This information is legally correct. However, the Indonesian Ministry of Finance (through the local Kantor Pajak Pratama) will not issue an NPWP (tax identification number) to any foreigner staying in Indonesia unless they have legal residency under a Kitas or Kitap. Therefore, the Indonesian government has made a conscious decision that it will not pursue tax declarations or payment from digital nomads or any other individual staying in Indonesia under, for example, a SOCIAL VISA, irrespective of their length of stay or imputed tax residency status. It's a tremendous advantage for those who want to live in Indonesia on an endless series of social or business visit passes, which the government will also kindly issue. I sort of wish I had followed this path myself...
I am not a tax expert. So would also like to learn more about this. But based on the information above, it could be explained like this:
A Social visa is B211/B211A, I understand in the past some NOMADS get entrance using these B211/B211A VISA, not with newly launched
official NOMAD VISA (E33G). With B211/B211A
it is impossible to stay for longer than 183+ days where people might be started to be considered as a tax residence in Indonesia. Also using B211/B211A, the NOMAD could do a visa run before 183 day elapse, to reset the clock to avoid becoming a subject to residential income tax. This is my standpoint represents my personal interpretation and is open to further debate.
https://visaguide.world/digital-nomad-visa/indonesia/
[ATTACH type="full" width="410px" alt="Capture.JPG"]4052[/ATTACH]
The newly introduced E33G Visa is the official NOMAD VISA. It permits individuals to remain in Indonesia
for up to one year (e.g longer than 183 days) without the necessity of conducting a visa run. I would welcome a link to a definitive statement from Indonesian governmental entities, excepts from the regulations, or laws that could serve as a defence, explicitly stating that
E33G holders (not B211/B211A) are exempt from tax obligations.