Cruising into Bali on a foreign yacht means satisfying two authorities at once: immigration for the people aboard, and the maritime, port and customs offices for the vessel itself.
This guide walks through the whole picture in the order it tends to matter — entry and visas, the CAIT cruising permit, port and customs clearance, insurance and vessel documents, and finally how to sequence it all on a realistic timeline. None of it is especially difficult in isolation; the difficulty lies in coordinating the parts so that nothing expires, contradicts or holds up the rest. Read it as an orientation, then let us handle the filing. It is general guidance rather than legal advice, and the finer points shift with your flag, vessel and itinerary.
Entry & visas
Start with the people. Every person aboard — owner, guests and crew alike — needs a valid visa to enter Indonesia, and the right one depends on how long they will stay and why. For a short cruising visit the Visa on Arrival, or its online form the e-VOA, gives thirty days and extends once for another thirty. Where the stay is longer, or the purpose moves beyond tourism, a pre-arrival visit visa such as the B211A opens sixty days with room to extend. Those basing themselves in Indonesia for the long term look to a KITAS, and in 2026 the expanded Golden Visa offers five- and ten-year horizons for those who qualify. Match each passport to the route that fits, and apply with lead time.
The CAIT cruising permit
The vessel needs its own permission to cruise. The CAIT — the cruising permit for foreign yachts — authorises your movement through Indonesian waters and names the ports and cruising area you intend to use. It is the document that turns a foreign hull sitting at anchor into a yacht legitimately cruising the archipelago, and it underpins much of what follows at the clearance counter. Apply for it against a considered itinerary; a permit that matches your real cruising plan saves friction at every subsequent port.
Port & customs clearance
Arriving and moving between ports means clearing with the harbourmaster and satisfying customs. Port clearance — the PPKK process — records your vessel’s lawful entry and movement, while Bea Cukai, the customs authority, handles the yacht’s temporary-importation status so that a foreign vessel can remain without being treated as a permanent import. Health and quarantine formalities round out the arrival. Done in the right order, with documents that agree with one another, clearance is routine; done piecemeal, it is where delays appear.
Insurance & vessel documents
Behind the permits sits the vessel’s own paperwork: registration and flag documentation, the certificate of insurance, crew and guest lists, and the particulars that identify the yacht consistently across every form. Valid insurance — third-party liability at its core, usually with hull and P&I alongside — is part of what the authorities expect to see. The recurring theme is consistency: the vessel’s name, flag and dimensions should read identically on the permit, the clearance and the insurance certificate, because mismatches are what slow a file down.
Planning your timeline
Finally, sequence it. Visas and the cruising permit reward lead time, so they are begun well before arrival; clearance happens on the ground as you enter and move between ports; extensions are scheduled against whichever clock — a visa or the vessel’s permitted stay — expires first. The comfortable way to cruise Bali is to have the people’s visas, the vessel’s permit and its clearances mapped onto a single calendar before the passage begins. That coordination is precisely what we take off your hands.