Indonesia e-Visa & e-VOA for Bali: Apply, Cost, Processing & Validity (2026)

Checked 2026-06.

As of June 2026, most tourists visiting Bali use the e-VOA (electronic visa on arrival) or B1 e-visitor visa: a single-entry permit costing roughly IDR 500,000 (about USD 33–35) for a 30-day stay, applied for online before you fly.

iVisa is an optional paid concierge that pre-checks your form, photo and dates and offers human support — useful if you want a guided, error-reduced application. You can always apply yourself on the official government portal and pay only the government fee.

Apply for an Indonesia e-visa via iVisa

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ItemDetailValidityCostNotes
Government fee (e-VOA / B1 e-visa)Official single-entry tourist visa, applied online before travel30-day stay; e-visa valid 90 days to enter~IDR 500,000 (USD 33–35)Fixed on evisa.imigrasi.go.id — no service surcharge
iVisa service fee (optional)Third-party concierge: form pre-check, photo/format validation, supportSame visa; same stayGovernment fee + iVisa fee on topOptional convenience — not the government, not required
30-day extensionOne extension of an e-VOA, done in-country+30 days (60 total)~IDR 500,000 againIn-person at immigration office + biometrics (2026 rule)
Processing timeFrom submission to PDF visa by emailIncluded in feeTypically 24–48h; apply ≥2 days before departure

For a Bali holiday, the two relevant options in 2026 are the **e-VOA** (electronic visa on arrival) and the **B1 e-visitor visa**. Both are single-entry, both allow a 30-day stay, and both carry the same official government fee of around **IDR 500,000 (roughly USD 33–35)**. The practical difference: the e-VOA is the simplest tourist route and can be **extended once in-country for another 30 days** (total 60 days), while the standard B1 e-visa is valid for entry within 90 days of issue but is generally not extendable the same way. Around 87 nationalities — including the US, UK, Australia, Canada and most of the EU — are eligible.

The process is online and straightforward. On the official portal you create an account, upload your passport bio-data page and a photo, enter your travel dates and onward/return flight details, and pay by Visa, Mastercard or JCB. Passports must be valid for **at least 6 months** beyond arrival. You then receive a PDF visa by email — typically within **24–48 hours**, though you should apply at least 2 days before departure to be safe. At Bali's Ngurah Rai (DPS) airport you scan the e-VOA/e-visa, and immigration completes entry; final admission is always at the officer's discretion.

On cost, be clear-eyed about who charges what. The **government fee is fixed at about IDR 500,000** when you apply directly on the official site **evisa.imigrasi.go.id** — there is no extra service charge on that portal. Many third-party sites (including iVisa and others) are **independent concierge services that add their own service fee on top** of that government amount. They are not the government and not required. What you pay extra buys form pre-checking, photo/format validation, reminders and human support — convenience, not a faster legal channel.

Who should consider a paid service like iVisa? Travelers who want a guided, error-reduced application, who are nervous about uploading the right photo format or flight proof, or who value live support if something goes wrong. Who should skip it? Confident, budget-focused travelers who are happy to fill in the official form themselves and pay only the ~IDR 500,000 government fee. Both routes produce the same valid visa.

A few 2026 gotchas: extensions now generally require an **in-person visit to a local immigration office** (biometrics/fingerprints), so plan ahead if you want the extra 30 days. The e-VOA/B1 is **single-entry** — leaving and re-entering Indonesia voids it, so you'd need a new one. And keep a copy of your onward or return ticket; immigration can ask for it. Figures here are dated ranges, not guarantees — always confirm the current fee and rules on the official portal before paying. Checked 2026-06.

Check your specific case with the visa-on-arrival eligibility checker.

FAQ

Do I need a visa for Bali in 2026, or can I just turn up?

Most tourists need an e-VOA or e-visitor visa. You can still buy a visa-on-arrival at Bali airport, but applying online for the e-VOA in advance avoids airport queues and lets you pre-pay. Around 87 nationalities are eligible.

How much does the Indonesia e-visa actually cost?

The government fee is about IDR 500,000 (roughly USD 33–35) for a 30-day single-entry stay, paid directly on the official portal evisa.imigrasi.go.id. Third-party services like iVisa add their own service fee on top for guided support.

Can I apply myself instead of using iVisa?

Yes. You can apply directly at evisa.imigrasi.go.id and pay only the government fee with no surcharge. A paid service like iVisa is optional — it offers form-checking and human support, but it is not required and is not the government.

Can I extend my Bali visa to stay longer than 30 days?

An e-VOA can usually be extended once for another 30 days (60 days total) for a second ~IDR 500,000 fee. As of 2026 extensions generally require an in-person visit to a local immigration office for biometrics, so start the process before your visa expires.