Indonesia healthcare guide

Verified 2026-05-12

System overview

Indonesia operates a national insurance scheme, BPJS Kesehatan. It covers the local population through a network of community health centres (puskesmas) and public hospitals, topped by national referral centres such as RSCM in Jakarta [1,2]. The public system is functional but uneven in quality, particularly outside Java, and English-speaking staff are scarce. Western relocators almost universally use private hospitals in the largest cities. The number of JCI-accredited hospitals in Indonesia is small relative to the country's size, concentrated in Jakarta, Surabaya and parts of Bali [3,4]. For Bali specifically, see the Bali health document.

Hospitals to know

Jakarta

Surabaya

Routine care and chronic disease management

GP and specialist access at the hospitals above is generally same-day or same-week, with online booking available. For typical 60+ chronic conditions:

Pharmacy and personal medication

Apotek (pharmacies) are common in cities. Pharmacies dispense many medicines over the counter, but Indonesia formally classifies prescription, restricted and controlled medicines, and pharmacies at large hospitals follow these rules strictly. Controlled drugs (benzodiazepines, opioids, stimulants) are tightly restricted and importing them without prior Ministry of Health authorisation can lead to severe penalties [1,7]. Always carry original prescriptions and a signed doctor's letter, and keep medicines in original packaging.

Vaccinations

CDC recommends long-term residents stay current on routine vaccines (MMR, dTaP, varicella, pneumococcal, shingles, seasonal influenza) and additionally hepatitis A, hepatitis B and typhoid. Get Japanese encephalitis vaccination for long stays in rural areas. Get rabies pre-exposure vaccination given the very high incidence of stray-dog rabies in many provinces (notably Bali, Sulawesi, North Sumatra and West Kalimantan) [8,9]. Yellow fever vaccination is mandatory only if arriving from a transmission country.

Endemic infectious risks

Water and food

Tap water in Indonesia is not safe to drink. Most households and reputable restaurants use bottled, filtered or galon (large refill) water; "isi ulang" refill stations vary in quality. Ice in chain restaurants and hotels is industrially made and safe; street-stall ice is not reliable [7].

Air quality

Jakarta has chronic and severe air pollution; PM2.5 monthly averages routinely run 40 to 80 micrograms per cubic metre during the dry season (June to September), well above WHO guideline values [10]. Wildfires and peatland burning in Sumatra and Kalimantan periodically produce regional haze that affects Jakarta, Singapore and the surrounding islands. For anyone with cardiac, COPD or asthma history, indoor HEPA filtration and respirators on high-AQI days are essential.

Insurance

Emergencies

Indonesia's nationwide emergency number is 112; dedicated services include 118 or 119 for ambulance, 110 for police and 113 for fire. Public ambulance response in Jakarta is slow and traffic-bound, so expats commonly call the private hospital direct or use a hospital-dispatched ambulance [1]. For major trauma or complex cardiac and neuro cases, medevac to Singapore (around 90 minutes by air from Jakarta) is the regional standard; get insurance with evacuation cover.

This page is not medical advice. Consult a qualified clinician.

Sources

  1. Indonesia Ministry of Health (Kemenkes)
  2. BPJS Kesehatan
  3. JCI accredited organisations directory
  4. Siloam Hospitals Group
  5. Mayapada Hospital
  6. RS Pondok Indah Group
  7. UK FCDO travel advice, Indonesia, health
  8. CDC Yellow Book, Indonesia
  9. CDC, rabies prevention for travellers
  10. WHO Indonesia country profile