Tag: Bali

  • Five contractor red flags when hiring in Bali

    I’ve lost money, time, and sleep to bad contractors in Bali. After 7+ years of building and 150,000+ m² of projects, these are the five warning signs I wish someone had told me in Year 1.

    Red Flag #1: They can’t show you a finished project

    No walk-throughs. No completed address you can visit. Renderings only. Walk away.

    Red Flag #2: The quote is suspiciously low

    If a bid undercuts the market by 30%+, the margin is coming from material quality, unpaid subcontractors, or change orders you haven’t seen yet. Usually all three.

    Red Flag #3: No written contract in Bahasa Indonesia

    English-only contracts don’t hold up the way local ones do. If there’s a dispute, you want Bahasa. Stamped, signed, and notarised.

    Red Flag #4: They want 50%+ upfront

    Healthy milestone schedules sit around 15–25% on signing. Anyone demanding half the budget before the first pour is funding another project with your money.

    Red Flag #5: They manage everything in their head

    No BOQ, no schedule, no change-order log. Every construction dispute I’ve seen in Bali falls into three categories: permit failures, quality defects, and timeline delays. Ninety percent of them could have been avoided with documentation that never existed.

    Every one of these warnings has cost someone I know real money. Some cost me real money. Tag someone who’s about to build in Bali. It might save them millions of rupiah.


    Further Reading

  • The Airbnb crackdown just hit Bali: what investors need to know

    The Airbnb crackdown just hit Bali. As of March 31, non-compliant villas can be delisted from every major OTA: Airbnb, Booking.com, Agoda, all of them.

    Indonesia’s Ministry of Tourism set a hard deadline: all short-term rental properties must have proper TDUP / Pondok Wisata registration. No registration, no listing. Estimates suggest 30–40% of Bali’s rental inventory may be affected.

    Why this is good news for serious investors

    Compliant, professionally managed properties will see occupancy climb as supply shrinks overnight. Developers who built with proper legal structure from day one just got a massive competitive advantage.

    Your four-step action plan

    1. Pull your TDUP / Pondok Wisata certificate. If you can’t find it, you don’t have one.
    2. Cross-check the property address on your OTA listings against the registered address on the permit. Mismatches trigger delisting.
    3. If you manage through a third party, get their compliance file in writing, not verbally.
    4. If you’re mid-purchase, make compliance a closing condition, not an afterthought.

    Regulatory tightening is doing the work that market discipline never quite managed. Serious operators welcome it. Everyone else is about to find out what “legal villa” actually means.


    Further Reading

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