LABUAN BAJO – You can fly halfway across the world, book a boat, wake up at 4am, and still be told you’re not allowed to climb one of Indonesia’s most iconic viewpoints.
That’s exactly what happened this weekend on Padar Island.
And it says less about tourists behaving badly, and more about a system that still doesn’t know how to handle its own success.
What Happened
On Saturday, dozens of foreign tourists were turned away at Padar Island in Komodo National Park after the daily quota of 1,000 visitors had already been reached.
Some had already arrived at the site.
Some had paid for tours.
None of that mattered.
“We didn’t know we needed a separate ticket. No one explained it clearly,” said one Australian visitor, who had booked a full-day Komodo tour.
What This Reveals
Indonesia wants to limit overtourism in Komodo.
That part makes sense.
The problem is not the quota.
The problem is everything around it.
- A digital booking system that many visitors don’t fully understand
- Tour operators who still bring guests without confirmed access
- Enforcement that happens at the last possible moment
“Sometimes we only find out the quota is full when we arrive,” said a local boat operator in Labuan Bajo.
So instead of controlling flow, the system pushes friction to the visitor.

So What’s Really Going On?
This is what happens when policy moves faster than infrastructure.
The government is trying to protect Komodo through numbers:
- 1,000 visitors per day
- 365,000 per year
But the experience on the ground tells a different story.
Because capacity isn’t just about numbers.
It’s about:
- coordination
- communication
- and timing
Right now, those three aren’t aligned.
The Quick Fix:
After protests from tourists, authorities added 200 extra tickets on the same day.
That solved the situation.
But it also exposed something bigger:
- the quota is flexible when pressure builds.
Which raises a simple question:
Is this about conservation, or crowd control optics?

Who Wins, Who Loses
Winners:
- Operators who push last-minute access
- Visitors who complain loud enough
Losers:
- Travelers who follow the rules
- The credibility of the quota system itself
Because once rules bend, they stop being rules.
What This Means for Travelers
If you’re planning to visit Komodo, here’s the reality:
Booking a tour is not enough.
Showing up is not enough.
Even paying is not always enough.
Access now depends on a system that is still being tested in real time.
Closing
Komodo doesn’t have too many visitors.
It has a system that still treats visitors as the final checkpoint instead of the starting point.
Until that changes, the experience won’t be defined by how beautiful the island is.
But by whether you’re allowed to see it at all.
#Giostanovlatto / #Heybalinews








































