How Do I Rent Out My Bali Villa Without an Agent?

You can rent out your Bali villa directly to long-term tenants by preparing your property, setting a competitive monthly price, creating a listing with professional photos, and publishing it on a direct-listing marketplace. Long-term residential rental requires fewer permits than short-term tourist accommodation, and you keep full control over pricing, tenant selection, and your rental income.

Aditya ersa·

Why Rent Out Your Villa Directly?

The traditional model for renting a villa in Bali involves an agent or property management company. For short-term tourist rentals, that model makes sense: you need daily check-ins, cleaning, guest communication, and OTA management. For long-term rental to a single tenant on a yearly contract, the equation is fundamentally different.

The cost of using an agent

Long-term rental agents in Bali typically charge a finder's fee of one to two months' rent per tenant placement. On a villa renting at $2,000 per month, that is $2,000 to $4,000 for a single introduction. Some agents also layer on ongoing management fees, typically 10-15% of monthly rent, even when the management workload on a long-term tenancy is minimal.

Full-service management companies handling short-term rentals charge 18-30% of all rental income. On a villa generating $26,000 per year, that is $4,680 to $7,800 going to the management company annually.

What you get when you go direct

When you rent directly, three things change immediately:

  1. You keep your full rental income. No finder's fee, no monthly management percentage, no commission on the transaction itself.
  2. You control the relationship. You choose the tenant. You set the price. You negotiate the terms. No intermediary making decisions on your behalf.
  3. You simplify the process. For long-term rental, the workflow is straightforward: list, screen, agree on terms, sign a contract. You do not need the operational infrastructure that short-term rental demands.

This is not about cutting corners. It is about recognizing that long-term rental is a structurally simpler business than nightly tourism accommodation and that paying 18-30% for simplicity you do not need is not a smart business decision.

Related guide: How Much Does a Bali Villa Agent Charge, and Is There a Cheaper Way? breaks down the full cost comparison between agent models and direct rental.

Is Your Villa Suitable for Long-Term Rental?

Not every property is equally attractive to long-term tenants. Before you list, run through this checklist to understand where your villa sits in the market.

Location

Long-term tenants, especially international expats and remote workers, cluster around specific areas. Canggu, Seminyak, Pererenan, and Ubud are the strongest long-term rental markets for international tenants. Sanur and Uluwatu have growing demand. Properties in less-established areas may take longer to fill.

Property condition

Long-term tenants live in your villa. They are not tourists passing through for a week. They will notice a weak water heater, unreliable wifi, mould in the bathroom, or a noisy generator. Before listing:

  • Internet: Fast, reliable wifi is non-negotiable. Remote workers depend on it. If your connection is unstable, invest in upgrading before listing.
  • Water and plumbing: Ensure hot water works consistently. Check for leaks. Long-term tenants will report issues that a short-stay guest tolerates.
  • Furnishing: Fully furnished is the standard expectation for international long-term tenants in Bali. Include a functional kitchen, comfortable workspace, and adequate storage.
  • Security: Secure perimeter, working locks, and ideally CCTV in common outdoor areas.
  • Outdoor space: A pool, garden, or private outdoor area significantly increases your villa's appeal and justifies higher monthly pricing.

Ownership structure

Your ability to list depends on your ownership arrangement:

  • Indonesian citizens (WNI): You can rent out property you own under Hak Milik or Hak Guna Bangunan with minimal formalities.
  • Foreign nationals (WNA): You typically hold your villa through a leasehold (Hak Sewa) agreement. Confirm your lease agreement allows subletting or rental to third parties. Some lease agreements restrict this.
  • PT PMA structures: If you hold property through a foreign-owned company, rental income flows through the entity. The tax and legal treatment differs. Consult a local advisor.

Legal Basics: What Do You Need?

One of the biggest advantages of long-term rental over short-term tourist accommodation is the reduced regulatory burden. But you still need the basics in order.

For long-term residential rental, you do NOT need:

  • A Pondok Wisata (tourism accommodation) license
  • Pink-zone (tourism zone) zoning
  • An NIB verified through OSS for accommodation
  • Hotel or tourism tax registration
  • OTA compliance (the March 2026 enforcement applies to short-term platforms)

What you DO need:

  • PBG (Persetujuan Bangunan Gedung): A valid building permit confirming your structure is legal.
  • NPWP (Nomor Pokok Wajib Pajak): A tax identification number for declaring rental income. For WNI, this is standard. For WNA with a KITAS or KITAP, getting an NPWP is possible and recommended, as it reduces your income tax rate from 20% to 10%.
  • Land certificate (Sertifikat Tanah): Proof of your ownership or leasehold right.
  • For WNA: A valid, notarised leasehold agreement (Akta Sewa) that permits rental activity.

Zoning: where your villa sits matters

For long-term rental, your villa can be in a yellow (residential) zone. The pink (tourism) zone requirement applies specifically to short-term tourist accommodation. You can verify your zone using the KKPR/RDTR map at oss.go.id.

Important: Tax and legal requirements vary by individual situation. The information above applies to the most common scenarios for individual villa owners doing long-term residential rental. Always consult a local notary or tax advisor for guidance specific to your ownership structure and residency status.
Related guide: What Legal Requirements Apply to Long-Term Villa Rental in Bali? covers permits, zoning, and compliance in full detail for both WNI and WNA owners.

Setting Your Price

Pricing a long-term rental correctly is the single most important factor in how quickly you find a tenant. Price too high and your villa sits empty for months, costing you more than any commission savings. Price at market or slightly below, and you attract serious enquiries within weeks.

What determines your monthly rent

Several factors drive long-term rental pricing in Bali:

  • Location: Canggu centre commands higher rents than north Canggu. Seminyak centre commands more than the outskirts. Proximity to cafes, coworking spaces, and the beach matters.
  • Number of bedrooms: One-bedroom villas and two-bedroom villas are the highest-demand categories for long-term singles and couples. Three-bedroom and four-bedroom villas appeal to families and groups who share.
  • Pool and outdoor space: A private pool adds significant rental value. A villa without a pool will rent for substantially less.
  • Condition and furnishing quality: Modern interiors, a proper kitchen, fast wifi, and quality furnishings justify premium pricing.
  • Lease duration: Many owners offer a discount for 12-month contracts versus six-month or three-month terms. A 5-10% annual discount is common.

How to research your price

  • Browse competing listings in your area for similar properties.
  • Check Facebook groups where villas are advertised and note asking prices.
  • Talk to other owners in your area.
  • Consider your own costs: annual PBB, PPh Final (10% of gross rental income for most owners), maintenance, and any staff costs. Your net income after tax and costs is what matters.

Indicative long-term rental rates for furnished villas with pool (monthly, USD, 2026):

  • Area: Canggu (Berawa, Batu Bolong, Pererenan) · 1 Bedroom: $800–1,500 · 2 Bedrooms: $1,500–3,000 · 3 Bedrooms: $2,500–5,000 · 4+ Bedrooms: $4,000–8,000+
  • Area: Seminyak / Kerobokan · 1 Bedroom: $1,000–1,800 · 2 Bedrooms: $1,800–3,500 · 3 Bedrooms: $3,000–6,000 · 4+ Bedrooms: $5,000–10,000+
  • Area: Ubud (Central, Penestanan, Sayan) · 1 Bedroom: $500–1,000 · 2 Bedrooms: $1,000–2,000 · 3 Bedrooms: $1,500–3,500 · 4+ Bedrooms: $2,500–5,000
  • Area: Uluwatu (Bingin, Padang Padang, Ungasan) · 1 Bedroom: $700–1,300 · 2 Bedrooms: $1,200–2,500 · 3 Bedrooms: $2,000–4,000 · 4+ Bedrooms: $3,500–7,000
  • Area: Sanur (Central, Sidakarya, Mertasari) · 1 Bedroom: $500–900 · 2 Bedrooms: $900–1,800 · 3 Bedrooms: $1,500–3,000 · 4+ Bedrooms: $2,500–5,000

Rates reflect asking prices for long-term contracts (3+ months) as of early 2026 and vary by exact location, furnishing quality, and contract length. Annual contracts typically command a 15–25% discount per month versus month-to-month rates. Sources: Bali Villa Realty market data, Bali Home Immo listings, iLOT Property Bali, and marketplace listing analysis (2025–2026).

A pricing principle

For your first listing, price at or slightly below what comparable villas in your immediate area are asking. Your goal for the first three months is to secure a tenant and build your track record. You can adjust pricing upward for the next tenancy once you understand real demand.

Related guide: How to Set the Right Rental Price for Your Bali Villa goes deep on pricing strategy, seasonal factors, and common mistakes.

Preparing Your Listing

Your listing is your sales pitch. On a direct-listing marketplace, there is no agent presenting your property to prospects. Your photos, description, and listed amenities do all the work. Get this right and you generate quality enquiries. Get it wrong and your villa gets scrolled past.

Photography

Professional-quality photos are the single highest-impact investment you can make in your listing. You do not necessarily need a professional photographer, but you do need:

  • Natural light: Shoot during the day with curtains open. Avoid flash.
  • Wide angles: Show the full room, not just a corner. A smartphone wide-angle lens works if you do not have a DSLR.
  • Key shots: Living area, each bedroom, kitchen, bathroom(s), pool, garden/outdoor area, entrance, and any standout feature (rice field view, rooftop terrace, outdoor shower).
  • Clean and staged: Tidy every surface. Remove personal items. Add a few tasteful touches: a fruit bowl, folded towels, fresh flowers.
  • Minimum 10 photos, ideally 15-20 covering every space a tenant will use.

Writing your description

Your description should answer the questions a prospective tenant has before they message you:

  1. Location context: Where is the villa? What is nearby? How far to the beach, to cafes, to a coworking space?
  2. The space: How many bedrooms and bathrooms? Is there a separate living area? Is the kitchen fully equipped?
  3. Standout features: Pool, garden, rice field view, rooftop, dedicated workspace, high-speed wifi, backup generator.
  4. Practical details: Is water and electricity included in the rent? What about wifi? Is there a weekly cleaning service? Is parking available?
  5. Rental terms: Minimum lease duration, deposit requirements, payment schedule.

Write in clear, factual English. Avoid marketing clichés ("tropical paradise," "luxury living"). Long-term tenants are practical. They want to know if the wifi is fast, if the kitchen has a proper stove, and if the neighbourhood is quiet at night.

Create your listing on a direct marketplace

On a marketplace like Property Plaza, you list your villa directly for long-term tenants, with no agent and no commission. You upload your photos, write your description, set your price, and publish. When tenants search and find your listing, they can contact you directly through the built-in chat. You communicate one-on-one, without any intermediary.

Property Plaza's audience is specifically international renters looking for long-term accommodation in Bali: expats, remote workers, and digital nomads from Europe, Australia, and North America. Every renter who contacts you through the platform has actively paid for access, which means they are seriously searching, not casually browsing.

You retain full control. You can adjust your price at any time. You can toggle your listing on or off as needed. If you want a local contact to help manage enquiries while you are abroad, you can grant them delegated access to handle conversations on your behalf, while keeping full control of the listing itself.

Founding Member Program: Property Plaza is currently offering 200 founding member spots with lifetime zero commission. If you are considering listing your villa, securing a founding member position locks in the zero-commission structure permanently.

Finding and Screening Tenants

Once your listing is live, you will start receiving enquiries. The quality of those enquiries depends heavily on where you listed (a filtered marketplace versus an open Facebook group) and how clear your listing is (vague listings attract vague enquiries).

Where serious long-term tenants search

International long-term tenants, the expats, remote workers, and digital nomads who sign yearly contracts and pay upfront, search online in English. They do not walk into a local agent's office. They do not browse Rumah123 (which targets the domestic Indonesian market). They search on platforms that specifically serve the international long-term rental market.

This is why listing on the right platform matters more than listing on every platform. One quality listing in front of the right audience outperforms ten scattered posts across Facebook groups.

How to screen tenants

When a prospective tenant contacts you, gather the following:

  1. Identity: Request a copy of their passport or KTP/KITAS. Confirm their name matches who they say they are.
  2. Visa status: For international tenants, confirm they hold a visa that covers the rental period (a KITAS, social visa, or B211 visa that can be extended). This protects you from a tenant who cannot legally stay for the full lease term.
  3. Purpose and duration: Why are they in Bali? How long do they plan to stay? A remote worker on a 12-month plan is a different risk profile from someone who "might stay a few months."
  4. References: For higher-value properties, asking for a reference from a previous landlord or employer is reasonable.
  5. Financial readiness: Confirm they can pay the deposit and first instalment before signing. Standard practice is one to two months' deposit plus the first month's rent upfront.

Trust your judgement. A brief video call or in-person meeting (if you or your representative is local) gives you a much better read on a prospective tenant than text messages alone.

Related guide: How to Attract and Screen Long-Term Tenants for Your Bali Villa covers the full screening process, red flags to watch for, and negotiation tactics.

The Rental Agreement

A proper rental agreement protects both you and your tenant. In Indonesia, the standard long-term rental contract is called a Perjanjian Sewa Menyewa (rental agreement).

Essential elements

Your rental contract should include, at minimum:

  • Full identity of both parties: Owner name, passport/KTP number. Tenant name, passport/KITAS number.
  • Property description: Full address, description of the property, and an inventory list of furnished items.
  • Rental period: Start date, end date, and any renewal terms.
  • Price and payment schedule: Monthly rent amount, currency, due date, and accepted payment methods.
  • Deposit: Amount (typically one to two months' rent), conditions for return, and deductions policy.
  • Utilities and services: Who pays electricity, water, wifi, pool maintenance, garden maintenance, and cleaning?
  • Maintenance responsibilities: What is the owner's responsibility (structural, major systems) versus the tenant's (daily upkeep, minor repairs)?
  • Termination conditions: Notice period for early termination by either party, penalties if applicable, and the process for ending the lease.
  • Dispute resolution: How disagreements are handled. Mediation is the preferred first step in Indonesian rental disputes.

Language requirements

Indonesian law requires the Bahasa Indonesia version of a contract to govern in case of dispute. You can prepare a bilingual contract (Bahasa Indonesia and English side by side), but always ensure the Bahasa version is legally reviewed.

Getting it right

Have your contract reviewed by a local notary (notaris), especially for your first tenancy. The cost is modest and the legal protection is significant. A well-drafted contract prevents the misunderstandings that cause most landlord-tenant disputes.

Important: Contract requirements and enforceability depend on your specific ownership structure, your tenant's residency status, and current Indonesian law. Always consult a local legal advisor before finalising your rental agreement.
Related guide: The Sewa Menyewa Contract: What Every Bali Villa Owner Needs to Know provides a full walkthrough of Indonesian rental agreements, clause-by-clause.

Managing Your Villa Remotely

A major advantage of long-term rental is that it is designed for absentee owners. With one tenant on a yearly contract, your management workload is a fraction of what short-term rental demands.

What you need in place

  • A local caretaker or contact person: Someone who can respond to maintenance emergencies, handle pool and garden upkeep, and serve as the tenant's local point of contact. This can be a part-time caretaker, a trusted neighbour, or a friend on the ground.
  • A reliable maintenance network: Know who to call for plumbing, electrical, AC repair, and pool service. Having two or three trusted contacts for each category means issues get resolved quickly.
  • Clear communication with your tenant: Establish how you will communicate (WhatsApp is standard in Bali) and set expectations for response times on both sides.
  • Delegated listing management: If you want someone local to handle enquiries from prospective tenants between tenancies, platforms like Property Plaza allow you to grant delegated access. Your delegate can manage conversations and toggle your listing online or offline, while you retain full ownership and control.

The remote management reality

With a good tenant on a yearly contract, most months require zero active management from you. The tenant pays rent on the agreed schedule. The caretaker handles routine maintenance. You check in occasionally. The work happens at the transition points: tenant move-out, property inspection, any repairs, re-listing, and new tenant move-in. For those transitions, having a local contact you trust is essential.

If you are not able to visit Bali for the transition, your local contact can handle property inspections and handovers. Some owners fly in once a year to coincide with the lease transition. Others manage the entire cycle remotely with a reliable local team.

Related guide: Can I Manage My Bali Villa from Abroad? covers the full remote management playbook, including what to delegate, what to handle yourself, and how to build your local support network.

Frequently Asked Questions