Indonesia’s digital arrival card now covers SATUSEHAT

Indonesia no longer requires a separate SATUSEHAT Card. The health declaration has been folded into the free SATUSEHAT Health Pass digital arrival card, which now combines arrival, health and customs forms into one QR code for immigration scanning.
The system is in force at major entry points, including Soekarno-Hatta and Ngurah Rai and officials have kept issuing reminders tied to border enforcement checks. Travelers still need to submit the form within 72 hours before arrival.
Who has to fill it out
The requirement applies to all international arrivals, including tourists, digital nomads, visa-on-arrival visitors, visa-exempt travelers from ASEAN countries and returning Indonesians. Families can submit one form for the group, but each traveler’s details still need to be entered.
Expats with longer stays must add their permit information, including ITAS or KITAP details where relevant. The form also asks for passport data, travel history from the past 21 days and basic health information.
What travelers need to do next
Submit the form online before departure, then save the QR code sent by email and keep it ready with your passport and visa at entry. The form is free, though other costs can still apply, including a $35 visa on arrival fee and Bali’s separate tourist tax of IDR 150,000 ($9).
Miss it and you can face problems at the gate. Indonesian immigration has kept up spot checks, so last-minute arrivals should also leave time to complete the form before boarding. For more, see our latest visa updates and read our full Indonesia guide for the complete picture.
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