 — Multiple-Entry Tourism Visa: for leisure, holidays and repeated personal visits.
- D2 — Multiple-Entry Business Visa: for meetings, conferences, audits and investment exploration (not paid employment).
Both come with 1-year, 2-year or 5-year validity, and each individual visit can last up to 60 days. You leave and return as often as you wish within the validity period — every entry simply resets your 60-day clock for that stay.
A multiple-entry visa requires an Indonesian sponsor (an individual or company) and proof of funds. Because of the sponsorship and the longer validity, these visas are almost always arranged through a licensed agency. Juara Holding Group arranges the sponsor, prepares the application, and files it through the official portal.
Frequent traveller? A multiple-entry visa means no more border runs — come and go from Bali for years on a single visa.
D1 vs D2 — Which Multiple-Entry Visa Do You Need?
| D1 — Tourism | D2 — Business | |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Leisure, repeated holidays, personal visits | Meetings, conferences, audits, investment exploration |
| Validity options | 1, 2 or 5 years | 1, 2 or 5 years |
| Per-entry stay | Up to 60 days | Up to 60 days |
| Paid work allowed? | No | No (business activity only) |
| Sponsor | Required | Required (often a company) |
| Best for | Second-home owners, frequent holidaymakers, yacht owners | Business owners, investors, regional executives |
The key distinction is purpose: D1 for personal/leisure travel, D2 for business activity. Neither permits paid employment in Indonesia — for that you need a Working KITAS (E23). If you’re exploring an investment, the D2 pairs naturally with later steps like an Investor KITAS (E28A) and PT PMA company setup.
Multiple-Entry Visa Durations — 1, 2 & 5 Years
| Validity | Best for | Per-entry stay |
|---|---|---|
| 1 year | Trying out frequent travel; shorter commitments | Up to 60 days |
| 2 years | Regular visitors, second-home owners, ongoing business | Up to 60 days |
| 5 years | Long-horizon frequent travellers, yacht owners, HNWIs | Up to 60 days |
The longer the validity, the better the value for genuine frequent travellers — and the fewer applications you’ll ever file. Each entry still caps at 60 days, so a multiple-entry visa is not a substitute for a residence permit if you intend to live in Bali continuously. For continuous living, a KITAS or the Second Home Visa is the right route.
Who Is the Multiple-Entry Visa For?
- Frequent holidaymakers who visit Bali several times a year and don’t want to reapply each time.
- Business owners and executives with ongoing interests in Indonesia (D2) — without committing to a work permit.
- Second-home owners who split their time between Bali and home.
- Investors scoping opportunities across multiple trips before committing to a PT PMA and Investor KITAS.
Premium: Multiple-Entry Visas for Yacht Owners & HNWIs ⚓
Bali and the wider Indonesian archipelago — Komodo, the Gili Islands, Raja Ampat — are among the world’s great cruising grounds, and yacht owners and high-net-worth travellers have a particular need the standard advice rarely addresses: the ability to arrive, depart and return on their own schedule, repeatedly, without the friction of single-entry visas or border runs.
The 5-year D1 multiple-entry visa is the natural fit. It lets you:
- Sail in and out of Indonesian waters and re-enter Bali freely for up to five years, with up to 60 days per visit.
- Avoid repeated embassy applications that don’t suit a mobile, schedule-driven lifestyle.
- Keep your crew and family mobile alongside you (each on their own appropriate visa).
- Bridge to longer-term options — many yacht owners and HNWIs later move to the Second Home Visa (5–10 years, IDR 2 billion deposit) or the Golden Visa (investor residence) for deeper roots in Indonesia.
For yacht owners, the visa is only one piece — vessel clearance (CAIT), cruising permits and port formalities run in parallel. Juara Holding Group provides discreet, white-glove handling of the immigration side for owners, principals and crew, coordinated around your itinerary. Message us privately to discuss a yacht-owner or HNWI arrangement.
Multiple-Entry Visa Requirements 2026
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Passport | Valid for the full visa period (well beyond 6 months); bio-data scan |
| Passport photo | Recent, plain background |
| Indonesian sponsor / guarantor | Individual (D1) or company (often for D2) — we arrange this |
| Proof of funds | Demonstrated financial capacity (higher expectations for longer validity) |
| Purpose documentation | Itinerary (D1) or business/invitation letters (D2) |
| Application | Filed via the official portal by our team |
| All Indonesia Arrival Card (AIDC) | Completed before each arrival at allindonesia.imigrasi.go.id |
Requirements scale with the validity you choose — a 5-year visa typically expects stronger proof of funds and a solid sponsor than a 1-year visa. Our team confirms the exact requirements for your chosen duration and nationality before you commit.
Multiple-Entry Visa Cost 2026 — Transparent Pricing
Below are our all-in, fully-managed service prices for the 1-year multiple-entry visas (sponsorship, document handling, submission and government fees all included). Longer 2- and 5-year validities are quoted on request, as fees scale with validity. Every quote is in writing, with no hidden charges.
| Visa | All-in price (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Multiple-Entry D1 (tourism, 1 year) | USD 749 | Frequent travellers; 60 days per entry |
| Multiple-Entry D2 (business, 1 year) | USD 849 | Ongoing business travel; 60 days per entry |
| D1 / D2 — 2 & 5-year validity | contact for quote | Premium long-validity; fees scale with term |
Our USD 749 (D1) and USD 849 (D2) are all-in, government fees included, for the 1-year multiple-entry visas. The 2- and 5-year options (including yacht-owner arrangements) are bespoke and quoted in writing.
All-in, government fees included. We’re a premium, fully-managed agency — not the cheapest, the most thorough. For a transparent comparison across all visa types, see our pricing page.
How to Apply for a Multiple-Entry Visa — Step by Step
- Consultation. Tell us how often you travel, your purpose (tourism or business) and preferred validity (1, 2 or 5 years). We recommend D1 or D2 and send a written quote.
- Sponsor arrangement. We act as or arrange your Indonesian guarantor — required for all multiple-entry visas.
- Document preparation. You receive a checklist (passport, photo, proof of funds, purpose documents); our team reviews everything.
- Submission. We file through the official Indonesian immigration portal and keep you updated.
- Receive your visa and travel freely. Once approved, you can enter Bali repeatedly within the validity period, up to 60 days per visit — completing the All Indonesia Arrival Card before each arrival.
Frequently Asked Questions — Multiple-Entry Visa
How long can I stay per visit on a D1 or D2 visa?
Up to 60 days per entry. You can leave and re-enter Indonesia as often as you like during the visa’s 1, 2 or 5-year validity, and each entry resets your 60-day stay. It is not a residence permit for continuous living.
What’s the difference between D1 and D2?
D1 is the multiple-entry tourism visa (leisure, personal visits); D2 is the multiple-entry business visa (meetings, conferences, audits, investment exploration). Neither permits paid employment — for that you need a Working KITAS (E23).
Do I need a sponsor for a multiple-entry visa?
Yes. All Indonesian multiple-entry visas require a sponsor or guarantor — an individual or a company. Bali Visa Trusted arranges this for you as part of the service, along with document preparation and submission.
Is there a multiple-entry visa for yacht owners?
Yes — the 5-year D1 is well suited to yacht owners and frequent HNWI travellers, allowing repeated entries over five years with up to 60 days per visit. We provide discreet handling of the immigration side for owners, principals and crew. Vessel clearance is handled separately.
Can I live in Bali full-time on a multiple-entry visa?
No. Each visit caps at 60 days, so a multiple-entry visa suits frequent visiting, not continuous residence. To live in Bali long-term, choose a KITAS or the Second Home Visa (5–10 years).
Apply for Your Multiple-Entry Visa with a Licensed Agent
Come and go from Bali for years — no border runs, no repeat applications. From a 1-year D1 to a 5-year yacht-owner arrangement, our licensed team handles sponsorship, documents and submission with transparent, written pricing.
🟢 WhatsApp Us Now · 📞 +62 811 3941 4563 · ✉️ bd@juaraholding.com
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