Performer Visa Indonesia 2025: Which Artist Visa Is Right for You?

Performer Visa Indonesia 2026: Which Artist Visa Is Right for You?

Indonesia has firmly established itself as one of Asia’s most exciting destinations for international artists and performers. With a music tourism market valued at USD 160 million, a live events industry growing faster than almost anywhere else in the region, and major performance hubs spanning Jakarta, Bali, and Bandung, the opportunities for foreign performers to build a meaningful career here have never been greater.

But before you take the stage, there is one decision that shapes everything else, your visa. Indonesia offers several distinct visa pathways for foreign artists, each designed for different performance types, contract lengths, and working arrangements. Choosing the right one determines whether you perform legally, earn income compliantly, and operate without disruption. Choosing the wrong one can result in serious immigration consequences that no performance fee is worth risking.

This guide breaks down every performer visa option available in Indonesia in 2025, C7A, C7B, C7C, D7, and the Artist KITAS E23R, and helps you identify which one fits your situation.

Understanding the Options: A Quick Overview

Indonesia’s performer visa framework can be broadly divided into two categories: short-term single or multiple-entry visas for event-based engagements, and a longer-term work visa for artists with extended contracts or residencies. The right choice depends primarily on how long you are performing, how many events are involved, and whether you plan to enter and exit Indonesia multiple times during your engagement.

C7A, C7B, and C7C — Short-Term Single Entry Visas

These three visas are the go-to options for foreign artists arriving in Indonesia for a specific, short-term engagement. Each is valid for 30 days, non-extendable, and permits the holder to legally earn income from their performance or demonstration activity.

C7A — Music Performer Visa

The C7A is the most commonly used performer visa in Indonesia and is tailored specifically for musicians, vocalists, DJs, conductors, and live band members performing at concerts, club events, or music festivals. If you are a musician arriving for a single show, a short festival run, or a club residency of up to 30 days, this is your visa.

C7B — Music Performer’s Crew Visa

Not every essential person on a touring production stands in the spotlight — and the C7B exists to cover the professionals who make the performance possible. Sound engineers, lighting technicians, roadies, and equipment operators supporting a musical act are all eligible under this category.

C7C — Practical Skill Demonstration Visa

The C7C extends Indonesia’s performer visa framework beyond music. It is designed for chefs, yoga instructors, visual artists, photographers, and other creative professionals invited to demonstrate their skills live during workshops, exhibitions, or artistic events. If your engagement involves a live demonstration rather than a traditional stage performance, this is the correct category.

Key Details — C7A, C7B, C7C:

  • Entry type: Single-entry
  • Stay duration: 30 days
  • Extension: Not available
  • Cost: IDR 3,000,000
  • Processing time: 5–10 business days
  • Income: Permitted

D7 — Art & Cultural Performance Multivisa

Introduced in 2025 as the successor to the former general C7 visa, the D7 is Indonesia’s multiple-entry short-term performer visa — and it is the right choice for artists whose engagement involves more than one entry into the country within a single performance window.

The D7 is suited to artists participating in theatre, dance, circus, or multidisciplinary productions, cultural festivals, or international arts exchange programmes that require flexibility of movement during the engagement period.

Unlike the C7 series, the D7 allows multiple entries within its validity window — up to 30 days total from the date of first arrival. It does not extend the stay duration, but it removes the single-entry restriction that makes the C7 series impractical for multi-venue or multi-city productions.

Key Details — D7:

  • Entry type: Multiple-entry
  • Stay duration: Up to 30 days from first arrival
  • Extension: Not available
  • Cost: IDR 5,000,000
  • Processing time: 5–10 business days
  • Income: Permitted

Artist KITAS E23R — The Long-Term Performer Work Visa

For artists whose work in Indonesia extends beyond a single event or short engagement, the Artist KITAS E23R is the appropriate and legally correct pathway. This is a multiple-entry work visa with a six-month stay duration, designed for professional artists working on extended contracts, national performance tours, long-term residencies, or ongoing commercial collaborations.

The E23R is the most comprehensive and most costly of Indonesia’s performer visa options, reflecting the broader scope of rights and protections it provides. It is the only visa in this framework that treats the artist as a working professional in the full legal sense, requiring a work permit (IMTA) in addition to the stay permit itself.

For artists who expect to return to Indonesia multiple times within six months, or whose contract runs beyond the 30-day window of the C7 or D7 options, the Artist KITAS is not simply preferable; it is legally required.

Key Details — Artist KITAS E23R:

  • Entry type: Multiple-entry
  • Stay duration: Up to 6 months
  • Extension: Re-application required after exit process (EPO)
  • KITAS issuance: IDR 9,350,000
  • Work permit (IMTA): IDR 4,000,000
  • Government levy: USD 600 (approximately IDR 9,600,000)
  • Total cost: IDR 22,950,000
  • Processing time: 5–10 business days (express: 2–3 business days)
  • Income: Permitted

Which Visa Should You Choose? A Simple Decision Guide

C7A–C7C D7 Multivisa Artist KITAS E23R
Stay duration 30 days 30 days from first entry 6 months
Entry type Single Multiple Multiple
Extendable No No Re-apply after EPO
Cost IDR 3,000,000 IDR 5,000,000 IDR 22,950,000
Income permitted Yes Yes Yes
Best for Single concerts, club events, workshops Festivals, multi-city productions Residencies, tours, long-term contracts

If you are arriving for one event and leaving within 30 days, C7A, C7B, or C7C is your visa, depending on your role.

If your production requires multiple entries within a 30-day window, D7 is the correct choice.

If you are performing, teaching, or working in Indonesia for longer than 30 days, or returning multiple times over several months, Artist KITAS E23R is the legally appropriate pathway.

What You Will Need to Apply

Regardless of which performer visa you apply for, the documentation requirements share a common foundation:

  • A valid employment contract in Bahasa Indonesia, bearing an official stamp and authorised signatures
  • Employer documentation, including AKTA, NIB, SIUP, NPWP, and company address
  • A valid passport with sufficient remaining validity
  • For first-time applicants: immigration account registration (IDR 1,500,000, one-time fee)
  • For Artist KITAS E23R: an educational diploma with certified translation, and employer account setup on both immigration and manpower platforms

Where Do Foreign Performers Work in Indonesia?

Understanding which visa you need is one part of the picture. Understanding where international artists typically find engagements in Indonesia is the other. The most active markets for foreign performers include:

Jakarta

Large-scale concerts, international festivals, arena tours, and corporate events make Jakarta the commercial heart of Indonesia’s live performance industry.

Bali

Beach clubs, luxury resort performances, international weddings, cultural festivals, and the Bali Arts Festival create year-round demand for musicians, dancers, and creative performers of all disciplines.

Bandung

A thriving indie music scene and a deeply engaged creative youth culture make Bandung one of Indonesia’s most artistically fertile cities for emerging international acts.

The Bottom Line

Indonesia’s performer visa framework is more structured than many international artists expect — and that structure exists for good reason. Performing on the wrong visa, or without any visa category that permits income, is a compliance violation that can result in deportation, blacklisting, and the permanent disruption of your Indonesia career.

The right visa costs a fraction of what non-compliance can. Apply early, document carefully, and when in doubt, consult a professional immigration adviser who understands the specific requirements of Indonesia’s arts and performance sector before you confirm your booking.

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