You have accepted a director role at a PT PMA. Or you are relocating your business operations to Jakarta. Or a company has just offered you a senior position and your start date is six weeks away.
The first practical question is always the same: how do you apply for KITAS?
The KITAS, short for Kartu Izin Tinggal Terbatas, is Indonesia’s Limited Stay Permit. It is the primary residence document for foreign nationals who live and work here legally. Without a valid KITAS, a foreigner cannot legally reside in Indonesia beyond a short visitor stay.
The KITAS application process involves three Indonesian government authorities, a specific document sequence, and several deadlines that matter considerably. Miss one step or submit in the wrong order, and the entire process stalls.
How to Apply KITAS in Indonesia: Complete Guide for Foreign Workers and Entrepreneurs (2026)
This guide explains the KITAS application from start to finish. Every step is written plainly, with the actual government portals linked so you know exactly where to go. If you have never dealt with Indonesian immigration before, you will still be able to follow this from beginning to end.
| 2026 update note: This guide reflects the KITAS framework under Indonesia Immigration Law No. 6/2011, Government Regulation No. 31/2013, and the most recent Ministry of Manpower and Immigration circulars as of early 2026. Always confirm the latest fee schedule and document requirements at izin.imigrasi.go.id before submitting. |
What Is KITAS and Who Needs One?
Let us start with the basics, because this is the foundation for everything that follows.
The KITAS (Kartu Izin Tinggal Terbatas) is a Limited Stay Permit issued by the Directorate General of Immigration (Direktorat Jenderal Imigrasi) under Indonesia’s Ministry of Law and Human Rights. It gives a foreign national the legal right to reside in Indonesia for a defined period, usually 6 to 24 months, depending on the type.
Think of it this way. Your passport gets you into Indonesia. Your visa gets you through the airport. But the KITAS is what gives you the legal right to stay, live, and in most cases, work.
Who Must Have a KITAS?
Any foreign national who plans to stay in Indonesia beyond a tourist or business visitor stay needs a KITAS. Specifically, a KITAS is required for all of the following.
- Foreign directors and commissioners of a PT PMA or any Indonesian legal entity residing in Indonesia
- Foreign employees working for any Indonesian company or representative office
- Spouses and dependent children of foreign workers or investors holding a valid KITAS or KITAP
- Foreign retirees who qualify under the retirement KITAS category
- Foreign investors who make a qualifying investment and reside in Indonesia to manage it
- Foreign researchers and religious workers on approved institutional sponsorships
| Important distinction: A business visa or tourist visa does not give you the right to work in Indonesia. Using a tourist visa to carry out work activities is a violation of Indonesia immigration law and carries deportation risk. If you are working here in any capacity, you need the correct foreign work permit Indonesia, not a tourist visa. |
Types of KITAS: Which One Applies to You?
Before starting your KITAS application in Indonesia, you need to know which type of KITAS matches your situation. Each type has different eligibility criteria, sponsoring entities, and required documents.
| KITAS Type | Who It Is For | Sponsoring Entity |
| Work KITAS (KITAS TKA) | Foreign employees and directors working for a company in Indonesia | Indonesian employer company (PT PMA, PT, or other entity) |
| Investment KITAS | Foreign investors who own a qualifying stake in an Indonesian company | The PT PMA or other Indonesian investment vehicle |
| Family Sponsor KITAS | Spouses and minor children of a foreign holder or Indonesian citizen | The foreign worker or Indonesian spouse |
| Retirement KITAS | Foreigners aged 55 or above retiring in Indonesia with sufficient funds | Licensed retirement visa agent or sponsor |
| Student / Educational KITAS | Foreign students enrolled in accredited Indonesian educational institutions | The Indonesian educational institution |
| Religious / Social KITAS | Foreign religious workers and accredited social volunteers | Registered religious or social organisation in Indonesia |
| Second Home Visa (linked permit) | High-net-worth individuals making a qualifying deposit in Indonesia | Bank Indonesia or designated commercial bank |
For most Singaporean entrepreneurs and foreign professionals, the relevant category is either the Work KITAS or the Investment KITAS. This guide focuses primarily on the Work KITAS process, since it is the most common path for PT PMA directors, foreign executives, and employees of Indonesian companies.
However, the general document principles and the immigration steps in Sections 4 through 8 apply to most KITAS types. The main difference between types is in the pre-requisite documents, specifically whether the process starts with a Ministry of Manpower work permit or another sponsoring institution.
The Three Authorities Involved in a Work KITAS Application
Here is where many applicants get confused. The KITAS application in Indonesia does not go through just one government office. It moves through three separate authorities in sequence. Each one must be completed before the next begins.
Understanding this structure upfront prevents the most common timing mistake, which is applying to the wrong authority at the wrong stage.
| Authority | What They Handle | Online Portal |
| Ministry of Manpower (Kementerian Ketenagakerjaan) | RPTKA approval (Foreign Worker Utilisation Plan) and IMTA issuance (Foreign Worker Employment Permit) | https://tka-online.kemnaker.go.id |
| Ministry of Law and Human Rights / Immigration (Ditjen Imigrasi) | VITAS issuance (Limited Stay Visit Visa) and KITAS conversion after arrival in Indonesia | https://izin.imigrasi.go.id |
| Local Immigration Office (Kantor Imigrasi) | KITAS physical card issuance, biometric registration, MERP (Multiple Exit Re-entry Permit), and annual extensions | In-person at the local Kantor Imigrasi |
The correct sequence is: Ministry of Manpower first (RPTKA and IMTA), then Immigration for the VITAS, then travel to Indonesia, then convert the VITAS to a KITAS at the local Immigration office within 30 days of arrival. We will walk through each of these in detail shortly.
| The most expensive KITAS mistake is going out of sequence. IMTA before RPTKA, or KITAS application before IMTA, creates a cascade of rejections that adds weeks to the process. |
KITAS Requirements: Full Document Checklist
Before starting any KITAS application, gather every document on this list. Immigration offices and the Ministry of Manpower both apply strict document completeness checks. Arriving with incomplete submissions adds 1 to 2 weeks of delay to an already structured timeline.
Documents from the Foreign Applicant
- Valid passport with at least 18 months remaining validity from the intended KITAS start date
- Passport-sized colour photographs, white background, 3 x 4 cm and 4 x 6 cm, taken within the last 3 months
- Curriculum vitae or resume showing relevant work experience and educational qualifications
- Highest educational certificate or degree, apostilled or legalised by the relevant authority in the issuing country
- Professional certifications relevant to the proposed work position, if applicable
- Health certificate from an accredited medical practitioner confirming fitness for work
- Police clearance certificate (SKCK equivalent) from the applicant’s home country or most recent country of residence, issued within the past 6 months
Documents from the Sponsoring Indonesian Company
- Company’s Notarial Deed (Akta Pendirian) and SK Kemenkumham
- NIB (Nomor Induk Berusaha) from the OSS portal
- Corporate NPWP (Tax Identification Number)
- Domicile Letter (Surat Keterangan Domisili Perusahaan)
- Approved RPTKA (Rencana Penggunaan Tenaga Kerja Asing), the Foreign Worker Utilisation Plan
- Approved IMTA (Izin Mempekerjakan Tenaga Kerja Asing), the Foreign Worker Employment Permit
- Company’s most recent corporate tax filing evidence
- Appointment letter or employment contract between the company and the foreign applicant
| Translation requirement: All foreign-language documents must be translated into Bahasa Indonesia by a sworn translator registered with the Indonesian Ministry of Law and Human Rights. Certificates issued in English may be accepted by some offices, but confirming with the local Kantor Imigrasi is strongly recommended before submission. |
How to Apply KITAS: Step-by-Step Process
Now let us walk through the full KITAS application process step by step. Follow this sequence exactly. Each step must be complete before the next one starts.
STEP 1: Obtain the RPTKA (Foreign Worker Utilisation Plan)
The RPTKA is the foundation of the entire work KITAS process. Without an approved RPTKA, the Ministry of Manpower will not issue the IMTA. And without the IMTA, Immigration will not issue the VITAS.
The sponsoring Indonesian company submits the RPTKA application through the Ministry of Manpower’s online portal at https://tka-online.kemnaker.go.id. The RPTKA specifies the position title, the KBLI business activity code, the number of foreign workers required, and the Indonesian counterpart employee assigned to receive knowledge transfer from the foreign worker.
Key information declared in the RPTKA:
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| Timeline: RPTKA approval typically takes 3 to 7 business days after a complete online submission. The Ministry of Manpower reviews the application against the Positive Investment List and the permitted KBLI activities. |
STEP 2: Obtain the IMTA (Foreign Worker Employment Permit)
With the RPTKA approved, the sponsoring company immediately applies for the IMTA through the same Ministry of Manpower portal at tka-online.kemnaker.go.id.
The IMTA authorises the specific company to employ the specific named foreign worker in the specific position. It is tied to the person, the position, and the company simultaneously. Changing any of these three requires a new IMTA application.
- IMTA validity: typically 12 months per issuance, renewable annually
- IMTA government fee: USD 100 per foreign worker per month of permit validity (paid upfront for the full period)
- For a 12-month IMTA: the fee is USD 1,200 payable at the time of application
| Timeline: IMTA issuance typically takes 3 to 5 business days after the RPTKA is confirmed and fees are paid. Keep the original IMTA document safe. You will need it at the Immigration office during KITAS conversion. |
STEP 3: Apply for the VITAS (Limited Stay Visit Visa) from Abroad
With both the RPTKA and IMTA approved, the foreign applicant can now apply for the VITAS (Visa Izin Tinggal Terbatas). This is the entry visa that converts to a KITAS after arrival in Indonesia.
Singaporean applicants apply for the VITAS at the Indonesian Embassy or Consulate in Singapore. The address is 7 Chatsworth Road, Singapore 249761.
- Bring the complete document package including passport, IMTA approval letter, appointment letter, educational certificates, police clearance, health certificate, and passport photos.
- Complete the VITAS application form at the Embassy.
- Pay the VITAS application fee (confirm the current amount directly with the Embassy before attending, as it updates periodically).
- The Embassy processes the VITAS typically within 3 to 5 business days.
- Once the VITAS sticker appears in your passport, you are cleared to travel to Indonesia.
| Important deadline: The VITAS is valid for 60 days from the date of issue. You must enter Indonesia within those 60 days. If you miss this window, the VITAS expires and the process restarts from this step. |
STEP 4: Enter Indonesia on the VITAS
Travel to Indonesia using the VITAS in your passport. Present it at immigration on arrival. The immigration officer at the port of entry stamps the VITAS and records your entry.
From the moment you enter Indonesia, the 30-day conversion clock starts. You have exactly 30 days to convert your VITAS to a full KITAS at the local Kantor Imigrasi. Do not delay this step. Missing the 30-day window means overstaying on the VITAS, which carries fines and may complicate your KITAS application.
STEP 5: Register with Local Police (STM/SKPPS) within 24 Hours
Within 24 hours of arrival at your Indonesian residence, you must report to the local Polsek (police station) to register your address. This reporting requirement is part of Indonesia’s Foreigner Surveillance System (Pengawasan Orang Asing).
Bring your passport with the VITAS stamp, a copy of the IMTA, and your Indonesian residential address. The police issue a STM (Surat Tanda Melapor) or SKPPS as acknowledgement. Keep this document. You will need it for the KITAS conversion appointment.
| Friendly reminder: The 24-hour police reporting rule surprises most first-time arrivals. This is not optional. It is a formal legal obligation under Indonesia’s immigration regulations. Your sponsoring company or immigration agent should remind you of this before you board the flight. |
STEP 6: Convert the VITAS to KITAS at the Local Immigration Office
This is the most critical in-person step. Visit the Kantor Imigrasi (local Immigration Office) covering your registered Indonesian address. Bring the complete document package listed below.
Documents to bring to the Kantor Imigrasi for KITAS conversion:
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The immigration officer reviews your documents, collects biometric data (fingerprints and photo), and processes the KITAS application. In most major cities including Jakarta, Surabaya, and Bali, the KITAS card is ready within 3 to 7 business days.
STEP 7: Apply for the MERP (Multiple Exit Re-entry Permit) Simultaneously
Apply for the Multiple Exit Re-entry Permit at the same Kantor Imigrasi appointment, or immediately after KITAS collection. The MERP allows you to leave and re-enter Indonesia as many times as needed during the KITAS validity period without the permit being cancelled.
Without the MERP, leaving Indonesia cancels your KITAS. This is a point that catches many first-time holders completely off guard. If you travel regularly between Singapore and Indonesia for business, the MERP is not optional. It is essential.
- MERP validity: matches your KITAS validity period (6, 12, or 24 months)
- MERP government fee: approximately IDR 200,000 to IDR 1,000,000 depending on permit duration (confirm current fee at the counter)
STEP 8: Register with the Local Civil Registration Office
Within 14 days of KITAS issuance, register with the local Civil Registration and Population Office (Dinas Kependudukan dan Catatan Sipil, or Disdukcapil). Bring your KITAS card, passport, and a copy of the RPTKA and IMTA.
The Disdukcapil issues a Foreign Resident Registration Card (Surat Keterangan Tempat Tinggal, or SKTT). This document is useful for day-to-day transactions including bank account operations, property rental agreements, and some government service interactions.
KITAS Validity, Renewal, and What Happens When It Expires
Understanding the validity and renewal cycle prevents one of the most common and most disruptive situations: an expired KITAS.
| Permit Stage | Validity Period | Key Deadline |
| Initial KITAS | 6 to 24 months depending on IMTA duration | Must be converted from VITAS within 30 days of Indonesia entry |
| KITAS Renewal | 12 months per renewal cycle | Submit renewal at least 30 days before expiry |
| MERP | Matches KITAS validity | Apply at KITAS issuance or immediately after |
| IMTA Renewal | 12 months per renewal | Renew IMTA before renewing KITAS; they must stay in sync |
| KITAP Eligibility | 5 years, renewable | Eligible after 3 consecutive years holding a valid KITAS |
How to Renew Your KITAS
KITAS renewal happens at the same Kantor Imigrasi where the original card was issued. Begin the renewal process at least 30 days before the current KITAS expiry date. Late applications attract a fine, and an expired KITAS technically converts the holder to an overstayer status.
For the renewal, the sponsoring company must first renew the IMTA at the Ministry of Manpower portal. Only after the new IMTA is in hand should the KITAS renewal application proceed at the Immigration office.
What Happens If the KITAS Expires?
An expired KITAS creates immediate problems. The holder becomes an overstayer under Indonesian immigration law. Overstaying carries fines of IDR 1,000,000 per day. Beyond 60 days of overstay, the holder may face deportation and a re-entry ban of 6 to 12 months.
Additionally, an overstaying foreign director cannot sign legal documents on behalf of the company, since their presence in Indonesia is legally irregular. This affects PT PMA operations significantly. Always set calendar reminders 60 days before KITAS expiry to start the renewal process.
KITAS for PT PMA Directors: What Makes It Different
Foreign directors of a PT PMA go through the same KITAS application process described above. However, a few specific points apply to the director context that are worth knowing separately.
The Director’s KITAS Enables the Company to Operate
In practice, the KITAS-holding director is the only person who can represent the PT PMA in most government interactions. They sign bank mandates, government portal registrations, and tax filings on behalf of the company.
This means the KITAS is not just a personal immigration permit. It is operationally linked to the company’s ability to function. Letting it expire, or failing to renew it properly, disrupts the company’s government compliance from that same day.
The Knowledge Transfer Obligation
Every IMTA for a foreign worker requires the company to assign an Indonesian counterpart (tenaga kerja pendamping) who receives structured knowledge transfer from the foreign worker. The RPTKA names this counterpart.
For directors, the counterpart is typically an Indonesian manager or deputy director. BKPM and the Ministry of Manpower may request evidence of this knowledge transfer programme during compliance reviews. Keep training records on file.
NPWP for Foreign Directors
Every foreign director residing in Indonesia on a KITAS must register a personal Indonesian tax ID (NPWP) at the local Tax Service Office (KPP). The NPWP is required for signing government documents, filing the company’s tax returns, and opening certain bank accounts.
Register for the personal NPWP online at https://ereg.pajak.go.id, or visit the KPP in person with your KITAS card and passport.
Costs and Fees for a Work KITAS Application in 2026
The total cost of a KITAS application involves both government fees and professional service fees. The split below gives you a realistic budget picture.
| Fee Item | Approximate Amount | Notes |
| IMTA Government Fee | USD 1,200 (for 12-month IMTA) | USD 100 per worker per month, paid upfront |
| VITAS Application Fee | SGD 30 to SGD 80 | Confirm current fee at Indonesian Embassy Singapore |
| KITAS Application Fee | IDR 1,000,000 to IDR 2,500,000 | Varies by permit class and duration |
| MERP Fee | IDR 200,000 to IDR 1,000,000 | Depends on duration; confirm at Kantor Imigrasi |
| Sworn Translation Fees | IDR 250,000 to IDR 500,000 per page | Required for all foreign-language documents |
| Document Apostille / Legalisation | SGD 20 to SGD 120 per document (Singapore) | Contact MFA Singapore or authorised agent |
| Professional Immigration Agent Fees | IDR 5 million to IDR 20 million | Varies by agent; covers coordination and submission |
| Health Certificate | SGD 50 to SGD 150 | From accredited clinic in Singapore |
| Police Clearance Certificate (Singapore) | SGD 12 + processing | From Singapore Police Force; allow 5 to 7 business days |
In total, budget approximately SGD 2,000 to SGD 4,500 in combined fees for a first-time KITAS application. This excludes the professional incorporation or advisory fees if you are also setting up a PT PMA simultaneously.
Realistic Timeline for a Work KITAS Application
The total KITAS application timeline depends on how quickly documents are prepared and how responsive each government office is. Here is a realistic week-by-week picture for a well-prepared applicant.
| Stage | Duration | What Happens |
| Document preparation | 1 to 2 weeks | Gather passport, certificates, police clearance, health cert, translations |
| RPTKA submission and approval | 3 to 7 business days | Sponsoring company submits online at tka-online.kemnaker.go.id |
| IMTA issuance | 3 to 5 business days | Ministry of Manpower issues IMTA after RPTKA confirmation |
| VITAS application at Embassy | 3 to 5 business days | Indonesian Embassy Singapore processes the VITAS |
| Travel to Indonesia | Day 0 | Enter Indonesia on VITAS; 30-day conversion clock starts |
| Police report (STM) | Within 24 hours | Register at local Polsek on arrival day or next morning |
| Kantor Imigrasi appointment | Day 2 to Day 14 | Submit KITAS conversion application with full document pack |
| KITAS card collection | 3 to 7 business days after submission | Biometrics taken; card printed and collected |
| MERP issuance | Same appointment or 1 to 2 days after | Apply at same Kantor Imigrasi |
| Disdukcapil registration | Within 14 days of KITAS collection | Register at local civil registration office |
| Total from document start to KITAS | 4 to 7 weeks | For well-prepared, first-time applicants with no document gaps |
Common Mistakes That Delay the KITAS Application
The KITAS application has several sequential dependencies. One error early in the process delays everything that follows. These are the most frequent mistakes made by first-time applicants.
Common KITAS application mistakes to avoid:
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From KITAS to KITAP: The Long-Term Residency Path
For foreigners who plan to stay in Indonesia for the long term, the KITAS is not necessarily the final destination. After holding a valid KITAS for at least 3 consecutive years, a foreign national becomes eligible to apply for the KITAP.
The KITAP (Kartu Izin Tinggal Tetap) is a Permanent Stay Permit valid for 5 years and renewable indefinitely. It gives the holder broader rights in Indonesia, including the right to own certain types of property and greater ease in government transactions.
| Factor | KITAS | KITAP |
| Validity | 6 to 24 months | 5 years per issuance |
| Renewal | Annual renewal required | Renewable every 5 years |
| Eligibility | Any qualifying foreign national | After 3 consecutive years on valid KITAS |
| Work Rights | Tied to specific employer (Work KITAS) | Broader; not tied to one employer for investment KITAP |
| Exit Permit | MERP required for re-entry | Re-entry permitted without separate MERP |
| Property Rights | Limited | Eligible for certain property ownership arrangements |
| Annual Compliance Cost | Higher (annual IMTA renewal required) | Lower over time (5-year cycle) |
For PT PMA directors and long-term foreign investors in Indonesia, the KITAP is worth planning for from the start. The 3-year KITAS accumulation period begins from your first valid KITAS issuance, so starting on time matters.
Read also: KITAP vs KITAS in Indonesia: Which Visa Is Right for Foreign Residents?
The KITAS Is Manageable When You Know the Sequence
The KITAS application in Indonesia is not as complicated as it first appears. It is sequential, it is procedural, and it is entirely predictable once you understand the three authorities involved and the order in which to approach them.
The biggest risk is not the process itself. The biggest risk is going in without preparation, submitting in the wrong order, or missing a deadline that triggers a restart.
For Singaporean entrepreneurs and foreign directors setting up a PT PMA, the KITAS is simply part of the market entry checklist. Get the RPTKA and IMTA moving in parallel with the company incorporation process. Apply for the VITAS as soon as the IMTA is in hand. And convert it within 30 days of arriving.
Do all of that, and your Indonesia KITAS permit lands in your hands on a clear, predictable timeline.
Official Government Portals for KITAS Applications
- Immigration Online Portal (VITAS and KITAS): https://izin.imigrasi.go.id (Directorate General of Immigration)
- Ministry of Manpower (RPTKA and IMTA): https://tka-online.kemnaker.go.id (Foreign worker permit applications)
- Indonesian Embassy Singapore: https://kemlu.go.id/singapore (VITAS applications from Singapore)
- DJP Tax Registration (Personal NPWP): https://ereg.pajak.go.id (Online NPWP registration for foreign residents)
- OSS Portal (Company Registration and NIB): https://oss.go.id (Required for sponsoring company verification)
Stop Spending Your Time on Paperwork
Every hour you spend chasing government portals, translating documents, and coordinating between three different Indonesian ministries is an hour you are not spending on your business.
That is exactly the problem Bizsquare solves for Singaporean entrepreneurs and foreign executives relocating to Indonesia.
Our team manages the entire KITAS application process on your behalf. We prepare your documents, coordinate with the Ministry of Manpower for the RPTKA and IMTA, liaise with the Indonesian Embassy in Singapore for your VITAS, and guide you through the Kantor Imigrasi conversion appointment. We track every deadline so nothing slips.
We have helped dozens of PT PMA directors, foreign executives, and Singaporean entrepreneurs get their KITAS correctly and on time. We know which offices require what documents. We know which common mistakes add weeks to a timeline. And we handle every administrative step so you do not have to.
What Bizsquare Takes Off Your Hands:
- Company Incorporation in Indonesia
- Apply for Indonesia KITAS | KITAS Application for Foreigners
- Accounting, Tax & Corporate Secretary Services in Indonesia
One more thing. If you are also setting up a PT PMA at the same time, we can run the company incorporation and KITAS processes in parallel. That alone saves 2 to 3 weeks compared to doing them sequentially.
Ready to stop managing government paperwork and start managing your business? Contact us today. We will tell you exactly which documents to prepare, what to expect at each step, and how quickly we can get your KITAS application moving.

