Open bank account no Kitas
I am looking to open a bank account in Bali.听 When I arrive in late January
With BCA if possible.
I am听 Australian, 66 years old, retired, I Have a social visa, which I can extend for up to
six months. I will be doing some voluntary English teaching, so I thought it might be cheaper to
have a deposit bank account with an ATM card.
My question is;听 What is the chance of opening up a bank account without a Kitas, as I do
Not have or intend to apply for a work permit. I do not want to commit to a retirement visa
At this time.
I really would appreciate any advice with this, many thanks Phil
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I think it might well have had something to do with the fat bag of cash I walked into the bank with.
The manager took one look and opened an account.
However, rules seem to be stricter now than they were back then, and I've always been asked for copies of my KITAS/KITAP since then.
Won't hurt to try, but you may have to stick to drawing on your home accounts using ATMs until you get the KITAS.
Thanks for reply. I was hoping there would be some way without Kitas.
I will try for sure, but as a retiree I would not qualify for Kitas. Only other
Option is听 to ask sponsor.
Ok cheers philip
Kidding aside, BCA is an excellent bank.听 I鈥檝e been with them since my day one鈥ixteen years ago.听 At that time I was allowed to open up an account with only my sosbud (social/cultural) visa as it was made clear to them that I was about to marry a local, and eventually would acquire a KITAS visa.
This philosophy鈥he eventuality of a KITAS, or the 鈥渋n process鈥 status of a KITAS still holds today at BCA鈥 very close friend of ours from Switzerland recently had no problems opening his account with BCA even while his KITAS and IMTA (work permit) applications had only been started the day before he opened his account with BCA.听 At that time he was only on a VOA tourist visa.听
The law is pretty clear, and it鈥檚 all centered around Indonesia being a serious international partner against money laundering (generally associated with drug dealing).听 Visit visa鈥檚, be they short or longer term are not an acceptable status for opening a bank account here.听 听
With that all being said, and with you appearing to be a trustworthy looking gentleman, hopefully with some locals who can vouch for you, the chances are pretty good that if you went to BCA with one of your local contacts, explained your situation and the 鈥渓ikelihood鈥 that you will be obtaining a KITAS soon (the retirement visa being a KITAS visa), you鈥檒l most likely be allowed to open an account鈥UT, don鈥檛 open it with any of your local contacts as sponsor (name on the account).听 That sort of move is just as reckless as "buying" land here using a sponsor.听 As wonderful and gracious as the Balinese are...they nonetheless are only human.听 听


I will go to BCA branch in Ubud(i assume they have a branch there)and simply say, That I have
a Social visa. That I have recently applied for my Kitas, but it is still in the process.
Should I mention that I am doing volunteer English school?
Ok thanks for your help with this, I fully intend to use the account legally as I want to
transfer funds into the account from Australia and use local ATM's.
Cheers Phil
There is a problem with them.
Their popularity means queues at their ATMs can be a bit on the long side, so make sure you always have enough cash to do your Saturday shop without going to an ATM.
I, being an old fuddy duddy with a touch of paranoia, don't use cards to buy anything.
That and I tend to be better discounts when I pull out a fat wad of cash, and wave it in front of the guy in the camera shop.
Their greed is a powerful tool when it comes to negotiation, especially when they see that cash walking out of the door, instead of sliding into their pocket.
While Fred's comments about long waiting lines are undoubtedly accurate for Jakarta, here in Bali, and in particular, Ubud, they have far more than enough ATMS around town.
Good luck with your volunteer work!
It's been a long journey, I feel I have finally found a
Place I can hang my hat up.
All the best for the new year!
Phil
Cheers!
philcon wrote:Hi.
I am looking to open a bank account in Bali.听 When I arrive in late January
With BCA if possible.
I am听 Australian, 66 years old, retired, I Have a social visa, which I can extend for up to
six months. I will be doing some voluntary English teaching, so I thought it might be cheaper to
have a deposit bank account with an ATM card.
My question is;听 What is the chance of opening up a bank account without a Kitas, as I do
Not have or intend to apply for a work permit. I do not want to commit to a retirement visa
At this time.
I really would appreciate any advice with this, many thanks Phil
Please watch out, if you do want to teach on a social visa respectively visit visa and expect to earn some bugs don't get caught. It's not legal, you would need a work permit.
To open a bank account today a KITAS is what you need even though there are different ways or perhaps some other ideas are given, make sure that nothing is backfire
As for his banking arrangements and the advice I offered him, once set up he鈥檒l have no problems either, but if he decides to make Bali his home, then yes, he should for certain go for the 5 year retirement KITAS.
I hope to apply soon. I have resided here continuously for 12 years and I am married to a wonderful Indonesian dragonlady. (No complaints from me).
I wonder if I might ask you a few private questions to assist me in proquring citizenship?
phylacogen
Good luck, and I hope you sing the national anthem far better than I did!听 听

And my Indonesian is getting much better - I hope it's good enough.
Hope it helps.
Thanks
The devil being in the details, some initial questions I would have with the Citibank approach would be:
-The exchange rate used by Citibank Australia.
-Convenience and locations of the atm machines on Bali.
-Daily and/or transaction maximums on withdrawals.
You do not have to pay atm fees. You can use your card to pay at almost every outlet set-up with a credit card machine free of charge.
The default maximum withdrawal I believe is $3000 a day. This can be increased to $10,000 a day with written approval.
This information can all be checked on their website. And a quick google map search will show all the ATMs and branches.
With this in mind why would you even want to go through the headache if dealing with an Indonesian bank?
In fact I'm almost regretting sharing the good deal they offer because the more people buying Rupiah with AUD will only drive the price up for me!
Aside from credit card accounts, Citibank is still not very popular at all here in Bali.听 And, this thread is about banking on Bali.听 听
听 But anyway, the 鈥渃urrency of the realm鈥 here is the IDR鈥hich is reason #1 why one 鈥渂others鈥 to hold IDR.
Phil, hope you find your peace in Ubud.
Hmmm, it would appear to me that you don鈥檛 know many retirees in Bali.听 听All those rounds of golf, spa treatments, martinis and dinners add up really fast!听 听
Retired doesn鈥檛 mean dead.听 On the contrary, retired is a most noble state of life.听 听
鈥淚n the electronic age we live in I doubt a retiree wants to walk around with a fat wallet.鈥
Let me know when 鈥渢he electronic age we live in鈥 comes to the local pasar or warung.听 听
听 听Like I said earlier鈥he big durian and Bali鈥wo completely different worlds.听 听

And which is it? Golf and Clubs or Warungs?Indonesia isn't in the stone age anymore,听 anywhere you need to spend has a credit card machine,听 and as noted before with the option I suggest, will probably give the best exchange rate.
And if your lifestyle is based in warungs you could visit the ATM once a month and keep your modest pile of hundreds at home.
Not at any point did I suggest retir茅es are nearly dead. In fact,听 how do you know I'm not in Jakarta for the lifestyle choice? I don't work here.
Ubud and Jakarta have nothing in common, even when the traffic is heavy in central Ubud Village.
鈥淚ndonesia isn't in the stone age anymore, anywhere you need to spend has a credit card machine.鈥
My special caption for this one...鈥渉ey fellas, where鈥檚 the atm machine?鈥澨 听
I think you need to get out of Jakarta once in a while if you truly believe that 鈥渁nywhere you need to spend has a credit card machine.鈥
Anyway, enjoy Jakarta鈥our lifestyle choice, and good for you.听 听
Cheers!
"Anywhere you need to spend"
By the context of our discussion, the implication was:听 anywhere you need to spend "big" i.e. The abundance of clubs and golf courses in your neck of the woods.
I was only trying to offer a fellow expat some useful advice with precise facts as opposed to vague details,听 which you yourself also asked for,听 so thanks for trying to invalidate my offer at every turn.
Ask your friend if they bank with Citibank.听 听

I鈥檓 sorry, but you鈥檝e made some comments in your posts which are simply not true鈥ne of them being, 鈥渂anks in Indonesia offer pretty rubbish interest rates anyway鈥︹
Really?听 Well, guess which bank in Indonesia offers the lowest interest rates on fixed rate one year deposits?听 It鈥檚 Citibank at 4.5%.听 HSBC is at 7.5%.听 听What do banks in Australia pay on one year certificate saving account interest?听 Between 3.7 and 4.1%.
You also wrote, 鈥淚f you are keen on holding Rupiah,听 just buy a safe and fill it, that's what I do.鈥
Does that really make sense to you?听 Aside from security concerns, do you think it鈥檚 wise to stuff a safe full of IDR where it earns nothing as opposed to having an IDR bank account here in Indonesia where it can earn 7.5% interest a year?听
And seriously, once out of the main population areas of any of the Provinces of Indonesia, atm machines become scarce.听 And that鈥檚 no different here in Bali either.听 So yes, whenever we plan to travel to more remote areas of Bali, or the other islands, we, (just like everyone else) take 鈥渇at wallets full of cash.鈥澨 And the locals do the exact same thing.
So yes, I disagree with most of your advice for Phil, as quite simply, I don鈥檛 find it to be fiscally sound advice.听 Nothing personal here, just a disagreement with your advice.
OK?听 And no hard feelings I hope.听
Cheers!
Foreign bank's machines are far less common outside cities, and far less numerous in the cities.
There are plenty of areas of eastern Java and Bali where one would have to travel 20 or more minutes to locate one, and this only gets worse in other parts of Indonesia where only the major cities and largest towns will have them.
Twenty minutes sounds like a reasonable likely maximum travel, but only in the sticks. Even a town like Wonosobo has at least one for all the Indonesian banks, more for most.
lexercon wrote:Thar reply about BCA is all untrue. BCA tellers are the most obnoxious Indonesians that you will ever meet..
I find their people to be very helpful, never so much as a harsh word or slightly off look from any of them.
That applies to every BCA staff member I've had the pleasure to encounter.
The bank appears to train them very well in both the technical side of their job and how to be good to customers.
I don't find using a bank to be a pleasure in any way, but their staff's lovely attitude softens an otherwise boring and mundane task.
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