No Permit, No Mercy: Karangasem Authorities Demolish Beachfront Building After Owner Ignores Warnings

Photo: Demolition of a building violating the coastal boundary in Bunutan Village, Abang District, Karangasem, Wednesday (February 11, 2026).

Photo: Demolition of a building violating the coastal boundary in Bunutan Village, Abang District, Karangasem, Wednesday (February 11, 2026). (I Wayan Selamat Juniasa/detikBali)

In a decisive enforcement action, Satpol PP Karangasem dismantled an illegal structure violating coastal setback regulations, sending a clear signal to property developers and investors across Bali.

KARANGASEM, Bali — For months, the structure stood where it should not have. Perched too close to the shoreline in Banjar Dinas Lean, Desa Bunutan, it defied both Indonesia’s coastal setback laws and the informal social contract that governs development in Bali’s more rural eastern regency. On Wednesday, February 11, 2026, it was reduced to rubble.

The demolition, carried out by the Karangasem Civil Service Police Unit (Satpol PP) in coordination with multiple government agencies, marked the culmination of an enforcement process that began with dialogue and ended with heavy machinery. Authorities deployed an excavator to the site, with operations scheduled to continue over two days.

“This building violated the coastal border regulations, and the owner was also unable to show proof of land ownership,” explained Ida Bagus Eka Ananta Wijaya, Head of Satpol PP Karangasem.

Prior to the demolition, officials issued three formal warning letters urging the owner to voluntarily dismantle the illegal construction. Each was ignored. The silence from the property owner left authorities with no alternative but to act.

A Pattern of Non-Compliance

The Bunutan case is not isolated. Across Bali, coastal setback violations—structures erected within zones legally required to remain free of permanent construction—have proliferated alongside the island’s tourism boom. These regulations exist to protect shorelines from erosion, preserve public access to beaches, and mitigate tsunami risks. Yet enforcement has historically been uneven, with some investors betting that fines or political connections will shield them from the ultimate penalty.

Karangasem’s action suggests that calculus is shifting. Ananta Wijaya emphasized that monitoring and data collection on suspect structures will continue. He issued a direct appeal to business actors still contemplating whether compliance is optional.

“Hopefully this serves as a lesson for business owners: before building, make sure your requirements are complete and verify whether the location violates regulations or not,” he said.

Local Support, Clear Expectations

The demolition received unusual public endorsement from village leadership. I Made Suparwatha, Head of Bunutan Village, expressed gratitude to the enforcement teams for responding to community complaints about the offending structure.

Suparwatha was careful to distinguish between opposition to development and opposition to lawlessness. “I do not object if anyone wants to build new tourism accommodations as long as they obey the rules,” he said. His hope: that Bunutan will see no further violators in the future.

What This Means for Investors and Landholders

For Bali’s international community—particularly expatriates and foreign investors considering hospitality ventures—the Karangasem demolition carries several unequivocal messages.

First, land title verification is non-negotiable. The inability to produce valid ownership documentation is now grounds not merely for administrative sanction but for physical dismantling of assets.

Second, coastal setback regulations are being enforced with a rigor that was uncommon even two years ago. Properties within prohibited proximity to the shoreline are at genuine risk, regardless of how long they have stood or how much capital they represent.

Third, the traditional strategy of ignoring warning letters in hopes that enforcement will lose momentum has demonstrably failed in this instance. Three warnings were issued. They were not empty threats.

A Broader Enforcement Trajectory

The Bunutan demolition follows a pattern of escalating spatial planning enforcement across Bali. In Badung, authorities have intensified scrutiny of villas operating without proper licenses. In Denpasar, buildings violating green space regulations have faced similar action. Governor I Wayan Koster’s pending regulation on land conversion, currently under legislative review, signals that the political will for enforcement is not confined to a single regency.

For those who build in compliance—with proper permits, verifiable land titles, and adherence to setback requirements—the investment climate remains stable. For those who have built or are contemplating building outside these parameters, the window for voluntary compliance is narrowing.

Advisory to Investors and Landholders

In light of this enforcement action, Hey Bali News offers the following guidance to those considering land acquisition or development projects on the island:

  1. Verify land status before transaction. Engage a trusted notary and conduct due diligence through the National Land Agency (BPN). “Freehold” claims by sellers must be verifiable through official certificates of title (SHM).
  2. Understand setback requirements. Coastal borders, riverbanks, and green belts are not negotiable. Satellite imagery and GIS mapping services can confirm whether a property lies within protected zones.
  3. Secure all permits prior to construction. Building permits (PBG), environmental approvals, and nuisance permits (HO) are not optional formalities but binding legal requirements.
  4. Do not assume amnesty. Past tolerance of violations does not predict future forbearance. Enforcement cycles intensify as regulatory frameworks mature.
  5. Respond to official notices. Ignoring warning letters eliminates negotiation windows and invites maximum penalty.

The excavator in Bunutan did more than demolish concrete and timber. It excavated a principle: that Bali’s shoreline belongs to the public, its regulations are not suggestions, and its patience with impunity has limits.

#heybalinews

Exit mobile version