Chiron....in your post #61 you indicated your interest in getting a Retirement Kitas/Kitap. If that is the case Ratu_Tuaq's well documented post # 65 will not help in that process. A Retirement Visa is not a 'do it yourself' visa...it needs an agent to make the application.
Hi Davita,
Actually, I was just pointing out that the retirement visa had a requirement for health insurance, and was trying to verify that the spousal KITAS/KITAP did not. However, since that time (about 11 months ago), I now understand the rules for both of the visas. With the spousal KITAS/KITAP, there isn't a health insurance requirement (at this time), but as a resident (or citizen) it looks like there will be a requirement for all to have BPJS coverage by January 1, 2019.
Just to be sure about our future plan, I will be retiring in the next 2-36 months from my work here in the US. My wife maintained her Indonesian citizenship since our marriage, and she's hoping I'll make the "wise decision" to retire in her hometown of Solo, Indonesia. In that context, we would be applying for the spousal KITAS/KITAP. I do have a keen interest in healthcare, health insurance, health costs, etc., and sprinkled across this forum are a number of questions regarding that topic. Post #65 was one of those. The most important things I'm focusing on at the moment (in order of importance) are:
1. Healthcare, doctors, and healthy living in general
2. Taxation and all money/banking related issues
3. Immigration, visas, notaries, real estate ownership, (i.e. legal issues)
Each one of these are multi-faceted, and have their own unique challenges for each individual - depending on their situation. So far, I've got most of this figured out, but the healthcare thing still has a couple nagging points that need an answer. Taxation is another one that has some unknowns, but looking better since I spoke with an international tax accountant. I plan to post something eventually on that conversation.