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Indonesia’s Tourism Boom Continues as International Visitor Numbers Climb

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Indonesia’s Tourism Boom Continues as International Visitor Numbers Climb

By Jamie McIntyre
Chief Editor, Australian National Review

Indonesia’s tourism recovery continues to gather momentum, with the latest figures showing international visitor numbers are still growing strongly, reinforcing the country’s position as one of the world’s most attractive travel and investment destinations.

According to Indonesia’s Central Statistics Agency (BPS), the nation welcomed 6.07 million international visitors between January and May 2026, representing a 7.68% increase compared with the same period last year. In May alone, Indonesia received 1.38 million foreign visitors, another encouraging sign that global demand for Indonesian travel experiences remains robust.

Bali continues to dominate as Indonesia’s premier international gateway, with 578,200 international arrivals entering through Ngurah Rai International Airport during the reporting period. Jakarta ranked second, welcoming approximately 235,200 international visitors through Soekarno-Hatta International Airport.

The three largest international source markets were:

* 🇲🇾 Malaysia: 298,200 visitors
* 🇦🇺 Australia: 155,000 visitors
* 🇸🇬 Singapore: 136,700 visitors

Domestic tourism also remains exceptionally strong, with Indonesians making more than 523 million domestic trips during the first five months of 2026, highlighting the depth of the country’s own tourism economy.

For property investors, these figures are particularly significant.

Every additional tourist creates demand for accommodation, restaurants, transport, entertainment, wellness facilities and tourism infrastructure. As visitor numbers continue rising year after year, demand for quality hotels, villas and managed accommodation is also expected to expand.

This is one reason many developers are now looking beyond traditional tourism centres.

While Bali remains Indonesia’s tourism powerhouse, neighbouring Lombok is increasingly attracting attention as improved infrastructure, new resorts, international investment and government-backed development continue transforming the island into an emerging tourism destination.

As tourism disperses beyond Bali, investors who position themselves early in developing markets may benefit from long-term growth as infrastructure and visitor numbers continue to increase.

Indonesia possesses several long-term advantages that continue to attract travellers, including its tropical climate, thousands of islands, world-class beaches, rich cultural heritage, improving infrastructure and generally competitive cost of living compared with many Western destinations.

For Australians in particular, Indonesia’s proximity makes it one of the easiest international destinations to visit, helping explain why Australia remains one of Indonesia’s largest tourism markets year after year.

If current trends continue, Indonesia appears well positioned to welcome record numbers of international visitors over the coming decade, creating significant opportunities across tourism, hospitality and real estate sectors.

For investors focused on long-term fundamentals, growing visitor numbers are one of the clearest indicators that demand for quality tourism accommodation is likely to remain strong well into the future.

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