Trade associations are calling on the Indonesian government to shorten the quarantine period for all arriving passengers from abroad, as the country prepares to reopen Bali for fully vaccinated visitors from select countries starting October 14.
The call comes after coordinating minister for maritime and investment affairs Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan announced on Monday (October 11) that the government will cut the quarantine period for international visitors from eight to five days.

Despite the reduction, the trade feels the policy will put a damper on Bali’s reopening plan and hinder recovery of the travel industry. Hence, they are hoping that the government will consider further cutting the quarantine time to one to three days for incoming visitors.
That sentiment will be conveyed in a letter addressed to the related government offices written by four major travel associations – Association of the Indonesian Travel Agencies (ASITA ’71), Association of the Travel Agencies in Indonesia (ASTINDO), Indonesia Inbound Tour Operators Association (IINTOA) and Indonesian Tour Leaders Association (ITLA).
Speaking at an open discussion among the four travel associations last weekend, Artha Hanif, chairman of ASITA ’71, questioned the need for a five-day quarantine for incoming travellers to Bali, given that they must meet the criteria of being fully vaccinated, and must present a negative Covid-19 PCR test result before departure, and be tested again on arrival.
“These are healthy people we are talking about. Why should we treat them like sick ones who have to be confined to their hotel rooms, eating hotel food which may not be to their liking since no outside food is allowed during the quarantine?” he said.
Instead, he suggested that the self-isolation period be cut to three or even two days, by which time the PCR test result should have been released. This will help travellers to save on travel expenses, given that serving a hotel quarantine will incur a minimum additional cost of seven million rupiah (US$492), according to Artha.
He also noted that sufficient protocols are in place to protect travellers’ safety, as they will be monitored by the Peduli Lindungi contact tracing app and must also purchase travel insurance for Covid-19-related medical expenses prior to arrival. As well, the places they will be visiting have received the Cleanliness, Health, Safety, and Environment Sustainability (CHSE) certification, he added.
Similarly, Paul Edmundus Talo, chairman of IINTOA, questioned the need to subject incoming travellers to a five-day quarantine given that they are fully inoculated. “I think a two- or even one-day quarantine to wait for the PCR test result (to be released) is reasonable,” he said.
The current quarantine policy hampers both inbound and outbound travel sales, as it is costly and inconvenient, opined Pauline Suharno, chairman of ASTINDO.
She suggested for the government to follow Dubai’s model of quarantining incoming visitors for one day until the release of their on-arrival PCR test result.
Pauline also expressed hope that the government work on establishing travel corridor arrangements with other countries and regions to facilitate two-way, quarantine-free travel as part of its border reopening plan.
Agreeing, Tetty Ariyanto, chairman of the ITLA, suggested that the travel industry urge the government to open travel corridors with select countries based on reciprocity, similar to the recently-announced vaccinated travel lanes between Singapore and South Korea.
With Bali’s reopening limited to 18 countries deemed low-risk including China, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea, and the UAE, Paul pointed out that many of those countries have outbound travel restrictions in place.
He said: “China and New Zealand, for example, are still limiting their people to travel. In the meantime, Germany and the Netherlands, which has at least 7,000 tourists waiting to travel (to Bali), are not on the list.”













A 22-year hospitality veteran, Cousins has extensive hotel operations experience in China. Prior to Niccolo Suzhou, he was general manager of Waldorf Astoria Xiamen – which he successfully opened – and previously held leadership positions at Raffles in Hainan, and Fairmont Peace Hotel in Shanghai.










Singapore Airlines (SIA) will be launching seasonal flights to Seattle and Vancouver, offering customers more travel options to North America during the year-end holiday season.
From December 2 to February 15, the airline will operate four-times-weekly services to Vancouver, Canada and Seattle. Two of the weekly flights from Seattle and Vancouver to Singapore will operate as vaccinated travel lane (VTL) services, providing eligible customers quarantine-free entry into Singapore.
SIA is also converting its daily direct San Francisco-Singapore services to designated VTL services from next Wednesday (October 20). These provide additional quarantine-free travel options for customers to travel to and from North America, on top of the earlier announced VTL services from Los Angeles and New York.
SIA will deploy the 253-seater Airbus A350-900, with 42 business class seats, 24 premium economy class seats and 187 economy class seats, on the Singapore-Vancouver-Seattle service.
Flight SQ28 will depart from Singapore at 09.15 and arrive at Vancouver International Airport (YVR) at 07.30, and depart Vancouver at 08.40 to land at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA) at 09.30.
Flight SQ29, SIA’s twice-weekly designated VTL service, will depart from Seattle at 11.00 and arrive at Vancouver at 11.45 on the same day. It will then depart from Vancouver at 13.15 and arrive in Singapore at 22.05 the following day.
SIA will also operate SQ27, a twice-weekly Seattle-Vancouver-Singapore service that is not a designated VTL flight in order to cater to customers who are ineligible to enter Singapore under the VTL arrangement.
On the San Francisco service, flight SQ34 departs Singapore at 18.40 and arrives at 19.05. The return flight SQ33 departs San Francisco at 22.05 and arrives in Singapore at 05.45 two days later. The flight timings will change with effect from October 31.
For this service, SIA operates the 161-seat Airbus A350-900 ULR with 67 business class seats and 94 premium economy class seats.
The addition of San Francisco, Seattle, and Vancouver expands the SIA Group’s VTL network to 17 cities. SIA will operate VTL services from Amsterdam, Barcelona, Copenhagen, London, Los Angeles, Milan, New York, Paris, and Rome from October 19, and Seoul from November 16.
These are on top of the existing VTL services from Bandar Seri Begawan, Frankfurt, and Munich. Scoot, SIA’s sister airline, will begin VTL flights from Berlin from October 20.
Multi-city itineraries within VTL countries are allowed if customers meet the eligibility criteria. Customers travelling on the VTL flights also enjoy transfers via Singapore Changi Airport to 59 destinations within the SIA Group network.