System overview
Indonesia's banking sector is dominated by state-owned banks (Bank Mandiri, BRI, BNI, BTN) and large private banks (BCA, Bank Permata, CIMB Niaga, Maybank Indonesia). All are regulated by Bank Indonesia for monetary policy and OJK for prudential oversight [1,2]. The Indonesian rupiah (IDR) is a managed floating currency; offshore trading is limited. The banking sector is stable but concentrated in Java; branch coverage in eastern Indonesia is thinner.
Opening an account as a foreigner
Requirements under OJK regulations:
- Passport with valid KITAS (Temporary Stay Permit) or KITAP (Permanent Stay Permit). A tourist visa is not sufficient.
- You need a Tax Identification Number (NPWP) for accounts with interest-bearing features; some banks accept a surat pernyataan (self-declaration) while the NPWP is being processed.
- Proof of address in Indonesia: KITAS/KITAP address, rental contract, or certificate of domicile (surat keterangan domisili) from the local kelurahan.
- Initial deposit: 500,000-5,000,000 IDR (about 30-300 EUR) depending on the bank and account tier.
BCA is widely considered the most foreigner-friendly major bank for daily banking. HSBC Indonesia and CIMB Niaga are also popular with expats for their English-language support.
Account types
- Savings account (tabungan): everyday account. Low interest (typically 0.5-1% for demand deposits). Monthly fee waived if minimum balance (usually 500,000-1,000,000 IDR) maintained.
- Time deposit (deposito berjangka): 1 to 24 months. Rates of 3-6% as of 2026. Government deposit insurance (LPS) covers up to 2 billion IDR per bank.
- Foreign-currency account: available in USD, SGD, EUR. Minimum balances vary (typically 500-1,000 USD equivalent).
International transfers
Inbound
SWIFT transfers to Indonesia work well. Correspondent fees are 10-20 USD. Wise supports IDR transfers [1]. Funds arriving in foreign currency can be held as-is or converted to IDR.
Outbound
Bank Indonesia requires supporting documentation for any transfer above 10,000 USD (or equivalent in IDR) [1]. For amounts under 10,000 USD, a simple purpose declaration suffices. Outbound remittances are generally permitted for:
- Foreign pension receipts being sent back to a home-country account.
- Education fees.
- Medical payments abroad.
The bank will issue a Transfer Proof (Bukti Transfer) which the sender should keep for BI reporting.
Digital banking
Major banks offer mobile apps with English support. BCA's myBCA and Mandiri's Livin' are the most widely used. Features include:
- Interbank transfers via BI-FAST (instant, 2,500 IDR per transaction, available 24/7).
- QRIS (QR Code Indonesian Standard): universal across merchants.
- Bill payment, mobile top-up, and e-wallet top-up (GoPay, OVO, ShopeePay).
Debit and credit cards
Debit cards (Visa/Mastercard/GPN national scheme) are standard. Credit cards are available to foreigners with a KITAS, an NPWP, and a minimum income of about 3 million IDR per month. Without an NPWP, the bank will apply a higher withholding rate on interest.
ATMs
Widespread in Java and Bali; less common in Nusa Tenggara, Sulawesi, Papua. Foreign-card fee: typically 25,000-50,000 IDR (about 1.50-3 EUR) per withdrawal. Maximum per transaction is usually 3,000,000-5,000,000 IDR (180-300 EUR). ATMs in Bali are particularly well adapted to foreign cards.
Tax implications of interest
Interest on savings and time deposits is subject to 20% final withholding tax for account holders with a valid NPWP, and 25% for those without. Foreign-currency account interest also faces withholding.
This page is not financial advice. Confirm current requirements with the specific bank branch.