BUILDING AND HOUSING
Indonesia's land legislations do not recognize the concept of freehold land rights. Instead the various rights attached to the land are subdivided into separate titles.
The Basic Agrarian Law (Law No. 5 of 1960) recognizes type of rights on land of non-state-forest area, whereas for the state-forest area, the Law No. 5 of 1967 on forestry is applied. To foreign as well as domestic investors, the following three main rights are significant; the Land Cultivation Right (Hak Guna Usaha, abbreviated as HGU), the Right of Building on Land (Hak Guna Bangunan, abbreviated as HGB) and the Right of Use on Land (Hak Pakai, abbreviated as HP).
These rights authorize the use of land in some ways, and their differences are mainly on the duration of validity, the nature of utilization, the opportunity to mortgage (to use as an asset or collateral) and proof of title:
A dwelling house or a residence that can be owned by a foreign person shall be:
Foreign investors who obtained mining contract from the Minister of Mines and Energy or the Respective Governor / the District Head or forest exploitation rights and or plantation right from the Ministry of Agriculture or the Respective Governor / District Head could automatically use the land within their business license. In case investors want to use the land for different purposes, special applications should be submitted to the Ministry or the respective Governor / District Head concerned. This rights have no collateral value to the owner.
Source: Indonesian's Investment Coordinating Board