Finding reliable long-term tenants for your Bali villa comes down to three things: knowing your target audience, listing where they actually search, and screening rigorously before signing any agreement. The three primary long-term tenant profiles in Bali are digital nomads (3--6 months), expats with employment or business (12+ months), and retirees (6--12 months). Each has different needs, budgets, and risk
Not all long-term tenants are the same. Understanding who you are renting to shapes everything -- from how you furnish the property to what price you set and how much turnover you should expect. The Bali long-term rental market is driven by three distinct profiles.
Digital nomads are remote workers -- freelancers, consultants, startup founders, and employees of distributed companies -- who choose Bali as a base for several months at a time. They typically hold a B211A visa (social/cultural) or the newer B215 Digital Nomad Visa.
What they look for:
What they typically pay: IDR 15--40 million per month depending on location and villa size. Solo nomads lean toward the lower end; couples and small groups toward the upper range.
Risk profile: Medium. They pay reliably while employed but can leave quickly if plans change. Short commitments mean more frequent turnover.
Expats with employment (KITAS holders) or running businesses in Bali are the gold standard for long-term stability. They include executives at international companies, business owners, teachers at international schools, and consultants with regional contracts.
What they look for:
What they typically pay: IDR 25--80 million per month. Families with school-age children and corporate housing allowances are at the high end of the long-term market.
Risk profile: Low. Stable income, long-term visa, community ties, and children in local schools all reduce the likelihood of sudden departure. These tenants also tend to treat the property well because they see it as their home.
Retirees and semi-retirees come to Bali for the lifestyle, climate, and cost of living. Many split their year between Bali and their home country, returning to the same villa each season. They are typically on retirement visas (ITAS Lansia for 55+) or B211A visas.
What they look for:
What they typically pay: IDR 20--50 million per month. They are less price-sensitive than nomads and more willing to pay a premium for comfort and reliability.
Risk profile: Low to medium. Income is typically pension-based and stable. The main risk is seasonal departure -- they may only want 6--9 months rather than a full year.
The channels that work for short-term tourist bookings do not work for long-term tenants. Airbnb and Booking.com attract holidaymakers staying days or weeks. Long-term tenants search differently.
Dedicated marketplaces that focus on monthly and yearly villa rental in Bali are where serious long-term tenants begin their search. These platforms attract people who have already decided to live in Bali -- they are not browsing vacation options.
On Property Plaza, you find tenants specifically searching for long-term housing in Bali -- expats, digital nomads, and professionals. You communicate directly via the built-in chat, so you can determine who is the right fit yourself. There is no commission, so the price you list is the price you keep.
Facebook remains the dominant discovery channel for Bali's expat community. Groups with tens of thousands of members are where tenants post "looking for" requests and owners share listings. The key groups include Bali expat and community groups, Canggu community boards, Ubud housing groups, and digital nomad forums. Post your listing with clear photos, price, location, minimum lease term, and contact information. Respond promptly -- good tenants move fast.
Nomad-focused platforms like Nomad List, remote work community Slack groups, and Reddit's digital nomad communities are where remote workers research their next destination. Having your villa visible on a platform where these tenants are already searching for Bali housing gives you an advantage over owners who rely only on word of mouth.
Never underestimate referrals. A departing tenant who had a good experience is your best recruiter. When a tenant gives notice, ask if they know anyone looking. Bali's expat community is tight-knit -- personal recommendations carry significant weight.
No platform screens tenants for you. That responsibility is yours. A thorough screening process takes 30 minutes of your time and can save you months of problems. Here is the checklist experienced Bali villa owners use.
Request the following before agreeing to any lease:
This is critical and often overlooked. A tenant whose visa expires mid-lease creates problems for both parties. Ask:
A tenant on a 60-day B211A visa who says they want a 12-month lease needs to explain their extension plan. If they cannot, that is a warning sign.
You do not need to see tax returns. You need enough information to be confident the tenant can pay rent consistently for the full lease term. Reasonable evidence includes:
A general guideline is that monthly rent should not exceed 30--40% of the tenant's monthly income. If a tenant earning USD 3,000 per month wants to rent a villa at USD 2,500 per month, the math does not work.
Ask for and actually check at least one previous landlord reference. The questions that matter:
If a tenant cannot provide any reference -- even from outside Bali -- treat that as a yellow flag.
Experienced Bali villa owners have learned these the hard way. Any of the following should make you pause:
The first conversation with a prospective tenant is your most important screening tool. Whether it happens via chat, video call, or in person, cover these topics:
These questions are not aggressive. They are standard. Any tenant who has rented property in a foreign country before will expect them. The ones who do not expect them are the ones you need to screen most carefully.
Property Plaza's direct chat lets you have this conversation before committing to anything. You can ask questions, request documents, and get a sense of the person -- all within the platform, before you exchange phone numbers or schedule a viewing.