Bali land prices beat Indonesia’s national average by 5x. Most investors I talk to read that number and flinch. They should do the opposite.
Here’s what that 5x actually means:
- Indonesia’s national residential average sits at IDR 25–35M/m².
- Prime Bali (Canggu, Seminyak, Uluwatu) trades at IDR 70–90M/m².
- That gap isn’t a bubble. It’s revealed preference, paid in cash every week by 6M+ international visitors.
When a market trades at 5x a national baseline and rental yields still hit 7–12% (top villas 15–20%), you’re not looking at “overpriced.” You’re looking at a market where demand has permanently outrun supply of legal, titled, freehold-adjacent land in walking distance of the beach.
Scarcity compounds. Price tags follow.
At Magnum Estate we’ve watched this curve since 2015. Canggu land that sold at $250/m² in 2018 now closes above $800. Same dirt. Different decade.
The contrarian read isn’t “Bali is expensive.” It’s that Bali is the clearest signal in Southeast Asia that scarcity, tourism demographics, and a weak alternative-asset story are revaluing tropical real estate. The spread versus mainland Indonesia is the proof.
If you’re waiting for a dip, you’re waiting for Bali to become a different market.
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