Three tax systems can apply to Bali villa rental income. PPh income tax applies to every owner: 10% for Indonesian tax residents, 20% for non-residents. NPWPD hotel tax (10%) and VAT (12%) apply only to short-term tourist accommodation -- not to long-term residential rental. Your residency status and rental type determine which taxes you actually owe. Always consult a qualified
Disclaimer: This guide is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Indonesian tax law changes frequently, and enforcement can vary by region. Always consult a qualified Indonesian tax advisor (konsultan pajak) before making decisions about your tax obligations. The information below reflects our understanding as of early 2026, but may not reflect the most recent regulatory changes.
The answer depends on three variables: your tax residency status, your rental model (tourist stays vs. residential tenancy), and whether you operate as an individual or through a business entity. Indonesia has three separate tax systems that can apply to rental income, administered by different authorities, with different triggers. Most villa owners are unclear about which ones apply. Some are overpaying. Others are unknowingly non-compliant.
This guide walks through each system and helps you determine your situation. The information here is educational -- a qualified Indonesian tax advisor should confirm what applies to you.
The critical insight: these three taxes are not cumulative for every owner. Your rental type determines how many apply:
Note: Enforcement and interpretation can vary by local tax office. Consult a qualified tax advisor to confirm your specific treatment.
PPh (Pajak Penghasilan) is the one tax every villa owner pays on rental income. No exemption based on rental type. The rate depends on your tax residency status.
If you are an Indonesian tax resident -- a WNI with an NPWP, or a WNA who qualifies as a domestic tax subject through an NPWP obtained via KITAS or KITAP -- your rental income is subject to PPh Final at 10% of gross rental income.
Legal basis: Peraturan Pemerintah No. 34 of 2017 concerning Income Tax on Rental Income from Land and/or Buildings.
If you are a non-resident -- typically a WNA without an Indonesian NPWP, or someone who does not meet the 183-day presence test -- your rental income is subject to PPh Pasal 26 at 20% of gross rental income.
Legal basis: Article 26 of the Indonesian Income Tax Law (UU PPh). This rate may be reduced if a Double Tax Agreement (P3B) exists between Indonesia and your country of residence.
The single most impactful tax decision for a WNA villa owner is whether to obtain an Indonesian NPWP. On $24,000/year of rental income, the difference is $2,400 annually ($4,800 at 20% vs. $2,400 at 10%).
To obtain an NPWP, you generally need a valid KITAS or KITAP and meet domestic tax subject requirements. The process goes through the local KPP (Kantor Pelayanan Pajak).
Important: An NPWP creates ongoing tax reporting obligations in Indonesia. Consult a qualified tax advisor to understand the full implications, including interaction with tax obligations in your home country.
This is where the tax picture diverges dramatically between short-term and long-term rental.
Under UU HKPD (Law No. 1 of 2022), the former hotel tax (Pajak Hotel / NPWPD) has been consolidated into PBJT (Pajak Barang dan Jasa Tertentu). The rate is set by local government, up to 10%. In Badung Regency (Kuta, Seminyak, Canggu, Jimbaran, Nusa Dua, Uluwatu), the rate is 10%.
Hotel tax applies to accommodation services functioning as temporary lodging: villas on OTA platforms for nightly or weekly stays, properties with a Pondok Wisata license, and any short-term tourist accommodation.
Hotel tax generally does not apply to long-term residential rental. When a tenant signs a rental agreement for monthly or yearly occupancy and uses your villa as their primary residence, the arrangement is a property lease (sewa properti), not a hospitality service (jasa perhotelan).
The key distinction is between:
On a villa earning $24,000/year, this distinction alone represents $2,400 in additional tax for short-term tourist rental.
Caution: The line between "residential rental" and "tourist accommodation" is not always clear. If you provide hotel-like services (daily cleaning, reception, breakfast) alongside a monthly contract, your local tax office may still classify the activity as accommodation subject to hotel tax. The substance matters, not just the contract duration. Confirm your classification with a local tax advisor.
Indonesia increased its VAT (PPN) rate from 11% to 12% effective January 1, 2025, under UU HPP (Law No. 7 of 2021). This has generated concern among villa owners. Here is what it means.
VAT applies to taxable services by registered PKP (Pengusaha Kena Pajak) businesses. Two conditions generally must be met:
The January 2025 increase to 12% targeted luxury goods and services, including certain luxury tourism and hospitality services. For most individual villa owners renting long-term, you are not a PKP, your service is residential rental, and the 12% rate is unlikely to apply. For PT or business entities providing short-term tourist accommodation, VAT obligations may apply at 12% -- professional tax advice is essential.
Important disclaimer: The application of the 2025 VAT changes to accommodation services is still being clarified through implementing regulations. Do not rely on this summary alone. Consult a tax advisor current on the latest PMK and DJP circulars.
Use this table to identify your likely tax profile. Find your row based on residency status and rental type.
Reading this table: Rows 1 and 3 are the simplest: one tax at 10%, no hotel tax, no VAT. Row 5 shows the cost of non-resident status (20%). Rows 2, 4, and 6 show how short-term tourist rental adds hotel tax. Row 7 is the most complex, where all three systems apply simultaneously.
This table is a simplified framework. Your actual obligations may differ based on local regulations, business structure, and current guidance. Use it as a starting point for a conversation with your tax advisor.
DJP has rolled out Coretax, a unified digital tax administration platform replacing the previous separate e-filing, e-billing, and e-faktur applications. For villa owners, this means PPh Final payments, SPT annual returns, NPWP management, and bukti potong (withholding certificates) are all handled through one system.
If you self-report PPh Final on rental income, you will use Coretax for monthly calculations and payments. The system continues to evolve -- for a detailed walkthrough, see our upcoming Coretax Filing Guide for Bali Villa Owners (Guide 18).
Practical note: Many villa owners work with a local tax consultant (konsultan pajak) who handles Coretax filings on their behalf. The cost is typically modest relative to the compliance risk of filing incorrectly.
Here is a practical overview of payment mechanics.
When: Payment by the 15th of the following month. Filing by the 20th.
How: Calculate 10% of gross rental received that month. Generate a kode billing through Coretax (or via your tax consultant). Pay through an authorized bank or online banking. File the monthly report through Coretax.
If your tenant is a corporate entity (PT, CV), they are obligated to withhold the 10% and remit to DJP on your behalf. They should provide a bukti potong (withholding certificate) as proof.
When: Due by the 10th of the following month. The Indonesian party making the payment withholds 20% and remits to DJP. As a non-resident, confirm withholding is being done, obtain bukti potong copies, and check whether a DTA reduction applies.
Register with your local Bapenda. File monthly. Pay through local government channels (separate from DJP). If you rent long-term residential only, this likely does not apply -- but be prepared to demonstrate the residential nature of your arrangement if questioned.
PBB applies to every property owner regardless of rental activity. You receive an SPPT from local government, typically due around August-September.
If you have an NPWP, file an annual SPT through Coretax by March 31 of the following year. Even though PPh Final is "final," you still report it in your annual return.
Let us put the numbers side by side. Consider a villa in Canggu earning $24,000 per year in gross rental income. Compare the tax impact of different scenarios:
For a WNI or NPWP-holding WNA owner, long-term residential rental carries a 10% total tax rate. Short-term tourist accommodation faces a minimum 20% -- and potentially over 30% if VAT applies. Add the management company fees (18-25% of revenue) and tourism licensing costs required for short-term, and the net income advantage of long-term rental is often far larger than the tax difference alone.
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