Key tax rules for European expatriates living and working in Indonesia. Updated for 2025. Indonesia taxes residents on worldwide income but introduced a meaningful concession for new arrivals: a four-year territorial tax exemption for qualifying foreign nationals. Understanding whether you qualify is the first question to resolve.
How you become a tax resident
You are an Indonesian domestic tax subject (effectively a tax resident) if you reside in Indonesia, are physically present for 183 days or more in any 12-month period, or intend to remain in Indonesia. The "intention to remain" criterion can apply even without meeting the 183-day count and is assessed based on factors including family relocation, long-term visa, and property lease.
Non-residents are taxed at a flat 20% on Indonesian-sourced income. Residents are taxed at progressive rates from 5% to 35% on worldwide income, subject to the four-year territorial concession described above.
Progressive rate schedule for residents
| Annual Taxable Income (IDR) | Rate |
|---|---|
| 0 to 60,000,000 | 5% |
| 60,000,001 to 250,000,000 | 15% |
| 250,000,001 to 500,000,000 | 25% |
| 500,000,001 to 5,000,000,000 | 30% |
| Above 5,000,000,000 | 35% |
An individual non-taxable income threshold (PTKP) applies. For a single individual: IDR 54,000,000 per year. For a married individual: IDR 58,500,000 per year. Benefits-in-kind provided by employers are taxable to employees under rules implemented from 2023.
Capital gains treatment
Indonesia does not have a general capital gains tax. Instead, final withholding taxes apply at the point of disposal for specific asset categories. Gains from the sale of shares listed on the Indonesian Stock Exchange (IDX): subject to a 0.1% final withholding tax on the gross transaction value, collected by the broker. This applies regardless of whether the transaction resulted in a gain or a loss.
Property (land and buildings): a 2.5% final income tax on the gross transfer value applies to the seller. For non-residents, the rate is 20% withholding on the gain. Transfer of shares in Indonesian companies not listed on the exchange: gains are subject to income tax at regular rates for residents, or 20% final withholding for non-residents (subject to applicable DTA rates).
How foreign-sourced income is treated
Indonesia taxes resident individuals on worldwide income as a default. Foreign pension income, foreign dividends, foreign rental income, and foreign employment income are all in scope for Indonesian residents.
The four-year territorial concession (HPP Law) allows qualifying foreign nationals who have not been Indonesian tax residents in the preceding four years to elect taxation on Indonesian-sourced income only for their first four years of residency. The election must be made and cannot be changed mid-period. After the four-year period expires, worldwide income taxation applies automatically.
This concession is particularly significant for expats arriving in Indonesia with established offshore pension assets, foreign investment portfolios, or other sources of foreign income. The four-year window creates a planning period, after which the structure of overseas assets becomes a taxable question.
Key DTA partners
Indonesia has DTAs with over 70 countries. Key provisions for European expats:
Can foreigners own property in Indonesia?
Indonesian law does not permit foreign nationals to own freehold land (Hak Milik). Foreigners with a valid stay permit (KITAS) can hold property under Hak Pakai (right of use), which grants a use right for an initial period of 30 years, extendable by 20 years, and then a further 30 years. Hak Pakai can apply to land and buildings.
The practical route for many expats is long-term leasehold, which is simpler to execute. Property held under Hak Pakai is transferable and can be mortgaged in some cases. Rental income from Indonesian property held by a foreign owner is subject to Indonesian final withholding tax of 10% (for those with a tax identification number) or 20% (without one).
Filing calendar
- 31 March Deadline for filing the annual individual income tax return (SPT Tahunan PPh OP) for the preceding tax year. E-filing is available and encouraged by the Directorate General of Taxes.
- 31 December End of the Indonesian tax year. Annual tax return covers income earned 1 January to 31 December.
- 183 days Physical presence threshold for tax residency in any rolling 12-month period. Residency can also be triggered by domicile or intent to remain, regardless of day count.
- 4-year window Territorial tax concession for qualifying new arrivals. Election must be made on arrival. After 4 years, worldwide income taxation applies automatically. Plan offshore income structure before the window closes.
Get the Indonesia tax calendar for expats
Filing deadlines, residency milestones, and key dates for European expats in Indonesia.