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A Market Growing Up: What Bali’s 2026 Regulatory Reset Really Means for Property Buyers

Andy Kun by Andy Kun
June 7, 2026
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Bali’s property market is not in crisis, it is growing up. Anyone reading the headlines over the past six months could be forgiven for thinking otherwise, because the noise has been relentless: new business classifications, restricted licences for foreign companies, a sharper tax net, and a constant stream of social media commentary predicting the end of foreign investment on the island. Last week I sat at a roundtable that cut straight through it. Hosted by Terje H. Nilsen, co-founder of Seven Stones Indonesia and interim chairperson of the Bali Tourism and Investment Chamber, the session brought together a small group of agents, developers, business owners and investors for a candid conversation about what is actually happening on the ground.

What stayed with me afterwards was not the regulatory detail. It was the relief in the room.


The Value of Sitting Down

For months, the people who actually move capital in this market have been reading contradictory signals. On one hand, the central government is openly courting foreign direct investment and positioning Indonesia as Southeast Asia’s next great destination for capital, with ambitions that invite comparison to Dubai, Singapore and Hong Kong. On the other, a wave of provincial measures and tax enforcement has made many of those same investors feel less welcome than they did a year ago. When the only source of information is a feed engineered for outrage, the result is paralysis. Sitting in a room with people living the same questions does something an algorithm cannot: it replaces fear with perspective.

The conversation kept returning to a single idea. Most of what feels chaotic right now is not the market falling apart. It is the market being put in order.


Three Changes Every Buyer Should Understand

Three regulatory shifts dominated the discussion, and each one matters.

The first is KBLI 2025, the updated national classification of business activities, issued on 18 December 2025 under BPS Regulation No. 7. It introduces specific accommodation codes that did not exist cleanly before, including a dedicated villa classification, serviced apartments and glamping. The alarm it generated was largely misplaced. In a joint circular, the investment ministry, the Ministry of Law and the national statistics agency confirmed that the new classification requires no new business licences: existing licences stay valid, the bulk of the conversion runs automatically through the online licensing system against a published conversion table, and manual updates are needed only where a company’s actual activities have substantively changed. The systems that handle licensing and company records are due to finish aligning to the new codes by 18 June 2026, with the old and new classifications running in parallel until then. For most owners this is administrative housekeeping, not a threat.

The second change is closer to home. The Bali provincial government has closed seven business classifications to new foreign companies, a restriction already live in the online licensing system, and they include the one that matters most to property buyers: real estate under code 68111, for years the standard classification foreign villa investors registered under. The others run from management consulting and travel agencies to vehicle rental and several small-scale trades. The change bites at the point of entry: a newly formed foreign company can no longer register under these codes in Bali. Companies that already hold them are not affected at this stage and continue to operate as before. The rationale is not hard to follow. Bali accounted for close to 40% of all foreign company registrations in Indonesia between 2021 and 2025, more than 19,000 companies across some 55,000 projects, and the province argues too much of that crowded into low-risk sectors meant for local businesses without delivering real economic weight.

The third is tax. Indonesia’s new integrated system, Coretax, is now mandatory, and it cross references declared values, transaction frequency and reporting status automatically. The grey practices some buyers once treated as routine, under-declaring a purchase price or quietly routing rental income offshore, are now surfaced by software rather than by chance. That era is closing, and quickly.


How the Room Actually Felt

None of this lands on one group alone. International buyers feel the whiplash of being told they are wanted while watching the structures they relied on tighten. Developers who built their businesses around foreign demand are recalculating. And the response from the Indonesians at the table was the one that moved me most, because their concern was not abstract. They see foreign capital, foreign employers and foreign spending as part of how their own livelihoods have grown, and they are anxious about what happens to that momentum if investors decide the island has become more trouble than it is worth.

Strip away the fear and the performance, and these are all reasonable reactions. They are also, tellingly, the reactions of people who still believe in the market. Nobody at that table was leaving.


A Young Market Doing What Young Markets Do

Here is the part the headlines miss. Indonesia is a fast growing economy with a relatively young property market, and young markets behave like any organisation that is maturing. They analyse, they react, they plan, they execute, they review, and then they improve. The reason markets like Australia, Singapore, the United States and much of Europe feel orderly by comparison is not that they were always so. It is that they have already lived through the messy phase Bali is moving through now.

Every emerging market carries this trade off. The friction is real, and so is the upside that belongs to those who arrive early. The investors who did best in those more developed markets were rarely the ones who waited for perfect clarity. They were the ones who read the direction of travel and structured themselves correctly for it.


Still the Right Time, For the Prepared Buyer

People do not stop building wealth because the rules get harder. The disciplined ones adapt, and they tend to find their best opportunities precisely when others hesitate. What has changed is the cost of getting the structure wrong, and that cost is now measured in years and, in the worst cases, in the entire investment.

This is where the right team stops being a convenience and becomes the safeguard. Working with a licensed agency and AREBI member, alongside a certified broker and independent legal and tax counsel, is no longer a formality; it is the difference between an asset that survives an audit and one that does not. At Fullers we work only for the buyer. We pre-screen every property for title, permits and zoning before it reaches a client, and we run the legal process with a notary and independent advisers rather than around them. In a market being rebuilt in real time, that discipline is the whole game.

Bali is not closing. It is correcting. For the buyer who reads it clearly and structures it properly, this remains one of the most compelling places in the region to own property: not in spite of the changes, but because of where they are leading.

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Andy Kun

Andy Kun

Andy Kun is the Managing Director of Fullers Properties, a Bali-based buyer's agency and advisory firm specialising in property acquisition, investment structuring, and market insight for international buyers. The firm works exclusively on the buyer's side, helping capital-ready individuals and institutions make decisions they are genuinely confident in, not ones they were sold.

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