Menu
🏥

🇮🇩 Indonesia

Healthcare

Private healthcare in Indonesia is adequate for routine care, with modern hospitals in Jakarta and Bali. For serious conditions, many expats fly to Singapore or Malaysia. International health insurance with evacuation coverage is strongly recommended.

Healthcare in Indonesia

Indonesia has a mixed public-private healthcare system with significant quality variation. Expats typically use private facilities exclusively.

Healthcare Quality Overview

Private hospitals: Modern facilities in Jakarta and Bali with English-speaking staff. Quality comparable to mid-tier Western care for routine procedures.

Public hospitals: Often overcrowded, understaffed, and limited English. Not recommended for expats.

Key limitation: For serious conditions, complex surgeries, or specialized treatment, most expats travel to Singapore (2-hour flight) or Kuala Lumpur.

Top Private Hospitals

Jakarta:

  • Rumah Sakit Pondok Indah (luxury, comprehensive)
  • Siloam Hospitals (multiple locations, JCI accredited)
  • RS Medistra
  • RS Siloam Semanggi

Bali:

  • BIMC Hospital (Kuta & Nusa Dua) - expat-focused, emergency care
  • Siloam Hospitals Bali
  • Kasih Ibu Hospital

Indonesia has 44 JCI-accredited hospitals nationwide.

Typical Costs (Private)

ServiceCost (USD)
GP consultation$30-80
Specialist consultation$50-150
Emergency room visit$100-300
Basic blood tests$30-100
MRI$200-500
Hospital stay (per night)$100-300
Dental cleaning$30-50
Dental filling$30-80

Health Insurance Options

Local insurance: Cheaper ($50-100/month) but limited to Indonesia, lower coverage limits, fixed hospital networks.

International insurance: Higher cost ($100-300/month) but includes:

  • Regional/global treatment options
  • Medical evacuation coverage
  • Higher benefit limits
  • English support

Recommended providers: Allianz, AXA, William Russell, BUPA, Pacific Prime

Medical Evacuation

Critical consideration for Indonesia expats:

  • No integrated national ambulance system
  • Island geography complicates emergencies
  • Singapore is the regional benchmark for serious care
  • Ensure policy covers evacuation ($50,000-100,000+ potential cost)

Vaccinations & Health Precautions

Recommended vaccinations:

  • Hepatitis A & B
  • Typhoid
  • Japanese Encephalitis (if rural areas)
  • Rabies (if handling animals)
  • Routine boosters (MMR, Tetanus)

Health tips:

  • Drink only bottled water (widely available, cheap)
  • Use mosquito repellent (dengue is present)
  • Be cautious with street food hygiene
  • Carry basic medications (pharmacies stock most things)

Emergency Numbers

  • General emergency: 112
  • Ambulance: 118
  • Police: 110
  • Fire: 113

Pro Tips

  • Get international insurance with Singapore coverage and medical evacuation
  • BIMC in Bali is the go-to for expat emergencies
  • Carry a medical kit - pharmacies may not stock specific medications
  • Dental and optical care are very affordable - good time to catch up
  • Register with your embassy for emergency assistance

Have questions about healthcare in Indonesia?