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To stay and work legally, a foreign national needs a work permit in Indonesia.
This article demonstrates how to apply for the work permit for both the foreign workers and foreign investors planning to live in Indonesia.
The information is based on the following work permit regulations: the Work Permit Regulation (No. 16/2015) and its October 2015 update (No. 35/2015), as well as the latest Presidential Regulation (No. 20/2018) for The Use of Foreign Worker.
General Requirements for Work Permit in Indonesia
First of all, let’s clarify some of the common terminology thrown around by the expatriate community in Indonesia:
- KITAS – most foreign nationals in Indonesia refer to their stay permit as KITAS. This is a legacy term as foreigners no longer receive an actual card with their work permit.
- Work Permit (IMTA) – until 2018, the company had to first apply for a work permit and then for the stay permit (VITAS or E-ITAS). This process is now combined.
- Re-entry permit (MERP) – until 2018, you had to separately apply for a re-entry permit to be allowed to exit and re-enter the country. This is no longer required.
To get a work permit, a foreign national first has to be employed by a company registered in Indonesia. However, not all companies are allowed to hire foreign workers.
Requirements for the company to be able to give work permits to their foreign workers
A company is eligible for hiring foreign employees in Indonesia as long as they meet the following criteria:
- Sufficient capital: the company is a PT PMA (which have a minimum capital of at least 10 billion Indonesian Rupiah) or a 100% locally owned company with a capital of at least one billion Indonesian Rupiah.
- Allocated Indonesian co-worker: each foreign worker has to have an Indonesian national designated as the “co-worker”.
- Permitted job title: foreign nationals are not allowed to hold some positions in Indonesia. Find the list of allowed positions here.
Additionally, the company must make sure that they have submitted the Manpower Report (WLTK or Wajib Lapor Ketenagakerjaan/). This is required even if the company is not hiring foreign employees and you cannot apply for work permits if you haven’t submitted it.
Minimum requirements for foreign nationals to be eligible for the work permit
The general requirements for an employee to be hired in Indonesia are:
- Bachelor degree or higher
- If the position requires specialized education, a relevant degree (e.g. in education or engineering)
- A recommendation letter from the previous employer, demonstrating at least five years of work experience
- Proof of health/life insurance for your whole stay in Indonesia
- Proof that the employee has health and life insurance
Positions a Foreign National in Indonesia Can Hold
Foreign nationals can hold a work permit carry any titles that are not restricted. A foreign national cannot hold positions related to human resources, legal and medical industries.
The general requirements do not specify any age limitation.
How Long is a Work Permit Valid for?
The work permit is valid from 6 to 12 months, depending on the Job Position applied. A 12 months work permit is extendable.
Local co-worker requirement
Every foreign worker has to have at least one local co-worker that holds a title relevant to the foreigner’s position. The company does not have to appoint Indonesian coworkers for the following positions:
- Director
- Commissioner
- Founder of a foundation (Anggota pembina yayasan)
- Member of a management of a foundation (Anggota pengurus yayasan)
- Supervisor of a foundation (Anggota pengawas yayasan)
Even though those positions don’t require a local coworker relevant to the position, they do need to be guaranteed by an Indonesian citizen who is responsible for any misconduct caused by the foreigner.
The Process of Getting a Work Permit in Indonesia
Total time: 30 days
The process of getting a work permit in Indonesia generally takes one month.
- Foreign Manpower Placement Plan (RPTKA)
An application stating the list of foreign workers and their positions you will be hiring.
- Payment of the Employee Development Fund (DPK-TPA)
DPK-TPA is essentially a pre-paid tax to the government for hiring foreign employees. The fee is $100/month and needs to be paid upfront for the entire duration of the work permit (either $600 for six month work permit or $1200 for a one year work permit).
- Stay Permit Notification Approval / Telex
The approval is sent to the Embassy of choice by the foreign worker, where she/he must exchange it to an actual stay visa at the Embassy prior to entering Indonesia.
- E-ITAS/ Limited Stay Permit
Limited Stay Permit (often called by foreign nationals as KITAS) will be issued as soon as the foreign worker has arrived in Indonesia and has its biometric data recorded either at the border or at the local Immigration Office.
- Civil Registration
Registering the domicile of the foreign worker to the local administrative office.
Extending Work Permits
The worker does not need to fly out of Indonesia during this process, however, it is highly advisable to start preparing for the extension process already three months before the expiration date of your work permit.
Frequently asked questions about hiring foreign workers in Indonesia
A company must hire at least one Indonesian for every foreign national. The co-worker’s position must be relevant to the foreigner’s title.
Yes. If they hold more than one billion Rupiah worth of shares, they should get an Investor Visa instead which is a much faster and cheaper process.
This is not correct. The foreign national can visit Indonesia with any valid visa as long as they don’t take up employment.
The new regulation states that the employer should enable language training to the employee but there is no enforcement or other types of formal control from the government.
The work permit is tied to the specific company and position. If the worker wants to work for another company, they need to get an additional work permit from that company.
If your KITAS is sponsored by your spouse, you are dependent. To be allowed to work, you have to get a work permit.
A surprisingly unknown fact is that you are allowed to import one container of personal goods to Indonesia with your KITAS. Note that the items are strictly for personal use and you are not allowed to sell them in Indonesia.
No, for those activities it’s better to get a business visa. A one-year multiple entry visa allows you to stay in the country for 60 days per visit.
Fill in the form below to get your work permit process started. See also how to get a work permit in the Philippines.