Cruising a foreign yacht into Indonesia is entirely achievable — provided the vessel and the people aboard are cleared under the right rules from the start.
Indonesia welcomes visiting yachts, but it regulates them through several authorities at once: immigration (Imigrasi) for the people, and the maritime and customs authorities for the vessel. The result is a handful of separate requirements — a cruising permit, personal visas, port clearances, customs formalities and insurance — that must all line up. This overview explains how the pieces fit together and where each one applies, so you arrive in Bali knowing precisely what your yacht needs and why.
The vessel: a CAIT cruising permit
Every foreign-flagged yacht cruising Indonesia needs a Clearance Approval for Indonesian Territory, or CAIT. This is the cruising permit, issued in the name of the vessel and quite separate from any personal visa. It authorises the yacht herself to be in Indonesian waters and is the document the harbourmaster and customs will ask to see at every port. Because it must be approved before you arrive, the CAIT is the natural starting point of any Indonesian cruising plan.
The people: owner, captain and crew visas
Everyone aboard needs the correct entry status in their own right. Short cruising visits are often covered by a Visa on Arrival, while longer stays or professional roles call for a pre-arrival visit visa arranged through Imigrasi. Owner, captain and crew each have their own circumstances, and the cleanest approach is to assess every passport individually and manage them as one coordinated file that stays aligned with the vessel’s permit.
Ports, clearance and customs
Arrival brings two more authorities into play. The harbourmaster’s office (syahbandar) grants port clearance — on arrival, again each time you move between ports, and once more on departure — while Bea Cukai customs enters the yacht as a temporary importation under her cruising status, keeping her free of import duty. At Benoa, Bali’s main port of entry, these formalities are completed together with immigration in a single arrival window.
Insurance, ports of entry and the framework
Valid hull and liability insurance is expected throughout your cruise, and entry is made through designated ports — Benoa being the principal gateway for Bali. The whole system rests on Indonesian regulation, chiefly the relevant Permenkumham provisions, administered by Imigrasi for the people and by the maritime and customs authorities for the vessel. Knowing which rule governs which requirement is precisely what turns a daunting list into a straightforward sequence.
What a foreign yacht needs
Four building blocks, one coordinated file — here is what we bring together so your yacht cruises Indonesia cleanly.
This is the overview — each requirement has its own dedicated service, and we coordinate them as a single file.