Setup goal

Open a restaurant or café in Indonesia

F&B is one of the most common foreign-investor entries — a Bali coffee chain, a Jakarta concept restaurant, a beach club. Setup-wise it's straightforward; the regulatory weight sits in halal certification, tourism licensing, and (if you serve alcohol) the separate alcohol-distribution track.

Pick the right KBLI before incorporation

Restaurant (KBLI 56102), coffee shop (56303), bar / drinking place (56301), and catering (56210) are distinct codes with different permit tracks. Get this wrong at incorporation and you'll be amending the deed later — possible but slow. Many F&B PMAs register multiple codes (restaurant + coffee shop + catering) so the deed covers operational variations without further amendment.

Halal certification is now mandatory

UU 33/2014 requires halal certification for food and beverage products sold in Indonesia. The phased rollout is now in force for most F&B categories — 2024 deadline for products containing meat, 2026 for general F&B. The certification is per-product / per-recipe and runs through BPJPH (Halal Product Assurance Agency), often with backlogs of 2–4 months. A non-halal restaurant must be clearly signed as such; selling pork or alcohol still needs the menu separation declared at registration.

Tourism licensing (TDUP / TDUI) for F&B

Most restaurants and cafés serving the public need a TDUP (Tanda Daftar Usaha Pariwisata) — the tourism-sector business licence, despite the name applying broadly to F&B venues. Issued by the Regency / City government via OSS, the TDUP feeds into the standard NIB workflow. Bars and venues serving alcohol additionally need the alcohol distribution licence (separate track, much more involved).

Most likely KBLI codes

KBLI codes that fit this goal

Sector permits

Permits you'll typically need

  • TDUP (Tanda Daftar Usaha Pariwisata)
    Regency / City Tourism Office (via OSS)

    Mandatory for restaurants, cafés, bars serving the public. Issued via the standard OSS NIB workflow.

  • Halal certificate (per product/recipe)
    BPJPH

    Mandatory for food/beverage SKUs under UU 33/2014. Non-halal F&B must be clearly signed.

  • Food safety certificate (PIRT or BPOM, scale-dependent)
    Local health office or BPOM

    For packaged food production / prepared meals served on-premise.

  • Alcohol distribution licence (NPP / SKB)
    Ministry of Trade / local government

    Required if serving or selling alcohol. Separate, more demanding track than TDUP.

Capital & ownership

How much capital and what ownership rules apply

Standard PT PMA: IDR 2.5b paid-up, IDR 10b total investment value per KBLI per location. F&B is 100% PMA-open under Pres. Reg. 10/2021 — even bars / alcohol-serving venues. Multi-outlet chains often hit the IDR 10b per-location commitment naturally through fit-out + equipment + working capital.

Setup sequence

Step-by-step setup

  1. 01
    Decide on the KBLI mix (restaurant + coffee shop + catering is a common stack).
  2. 02
    Site selection — Bali in particular has zoning restrictions; confirm the location is in a tourism / commercial zone before signing the lease.
  3. 03
    Incorporate PT PMA, register KBLIs in the deed, secure NIB.
  4. 04
    Apply for TDUP via OSS — usually 2–4 weeks for the local tourism office to issue.
  5. 05
    File halal certification per product / recipe — start early, BPJPH backlog is real.
  6. 06
    If serving alcohol: separately apply for the alcohol distribution licence — typically adds 2–3 months.
  7. 07
    Food safety certificate (BPOM if scale demands, PIRT for smaller venues), staff health certificates.
  8. 08
    Open + LKPM quarterly reports + ongoing halal recertification.
Gotchas

Common gotchas worth knowing

  • ·Bali zoning is enforced more strictly than other regions — a restaurant location that's technically residential-zoned can be shut down even after operating for years.
  • ·Halal is not optional for most F&B SKUs as of 2026 — the certification timeline often determines launch date, not the construction timeline.
  • ·Alcohol distribution licensing is a separate, harder track — selling beer / wine / spirits needs a different licence regime and Ministry of Trade approval.
  • ·A foreign-owned F&B PT PMA can't use franchising structures freely — Permendag franchising rules require an Indonesian master-franchisee for some setups.

Frequently asked

What KBLI code is a coffee shop in Indonesia?

KBLI 56303 — Coffee shops and other drinking places (non-alcoholic). For a multi-outlet coffee chain, also register 56304 (Restaurant chain operations).

Do I need halal certification for a non-halal restaurant?

No — non-halal restaurants are explicitly allowed but must be clearly signed as non-halal at the entrance. The mandatory certification under UU 33/2014 applies only to products marketed as halal-compliant.

Can a foreign-owned PT PMA serve alcohol?

Yes — KBLI 56301 (alcoholic-beverage drinking places) is 100% PMA-open. The complexity isn't ownership but the alcohol distribution licence (separate track via Ministry of Trade), and import-duty rules if serving imported alcohol.

How long does it take to open a restaurant in Bali?

4–8 weeks for the company side (PT PMA + NIB + TDUP). Halal certification adds 2–4 months and runs in parallel. Construction / fit-out runs separately. Realistic launch from incorporation: 4–6 months for a non-alcohol venue, 6–9 months for a venue with alcohol.

Do I need a TDUP if I only do delivery?

Yes — cloud kitchens and delivery-only venues still need the TDUP under most regency rulings, since TDUP covers F&B service activity broadly. Some areas issue a simplified version for ghost-kitchen formats.
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