WanderSafe — LGBTQ+ Travel Safety
Bali, Indonesia
Bali's Hindu-majority culture is more tolerant than other Indonesian islands, and tourist areas like Seminyak have operated LGBTQ+ venues for decades with minimal incident for discreet foreign visitors. However, Indonesia's 2025 Criminal Code creates new legal uncertainty — same-sex relations between unmarried partners are now technically criminalized nationwide, including Bali. The practical risk in Seminyak tourist areas remains low, but the legal situation has materially changed and should be understood before travel.
Legal Status
Indonesia's legal framework is hostile to LGBTQ+ relationships. The revised Criminal Code (RKUHP, enacted 2025) is the most significant legal change: it criminalizes cohabitation outside of marriage and extramarital sex — provisions that are applied to same-sex couples who cannot legally marry. Same-sex cohabitation is now explicitly illegal nationwide, including Bali. Same-sex marriage is not recognized. Bali has no separate legal protections; Indonesian national law applies.
Emergency Contacts
112
+62 361-224111
· www.rainbowrailroad.org
· step.state.gov