Fuel Prices Are Surging Across Southeast Asia—Indonesia Is the Exception. Here’s Why It Matters for Bali

Illustration photo of someone filling up with petrol at a gas station

Illustration photo of someone filling up with petrol at a gas station (Freepik)

JAKARTA — As fuel prices climb across Southeast Asia, a regional pattern is becoming clear: higher global oil costs are reaching consumers almost everywhere—except Indonesia.

For travelers heading to Bali, the difference is already noticeable.

In neighboring countries, filling up a tank has become significantly more expensive in recent weeks. But in Indonesia, prices at the pump remain unchanged, insulated—at least for now—from the volatility reshaping global energy markets.

The contrast is not accidental. It reflects a deliberate policy choice, one that carries both short-term stability and long-term consequences.

A Region Feeling the Pressure

Since late February, escalating tensions in the Middle East—particularly involving the United States, Israel, and Iran—have pushed global crude prices higher. The ripple effects are now visible across Southeast Asia.

Across the region, the mechanism is straightforward: higher crude prices translate into higher retail fuel prices.

Indonesia is the outlier.

Indonesia’s Stability—By Design

At fuel stations across Jakarta, Bali, and beyond, prices have barely moved.

Subsidized fuel products remain fixed:

Non-subsidized fuels have also stayed stable, with Pertamax and its variants showing no meaningful adjustments in recent weeks.

This stability is not the result of market forces. It is policy.

Indonesia heavily subsidizes fuel, absorbing fluctuations in global oil prices to protect consumers and maintain economic stability. In effect, the government acts as a buffer between global volatility and domestic prices.

But that buffer is not free.

Indonesia is not immune to rising oil prices—it is simply absorbing them.

Photo of a Pertamina gas station and a queue for filling up fuel can be seen (IST)

What This Means for Bali Travelers and Expats

For visitors and residents in Bali, the impact is immediate and practical.

In a region where costs are rising, Indonesia offers a rare pocket of price stability.

The Trade-Off Beneath the Surface

The divergence between Indonesia and its neighbors highlights a deeper policy divide.

Countries like Singapore and Thailand largely allow market pricing to reflect global realities. Consumers pay more when oil prices rise—but governments avoid heavy fiscal burdens.

Indonesia has chosen a different path.

By keeping prices stable, the government absorbs the cost through subsidies. As global oil prices increase, so does the strain on public finances.

Each approach carries trade-offs:

For now, Indonesia is prioritizing stability.

A Regional Gap That’s Growing

For travelers moving across Southeast Asia, the differences are becoming increasingly visible.

A journey from Singapore to Kuala Lumpur to Bali now reveals not just different cultures—but different energy policies.

In one country, fuel prices fluctuate weekly. In another, they remain unchanged despite global shocks.

That divergence is reshaping cost structures across tourism, logistics, and daily life.

What Comes Next

The key question is not whether global oil prices will remain volatile—they likely will.

The question is how long Indonesia can maintain its current approach.

Fuel subsidies have historically been adjusted during periods of fiscal pressure. If global prices remain elevated, policymakers may eventually face a choice: continue absorbing the cost, or pass some of it on to consumers.

For now, the shield remains in place.

The Bottom Line

For Bali, the impact is clear: fuel remains affordable, predictable, and insulated from global shocks.

But unlike in neighboring countries, the true cost is not visible at the pump.

It is carried elsewhere.

Hey Bali News will continue to monitor fuel price developments and their impact on Bali’s tourism economy, cost of living, and investment landscape.

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