Lombok Visa Guide 2026: Everything You Need to Know
Planning a trip to Lombok? Get the complete Indonesia visa guide for 2026 — VOA costs, e-VOA application steps, extension process, digital nomad options, and the latest entry requirements. Updated for 2026.
Most visa guides for Indonesia are written with Bali in mind — and while the rules are largely the same, Lombok visitors get left behind with outdated information, missing details, and advice that doesn't account for arriving at Lombok International Airport. This guide fixes that.
Whether you're flying in for two weeks of surf and sunsets, spending a season island-hopping, or seriously considering a longer-term move to Lombok, this is the only visa resource you need. We've broken everything down by visa type, covered the exact application steps, included up-to-date costs in both IDR and USD, and flagged all the 2024–2025 rule changes that affect your entry.
The Short Answer: Which Visa Do You Need?
Before getting into the details, here's the quick version:
Staying 30 days or less? You'll use the Visa on Arrival (VOA), or the e-VOA applied for online in advance. Cost: IDR 500,000 (~USD 35). Available to around 97 countries including the US, UK, Australia, and all EU nations.
Staying up to 60 days? Still the VOA — but you'll need to extend it at the Mataram Immigration Office in Lombok. One extension of 30 days is allowed. Total cost: IDR 1,000,000 (~USD 70).
Staying up to 6 months? The B211A/C1 Tourist Visa is your best option. Costs around USD 100 in government fees and can be extended twice for a maximum of 180 days.
Working remotely for a foreign company for up to a year? Indonesia's E33G Digital Nomad Visa was officially launched in 2024 and is designed exactly for this.
Long-term resident or investor? There are Second Home Visas, Retirement KITAS, Work KITAS, and more — all covered below.
Visa on Arrival (VOA): The Go-To Visa for Most Tourists
What Is the VOA?
The Visa on Arrival is the standard entry visa for most international tourists visiting Indonesia, including Lombok. It grants you 30 days from the date of arrival, with the option to extend once for an additional 30 days — giving you a maximum of 60 days total.
The government fee is a flat IDR 500,000 (approximately USD 35), regardless of whether you apply online in advance or pay at the airport on arrival.
Who Is Eligible?
Roughly 97 countries are eligible for the VOA. This includes every major tourist-origin country:
English-speaking countries: United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Ireland.
EU/Schengen countries: All EU member states are eligible, including France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Portugal, Sweden, and more.
Asia-Pacific: Japan, South Korea, China, India, Taiwan, and all ASEAN nations.
Other major countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, South Africa, Russia, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, Morocco, Turkey, and many more.
For the official, definitive list, check imigrasi.go.id — the Indonesian Immigration website. Eligibility does occasionally change, and that's the only source you should trust.
The e-VOA: Apply Online Before You Fly (Strongly Recommended)
The e-VOA (electronic Visa on Arrival) is the same visa but applied for online before your trip. It costs exactly the same — IDR 500,000 — and is far better than paying at the airport, because it eliminates the queue at the VOA counter entirely and significantly speeds up your immigration process.
How to apply for your e-VOA:
Go to the official Indonesian Immigration e-visa portal: evisa.imigrasi.go.id
Click "Apply" then "Register" to create an account using a valid email address
Activate your account via the verification email — you have 1 hour to do this
Log in and select "Apply" for Visitor Visa (e-VOA)
Upload the required documents:
A full-colour scan of your passport bio page (JPG or PNG, minimum 400×600px, maximum 2MB)
A passport-style photo with a white background (your face should fill 50–60% of the image)
Your return or onward flight ticket
Complete the application form with your travel details, purpose of visit, and accommodation information
Review everything carefully — once issued, information cannot be changed
Pay IDR 500,000 by Visa, Mastercard, or JCB card — payment must be completed within 120 minutes of starting your session
Receive your approved e-VOA by email — download and save the PDF
Your e-VOA is valid for 90 days from the date of issuance — you must enter Indonesia within this window
Your 30-day stay begins from your arrival date in Indonesia
⚠️ Important: An e-VOA does not guarantee entry. The final decision always rests with the immigration officer at the border.
Avoid third-party sites. There are unofficial websites that offer to process your e-VOA for fees of IDR 800,000–1,200,000. The official government portal is the only place you need — and it costs IDR 500,000. If you want a legitimate partner alternative, VFS Global runs an authorised portal at indonesiavoa.vfsevisa.id, though their fee is IDR 800,000.
Arriving at Lombok International Airport Without an e-VOA
If you're flying directly into Lombok International Airport (IATA: LOP) and didn't arrange your e-VOA in advance, the process at the airport is straightforward — and considerably more pleasant than doing it at Bali.
Here's what to expect:
After landing, follow the signs toward "Visa on Arrival" before reaching the main immigration counters
Present your valid passport and proof of return or onward travel
Pay IDR 500,000 — cash in IDR or USD is the safest option; card readers at Lombok airport can be unreliable
Receive your VOA sticker affixed in your passport
Proceed to the immigration counter and present your documents
Immigration stamps your entry — your 30 days begins from this date
One of Lombok's genuine advantages over Bali: the airport is significantly smaller and far less crowded. The entire immigration process — including VOA payment — rarely takes more than 30 minutes. Compare that to Bali's Ngurah Rai Airport, where queues can stretch to 90 minutes or more during peak arrivals.
⚠️ Note on E-Gates at Lombok: Bali's airport has automated E-Gate lanes for e-VOA holders with biometric passports. It is not confirmed whether Lombok airport currently has operational E-Gates — plan for a manual counter regardless, though having an e-VOA still speeds up the process.
What You Can (and Cannot) Do on a VOA
Permitted activities include: tourism and sightseeing, visiting family and friends, business meetings and negotiations (no signing contracts), purchasing goods, attending conventions or exhibitions as an attendee, transit, medical treatment, and sailing or yachting.
Not permitted: any form of work — paid or unpaid — including teaching, volunteering, religious activities, and creating monetized content. Indonesia has significantly increased immigration enforcement since 2024, with targeted operations catching foreigners working unlawfully on tourist visas. The consequences include deportation and a re-entry ban. If you intend to work remotely, see the E33G Digital Nomad Visa section below.
How to Extend Your VOA in Lombok
Your VOA can be extended once, adding 30 days to your stay. The extension must be initiated at least 7 days before your visa expires — ideally 10–14 days before to be safe.
Where to go: Kantor Imigrasi Kelas I TPI Mataram, Jl. Udayana No. 2, Monjok Barat, Mataram, NTB 83122. Phone: (0370) 632520. WhatsApp: 081999949000. Website: mataram.imigrasi.go.id
Office hours: Monday–Thursday, 08:00–16:00 (lunch 12:00–13:00). Friday, 08:30–16:30 (longer lunch break for Friday prayers: 11:30–13:30). Closed weekends and public holidays. Payment is accepted until 15:00.
From Kuta Lombok, allow 1.5–2 hours for the drive. From the airport at Praya, it's approximately 1 hour.
The extension process (as of mid-2025):
Submit your extension request online at evisa.imigrasi.go.id — go to Services → Find Existing Stay Permit → Extend
Pay IDR 500,000 online
Within one working day of payment: visit the immigration office in person for biometric data collection (photo and fingerprints) — this in-person visit is mandatory and cannot be skipped
Wait 3–7 working days for processing
Return to collect your passport with the extension stamp
Documents to bring: your original passport (6+ months validity, at least one blank page), photocopies of your passport photo page and current VOA stamp, proof of onward or return travel, and your online payment confirmation.
Dress code strictly enforced: no tank tops, shorts, flip flops, or bare shoulders. Lombok is a Muslim island and the immigration office enforces conservative dress standards. You will be turned away if dressed inappropriately.
💡 Using a visa agent: A licensed agent can handle all paperwork and reduce your required visits to just the single mandatory biometric session. Agent fees range from IDR 750,000–1,200,000 on top of the government fee. Well-regarded local options include AER Visa Lombok — ask at your accommodation for a trusted local recommendation.
An important note for Bali-based travellers: the Mataram Immigration Office is significantly less busy than Bali's offices in Jimbaran or Denpasar. Many experienced long-term travellers specifically extend their visa in Lombok rather than Bali, even if they're based in Bali. Worth considering if you're spending time on both islands.
B211A / C1 Tourist Visa: The Best Option for Stays Up to 6 Months
What Is It?
The B211A — officially reclassified as the C1 Tourist Single Entry Visitor Visa since January 2024 — is Indonesia's primary long-stay tourist visa. It's widely referred to as the B211A, and you'll still hear it called that by agents, guesthouses, and expats. The name change is administrative; the visa itself works the same way.
It grants an initial 60-day stay, extendable twice for 60 days each time — a maximum stay of 180 days (six months) in Indonesia. This is the go-to visa for digital nomads, slow travellers, and anyone wanting to spend a full season in Lombok without doing a visa run.
Who Should Get the B211A/C1?
Choose the B211A/C1 over the VOA if you:
Plan to stay more than 60 days
Want to stay up to 6 months without leaving Indonesia
Prefer the security and simplicity of one visa over multiple extensions and visa runs
Are from a country not eligible for the VOA
If you're staying under 60 days, the VOA is simpler and cheaper.
Cost
The government application fee is IDR 1,500,000 (~USD 100) for the initial 60-day visa. Each of the two possible extensions also costs IDR 1,500,000, giving a total of approximately IDR 4,500,000 (~USD 300) in government fees for the full 180 days. If you use a licensed agent (which most people do), total costs for the full 180-day period typically come to USD 450–1,000.
How to Apply
Option A — Online via the official portal: Go to evisa.imigrasi.go.id, create an account, select "Tourist Visit Visa" (C1 category), upload your documents, pay IDR 1,500,000 by credit card, and wait 5–10 business days. You'll receive your visa by email and must enter Indonesia within 90 days of issuance.
The online portal requires a sponsor letter — most applicants use a licensed visa agent as their sponsor, which means Option B below is the more practical route for most people.
Option B — Through a licensed visa agent (most popular): The agent acts as your official sponsor and guarantor, handles all documentation, and communicates with immigration on your behalf. Processing takes 5–10 business days. Well-known agents include Bali Business Consulting, Lets Move Indonesia, Flado Indonesia, and AER Visa Lombok for those based on the island.
Required documents:
Passport with at least 6 months validity (12 months recommended if planning the full 180-day stay)
Recent passport photo (4cm × 6cm, white background)
Bank statement showing a minimum balance of USD 2,000 over the last 3 months
Return or onward flight ticket within 180 days
Proof of accommodation for at least the first 2–3 nights
Travel health insurance (required by some embassies; strongly recommended regardless)
Extending the B211A/C1
Each extension follows the same hybrid process as the VOA extension — submit online, pay IDR 1,500,000, then attend the Mataram Immigration Office in person for biometric collection. Processing takes 5–10 working days. The Lombok immigration office details are the same as listed in the VOA section above.
⚠️ Tax residency warning: If you stay 183 or more days in any 12-month period in Indonesia, you may become an Indonesian tax resident, potentially subject to tax on your worldwide income. Keep your total stays under 183 days to avoid this.
E33G Digital Nomad Visa: For Remote Workers
Indonesia's Official Remote Work Visa
Indonesia officially launched the E33G Remote Worker Visa on April 1, 2024 — the country's formal answer to the growing demand for a genuine digital nomad visa. It provides a one-year temporary residence permit (KITAS/ITAS) for foreign nationals employed by or contracted to companies based outside Indonesia.
This is the right visa if you work remotely for a foreign company and want to live legally in Lombok for up to a year.
Eligibility Requirements
You must be employed or contracted by a company registered outside Indonesia
Minimum annual income of USD 60,000
Minimum bank balance of USD 2,000 for the last 3 months
Passport valid for at least 6 months (12 months recommended)
Must apply from outside Indonesia (offshore applications only)
Certain nationalities are excluded (Afghanistan, Cameroon, Guinea, Israel, Kosovo, Liberia, Nigeria, North Korea, Somalia)
⚠️ Important note for freelancers: An employment contract or letter from a foreign-registered organisation is typically required. Pure freelancers without a registered foreign business entity may struggle to qualify — though freelancers who invoice through a registered foreign company may be eligible. Check with a licensed visa agent.
Cost
The official government fee is approximately IDR 7,000,000 (~USD 430), plus KITAS processing costs. Total first-year expenses through a licensed agent typically run USD 600–1,000.
What the E33G Permits
✅ Remote work for foreign companies ✅ Running your own business registered abroad ✅ Multiple entries and exits during the visa period ✅ Opening Indonesian bank accounts and obtaining a local driver's licence
❌ Working for Indonesian companies or receiving income from Indonesian entities ❌ Providing paid services to Indonesian clients ❌ Conducting local business (teaching, Airbnb hosting, real estate, etc.)
How to Apply
The application is processed at evisa.imigrasi.go.id. Most applicants use a licensed agent because the payment process often requires an Indonesian bank account. The process takes 7–10 working days, after which you receive an e-visa. Upon arriving in Indonesia, you must complete biometric registration at an immigration office. Upon permanent departure, you'll need to complete an Exit Permit Only (EPO/ETK) process.
Other Long-Term Visa Options
Second Home Visa (E33)
The Second Home Visa targets high-net-worth individuals who want long-term Indonesian residency. It provides 5 years, extendable for another 5 years (10 years maximum), and after 3 years, holders can apply for permanent residency equivalent (ITAP).
To qualify, you must prove one of the following within 90 days of receiving your ITAS:
A minimum deposit of USD 130,000 (IDR 2 billion) in a personal account at an Indonesian state-owned bank (BNI, BRI, or Mandiri)
Purchase of residential property valued at a minimum of approximately USD 305,000–1,000,000 (thresholds vary by location) with Hak Pakai (Right to Use) title
Government fees are IDR 12,000,000 for 5 years or IDR 18,500,000 for 10 years, plus agent fees. The application must be initiated from outside Indonesia, and biometric data must be provided within 30 days of arrival. Failure to submit proof of funds within 90 days cancels the ITAS.
Benefits include multiple entry and exit, the ability to bring family members, opening bank accounts, leasing property, and a pathway to permanent residency. Work and commercial activities are not permitted.
More information is available through licensed immigration consultants such as Lets Move Indonesia or LMI Consultancy.
Retirement KITAS (E33F)
For individuals aged 55 and over who want to retire in Lombok. Requires proof of pension or passive income of at least USD 1,500 per month, a minimum bank balance of USD 2,000 for the last 3 months, health and life insurance (minimum IDR 25 million coverage), a 12-month accommodation lease, and a domestic helper arrangement.
Valid for 1 year, renewable annually for up to 5 years. Work is absolutely prohibited. Government fees are approximately IDR 3–8 million, with total agent-inclusive costs typically running IDR 10–20 million.
There is also a newer Silver Hair Visa (E33E) for those aged 60 and over, offering 5-year stays with simplified requirements but a higher financial threshold.
Work KITAS (C312)
For foreigners sponsored by an Indonesian employer. The employer must secure an approved manpower plan (RPTKA) and pay a monthly DKP-TKA levy of USD 100. Work is only permitted for the specific position and company listed on the KITAS. Valid for 6–24 months (commonly 12 months) and renewable.
For any KITAS enquiries, InCorp Indonesia and Cekindo are reputable business setup and immigration consultancies.
Arriving in Indonesia: Entry Essentials for Lombok
The All Indonesia Digital Arrival Card — Mandatory From October 2025
As of 1 October 2025, all international travellers entering Indonesia must complete the All Indonesia Digital Arrival Card before arrival. This replaces all previous separate customs, health, and immigration declaration forms with a single unified digital form.
Complete it within 72 hours before your flight at the official portal: allindonesia.imigrasi.go.id. The service is free. You'll receive a QR code to present at customs on arrival.
⚠️ Scam warning: There are unofficial third-party websites charging fees for this free government service. Only use the official portal above.
The Bali Tourist Levy — Does NOT Apply to Lombok
Since February 2024, all foreign tourists entering Bali must pay a IDR 150,000 (~USD 10) tourist levy per entry. This is a Bali Province-specific tax, paid online at lovebali.baliprov.go.id or at the airport.
If you fly directly into Lombok International Airport, you do not pay this levy. Lombok is in West Nusa Tenggara (NTB) Province, which has no equivalent tourist tax. This is one of several ways that arriving directly into Lombok simplifies the entry process.
If you are transiting Bali en route to Lombok, you clear immigration at Bali (your first port of entry) and the levy applies at Bali.
Transiting Bali to Lombok
Many international travellers arrive into Bali's Ngurah Rai Airport (DPS) before connecting to Lombok by domestic flight or ferry. Here's how it works:
Via domestic flight: You clear immigration, customs, and collect your baggage entirely at Bali. From the international terminal, walk 5–10 minutes to the domestic terminal, check in for your Lombok flight, go through domestic security, and board. Allow a minimum of 3 hours between your international arrival and domestic departure if on separate tickets, or 2 hours on the same airline booking. The Bali–Lombok flight is approximately 50 minutes, operated by Wings Air/Lion Air, Garuda Indonesia, and Batik Air, with multiple daily departures.
Via ferry: The ASDP public ferry departs from Padang Bai harbour in east Bali (around 1.5 hours from Kuta/Denpasar) and arrives at Lembar Harbour in southwest Lombok. Ferries run every 60–90 minutes, 24 hours a day. The crossing takes 4–5 hours and costs IDR 75,000 as a walk-on passenger. Fast boats from Padang Bai, Sanur, or Serangan reach Lombok or the Gili Islands in 1.5–3 hours for IDR 350,000–600,000. This is a domestic route — no separate immigration process required.
Direct international flights into Lombok: If you prefer to fly directly, AirAsia operates daily flights from Kuala Lumpur, Batik Air flies 4x weekly from Kuala Lumpur, and Scoot runs 4x weekly from Singapore.
Visa Runs: Do You Still Need Them?
A visa run means leaving Indonesia and re-entering to start a fresh visa. After exhausting a 60-day VOA (30 days plus one extension), travellers who want to keep staying must either leave and re-enter on a new VOA, apply in advance for a B211A/C1, or depart.
Visa runs remain common in 2025, but they're increasingly unnecessary given the B211A/C1 option for longer stays.
There is no explicit legal restriction on consecutive VOAs, but immigration officers have discretion to question travellers with obvious short-trip patterns. Same-day returns are increasingly flagged — staying at least 2 nights at your destination is strongly recommended.
Popular visa run destinations from Lombok:
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: The most popular and cost-effective option. AirAsia flies daily from Lombok. Return flights typically run USD 100–200.
Singapore: Scoot operates 4x weekly directly from Lombok. Return flights are USD 100–250. More expensive but straightforward.
For anyone planning to stay longer than 60 days, the B211A/C1 is a far more cost-effective and less disruptive option than repeated visa runs.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
These are the most frequent errors that cause problems at Indonesian immigration:
🔴 Not getting the e-VOA in advance. The single most impactful step you can take. Do it — it takes 10 minutes and eliminates the airport queue entirely.
🔴 Not completing the All Indonesia Arrival Card before flying. This is now mandatory. Complete it at allindonesia.imigrasi.go.id within 72 hours of your flight and screenshot your QR code.
🔴 Arriving with a damaged passport. Indonesian immigration — particularly at Bali — is notoriously strict. Tears, water damage, or bent covers can result in denied entry. Replace damaged passports before travelling.
🔴 No proof of return or onward travel. Always have a printed or digital copy of your return or onward flight ready. You may be required to book one on the spot.
🔴 Carrying no IDR cash. Card readers at Lombok airport are less reliable than Bali's. Always carry IDR 500,000 in cash as a backup for the VOA fee.
🔴 Passport with less than 6 months validity. This is a hard requirement. Check your expiry date before booking your trip.
🔴 Overstaying your visa. The fine is IDR 1,000,000 (~USD 65) per day — even one day triggers it. Beyond 60 days overstay, the consequences include automatic deportation, a re-entry ban, and potential detention while awaiting deportation. Take your visa expiry date seriously.
🔴 Working on a tourist visa. Immigration enforcement in Indonesia has intensified significantly through 2024–2025. Deportations, blacklistings, and criminal charges are real consequences. If you're working remotely, explore the E33G.
🔴 Using unofficial visa agents or third-party arrival card websites. Red flags include anyone promising to extend visas beyond legal limits or offering the free All Indonesia Arrival Card for a fee. Only use licensed agencies with verifiable offices and online presence.
Key Warnings for Every Visitor
Beyond visas, there are a few broader warnings that every visitor to Lombok and Indonesia should know:
Drug penalties are severe. Indonesia enforces some of the strictest drug laws in the world. Marijuana, CBD, and THC are completely illegal — medical prescriptions from your home country carry no weight. Trafficking carries the death penalty. This is not an exaggeration.
Some ADHD medications are illegal in Indonesia. Medications like Adderall that are prescribed and legal in the US or UK may be classified as controlled substances in Indonesia. Check before you travel — bring documentation for any prescription medication and verify its legal status with the Indonesian embassy.
Credit card skimming. The US State Department has specifically flagged Indonesia for credit card skimming risks. Be vigilant with ATMs and card transactions.
New criminal code effective January 2026. Indonesia's revised criminal code — which came into effect on 1 January 2026 — includes provisions covering cohabitation outside marriage, extramarital relations, and blasphemy. The practical impact on tourists remains limited in day-to-day reality, but it's worth being aware of.
Quick Reference: Indonesia Visa Comparison
Visa-Free Entry: Only available to ASEAN nations plus a small number of other countries including Colombia, Hong Kong SAR, Suriname, Brazil, and Turkey. Grants 30 days, cannot be extended. Not available to Western/English-speaking nationalities.
Visa on Arrival (VOA): Available to ~97 countries. Costs IDR 500,000 (~USD 35). Grants 30 days, extendable once for another 30 days. Apply online as an e-VOA at evisa.imigrasi.go.id before arrival.
B211A / C1 Tourist Visa: Available to most nationalities. Costs IDR 1,500,000 (~USD 100) plus extensions. Grants 60 days, extendable twice for 60 days each — up to 180 days total. Best option for long stays. Apply online or through a licensed agent.
E33G Digital Nomad Visa: For remote workers employed by foreign companies earning USD 60,000+ annually. Costs ~IDR 7,000,000 (~USD 430). Grants 1 year. Apply from outside Indonesia at evisa.imigrasi.go.id.
Second Home Visa: For high-net-worth individuals. Requires USD 130,000 in an Indonesian state bank or property purchase. Grants 5 years, extendable to 10.
Retirement KITAS: For those aged 55+. Requires USD 1,500/month income proof. Grants 1 year, renewable for up to 5 years.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a visa to visit Lombok? Most international tourists do — specifically a Visa on Arrival or e-VOA. Only ASEAN nationals and a small number of other countries qualify for visa-free entry. The vast majority of Western visitors (US, UK, Australia, EU) need a VOA, which can be purchased at the airport or arranged online in advance.
Is the Bali tourist tax charged at Lombok airport? No. The IDR 150,000 Bali tourist levy is a Bali Province-specific charge. It does not apply at Lombok International Airport. If you fly directly into Lombok, you will not pay this tax.
How long does immigration take at Lombok airport? Much less than Bali. Lombok's airport is significantly smaller and less crowded. Most travellers with an e-VOA or VOA clear immigration within 30 minutes — often less.
Can I work remotely in Lombok on a tourist visa? Technically, no. Tourist visas (VOA, visa-free, B211A/C1) do not permit any form of work. Remote work for foreign companies has historically existed in a grey area, but Indonesian immigration enforcement has increased significantly since 2024. The E33G Remote Worker Visa is the legal option for remote workers.
How do I extend my visa in Lombok? VOA extensions are handled at the Mataram Immigration Office (Jl. Udayana No. 2, Mataram). Submit your extension request online at evisa.imigrasi.go.id, pay IDR 500,000, then attend in person for mandatory biometric collection. Start the process at least 7–14 days before your visa expires. From Kuta Lombok, allow 1.5–2 hours of driving time.
What happens if I overstay my visa in Indonesia? A fine of IDR 1,000,000 (~USD 65) per day applies from day one of overstay. Beyond 60 days, automatic deportation and a re-entry ban are imposed. Take your visa expiry date seriously.
What is the All Indonesia Arrival Card? As of October 2025, it's the mandatory digital arrival form that all international visitors to Indonesia must complete before flying. It's free and completed at allindonesia.imigrasi.go.id. Complete it within 72 hours of your flight and save your QR code.
Can I get a new VOA straight after my 60 days expires? Yes — there's no explicit legal ban on consecutive VOAs, but you must leave Indonesia first. Immigration officers have discretion to question frequent short-trip patterns. Stay at least two nights on your visa run destination.
Key Resources
Here are the official sources you should use — and bookmark — for Indonesia visa matters:
🔗 Indonesian Immigration Portal — official policy and announcements
🔗 e-VOA / e-Visa Application Portal — apply for VOA, B211A/C1, extensions
🔗 All Indonesia Arrival Card — mandatory digital arrival form
🔗 VFS Global e-VOA Partner Portal — authorised alternative (higher fee)
🔗 Love Bali Tourist Levy Portal — Bali-only tourist tax (does not apply to Lombok)
🔗 Lombok Airport Official Site — airport information and VOA country eligibility list
🔗 Mataram Immigration Office — Lombok visa extensions
🔗 Indonesian Embassy (US) — US-specific visa information
🔗 Indonesian Embassy (UK) — UK-specific visa information
🔗 Indonesian Embassy (Australia) — Australia-specific visa information
Last updated: March 2026. Indonesia visa regulations change regularly and sometimes without advance notice. Always verify current requirements at imigrasi.go.id before travelling.