Legal Setup for Overseas Agents Selling Bali Property
If you sell Bali real estate from abroad, sooner or later the question arises: how should you structure your work legally? Let’s look at three practical models.
Model 1: No presence in Indonesia (individual abroad)
You work as an intermediary agent in your home country. All deals go through a local Indonesian partner. The partner receives the commission from the developer and pays you under a referral agreement.
Pros:
— Minimal formalities.
— No need to live in Bali or visit often.
— No Indonesian taxes required.
Cons:
— Full dependence on the partner. If they “forget” your commission, it is difficult to dispute.
— You pay taxes in your own country. If personal income tax is 13–20%, that is manageable. If it is 35–45%, it becomes painful.
— It is harder to give clients guarantees, and your name is not really “established” on the island.
When it fits: one-off deals, a testing period, small ticket sizes.
Model 2: PT PMA in Bali (foreign-owned company)
You open your own legal entity in Indonesia — a PT PMA. You obtain an investor KITAS. You sign partnership agreements with developers on behalf of the company. Commissions are paid into the corporate account.
Pros:
— Legal independence on the island.
— You can hire employees in Indonesia.
— You can hold HGB (right to build) through the company if you grow into a developer.
— Your tax base is Indonesia, with corporate tax at 22% (often lower than personal tax in developed countries).
— KITAS may be available for the whole family.
Cons:
— Setup costs 16 million rupiah ($1000) one-time, plus annual operating costs (legal reporting, accountant, BPJS) of 3–5 million rupiah per month.
— Minimum declared capital is 10 billion rupiah, with 2.5 billion rupiah ($150,000) effectively required to be contributed.
— Quarterly LKPM reporting obligations.
— You need to actually run a business in Indonesia — a nominal PMA creates a risk of revocation.
When it fits: you plan to work with Bali long term, expect volumes of 2–5+ deals per year, and are ready to spend at least 2–3 months a year on the island.
Model 3: Hybrid — main base abroad + local JV
You remain a resident of your home country, but register a Joint Venture with a local Indonesian agency. A JV is a legal entity where you and your Indonesian partner both hold shares. Deals go through the JV, taxes are Indonesian (as with a PMA), but management can be shared.
Pros:
— No KITAS needed, no need to live in Bali.
— Legal presence on the island through your stake in the JV.
— The Indonesian partner handles operations.
— Flexibility in profit distribution.
Cons:
— Dependence on the partner’s good faith.
— More complex legal structuring and tax matters.
— Less control than with your own PMA.
When it fits: a mid-stage business, when you already have a reliable local partner and do not want to handle island operations yourself.
What I would do at the start:
Year 1: Model 1 (individual + referral agreement with a local partner). Test whether the market suits you and whether there is client flow.
Years 2–3: If volumes grow, move to Model 3 (hybrid with JV) or directly to Model 2 (your own PMA), depending on your tolerance for operations and the tax situation in your home country.
Year 3+: With stable operations, a PMA becomes the optimal structure. You gain the ability to build your own brand, hire a team, and enter projects as a co-investor.
Important: this structure should be chosen for the business, not because it is “fashionable.” An open PMA without real deals is a useless expense. A referral model without a local structure is a ceiling of 1–2 deals per year. Choose based on your actual business trajectory.