The D1 is a multiple-entry visa valid for 1, 2 or 5 years. Here is how the 60-day stay, the exit-and-re-enter cycle, and visa renewal actually fit together — with us handling the reminders.
It helps to separate two ideas. First, the 60-day stay: within the visa’s validity you simply exit Indonesia and re-enter to begin a fresh stay of up to 60 days — there is no in-country extension for the D1 itself. Second, the visa validity of 1, 2 or 5 years: when it nears expiry you either renew or apply afresh for a new D1, always from outside Indonesia. We track both clocks for you so nothing lapses by surprise. See the D1 visa overview for the full picture.
As your visa validity nears its end, we advise whether to renew or apply afresh for a new D1 — both are arranged while you are outside Indonesia.
Each entry permits up to 60 days. To reset the clock you exit and re-enter — overstaying carries penalties, so we keep the dates clear.
We track your 60-day stays and your overall validity, and reach out in good time so renewals never become last-minute.
We monitor both your current 60-day stay and your visa’s 1, 2 or 5-year validity.
Within validity, you leave Indonesia and re-enter to begin a fresh stay of up to 60 days.
As validity nears its end we advise whether to renew or file a new D1, and prepare the documents.
With the new or renewed visa issued, your multiple-entry access continues uninterrupted.
Still unsure? Message our concierge — we reply within two working hours.
The 60-day stay is not extended in-country — you exit and re-enter to reset it. When the visa’s overall validity nears its end, you either renew or apply afresh for a new D1, both from outside Indonesia. We advise the right path for your case.
Once the 1, 2 or 5-year validity ends, the visa can no longer be used to enter. Before that point we arrange a renewal or a new D1 so your access continues without a gap.
Yes, and we recommend it. Renewing in good time avoids any lapse in your multiple-entry access — which is exactly why we send reminders ahead of the deadline.
Yes. The D1 grants up to 60 days per entry. To begin another stay you must exit Indonesia and re-enter — this is the normal multiple-entry cycle, not a fault in the visa.
Tell us when your stay or validity is due and we will handle the timing — all-in pricing, no hidden fees, with a reply within two working hours.