Yes, Bali travel is fine with a renewed passport if it has enough validity and any visa or entry record matches the passport you carry.
Bali doesn’t have a separate passport rule from the rest of Indonesia. If your passport was renewed before your trip, the first thing to sort out is simple: which passport number is tied to your visa, e-VOA, airline booking, and any other travel document. A new passport does not block the trip on its own. Trouble starts when the passport in your hand does not match the document you used for entry approval.
That’s why the answer is “yes,” with a few checks attached. Indonesia requires a passport that stays valid for at least six months from your arrival date. If you need a visa, the visa details also matter. Indonesia’s official eVisa system says the visa is electronically linked to the passport used in the application, and it is valid only when you travel with that passport. That one line shapes the whole plan.
So the real question is not whether a new passport is allowed. It is whether your new passport still works with the rest of your trip. If you renewed early, fixed a damaged passport, changed your name, or replaced a lost one, you need to make sure your Bali entry path still lines up from check-in to immigration.
What A New Passport Means For Bali Entry
A new passport usually helps, not hurts. It gives you fresh validity, clean pages, and a current document for airline and immigration checks. In many cases, you can travel with no extra drama at all.
That clean outcome is most common when you have not yet applied for an Indonesian visa, or when your nationality does not need a separate prearranged visa for the stay you plan. In that case, you simply travel with the new passport, make sure it has enough validity, and use that same passport number in your airline booking and any arrival paperwork.
The snag comes up when an approval was issued under the old passport number. That can include an eVisa, an e-VOA application, a long-stay visa, or another document tied to your old travel document. A passport renewal can break that link. That is why many travelers feel fine at home, then hit a wall at online check-in or the airline counter.
For Bali, think in layers. First is passport validity. Next is visa linkage. Then comes flight booking data. Then there is practical proof such as your return or onward ticket and enough blank space in the passport for entry processing. If all four line up, the trip is usually smooth.
Can I Travel To Bali With A New Passport If My Visa Was Issued On The Old One?
This is the part that trips people up most. Indonesia’s official eVisa site states that the visa is electronically linked to the passport used in the application and is valid only if you travel with that passport. That means a new passport can change more than the booklet in your bag. It can change whether your existing approval still works at all.
If you already hold an Indonesian eVisa or e-VOA that was issued using the old passport number, do not assume immigration will “see both” and sort it out for you. Some countries allow easy travel with an old passport that holds a valid visa and a new passport for current identity. Indonesia’s eVisa wording is tighter. The safer read is that the travel document and the visa record need to match.
That does not always mean the trip is dead. It may mean you need to reapply, update the record if the system allows it, or carry both passports while also confirming the rule for your exact visa type. The wrong move is turning up with only the new passport and a visa approval tied to the old one, hoping the airline agent will wave it through.
If your passport changed after you received approval, deal with it before travel day. Waiting until the airport leaves you exposed at two checkpoints: the airline may refuse boarding, and Indonesian immigration may refuse entry even if the airline lets you fly.
Checks To Make Before You Fly
Run through these checks in order. They take a few minutes and can save hours of stress.
Passport Validity
Indonesia travel information published by the U.S. Department of State says your passport should be valid for six months beyond arrival and have two blank visa pages. Indonesia’s own eVisa guidance also states that foreigners entering Indonesia must hold a passport with at least six months of validity from the arrival date. If your renewed passport does not clear that mark, renew again or delay the trip.
Visa Status
Check whether you need a visa, can use visa on arrival, or already hold an approved visa. Then confirm which passport number appears on that approval. A mismatch here is the biggest red flag.
Airline Booking Data
Your ticket should reflect the passport you will present at check-in. A name mismatch, date-of-birth error, or old passport number on the booking can slow things down. Many airlines let you update passport details online. If not, ask them to correct it before you travel.
Old Passport In Your Carry-On
If any past visa, residence label, or supporting travel history sits in the old passport, carry it with you. Even when the new passport is the one you plan to use, the old one can still answer questions at the counter.
Outbound Ticket
Indonesia’s eVisa guidance notes that immigration officers may ask for proof of onward or return travel. Keep that booking easy to show on your phone and as a printed copy.
| Travel Item | What To Check | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| New Passport | At least 6 months of validity from arrival | Indonesia entry rule |
| Blank Pages | At least 2 blank visa pages | Needed for entry processing |
| Visa Or e-VOA | Passport number matches the issued approval | Mismatched data can block boarding or entry |
| Airline Booking | Name, passport number, and birth date match current passport | Airline systems check document data before boarding |
| Old Passport | Carry it if any visa or travel record is tied to it | Useful for identity trail and document review |
| Return Or Onward Ticket | Keep proof ready to show | May be requested at entry |
| Name Change Papers | Bring supporting document if your name changed | Helps tie old and new records together |
| Damaged Or Lost Old Passport | Know whether you must reapply for the visa | A linked visa may no longer be usable |
When A New Passport Usually Causes No Trouble
You are in the safest zone when all of these are true: your new passport has enough validity, you have not yet applied for the Indonesian visa, your airline booking can be updated to the new passport, and your personal details are unchanged. In that setup, the new passport is just your current travel document. Use it for every step and you’re set.
You’re also in good shape when your trip qualifies for the entry method you plan to use and you use the renewed passport from the start. That is the cleanest path because there is no old-passport record hanging around in the background.
For current rule checks, the official Indonesia e-VOA information page spells out the passport-validity rule and notes that officers may ask for an outbound ticket. For a U.S.-focused summary, the U.S. Department of State’s Indonesia page lists six months of passport validity beyond arrival and two blank pages.
When You Should Pause And Fix Things First
A few setups deserve extra care before you head to the airport.
Your Visa Was Issued Under The Old Passport Number
This is the big one. If your Indonesian visa or eVisa approval is linked to the passport you replaced, you need to confirm whether it can be updated or whether a fresh application is the safer path. Do not assume a printed approval email is enough if the passport number on the visa record is old.
Your Name Changed
A name change can confuse airline systems and border checks even when the passport is valid. If your old passport, visa application, or ticket carries a prior name, bring the document that connects the two identities.
Your Old Passport Was Lost Or Surrendered
If the old passport held the linked record and you no longer have it, the odds of a clean boarding experience drop. In that case, solving the visa side in advance matters even more.
Your Airline Profile Still Shows The Old Passport
Frequent-flyer accounts and stored traveler profiles can auto-fill outdated passport details. Double-check the booking itself, not just your account page.
Your New Passport Is An Emergency Passport
Emergency travel documents often bring extra scrutiny. Indonesia’s official guidance distinguishes between standard passports and some other travel documents, with longer validity needed for certain non-standard documents. If you are traveling on an emergency document, verify your exact document type before departure.
| Situation | Risk Level | Best Move |
|---|---|---|
| Renewed passport before applying for visa | Low | Use the new passport for all bookings and applications |
| Approved visa tied to old passport | High | Confirm update or reapply before travel |
| Airline ticket still shows old passport data | Medium | Correct the booking before check-in opens |
| Name change after passport renewal | Medium | Carry name-change proof and align all travel records |
| Lost old passport with linked visa | High | Sort the visa issue before airport day |
| Emergency passport | Medium To High | Verify entry acceptance for that document type |
What To Carry On Travel Day
Pack documents like you expect a human being, not just a scanner, to review them. That mindset keeps your file clean and easy to explain.
Main Documents
- Your new passport
- Your old passport, if any visa or past travel record is tied to it
- Visa approval email or e-VOA confirmation, if required
- Return or onward ticket
- Hotel or stay details
Back-Up Papers
- Name-change record, if your current passport name differs from the old one
- A screenshot or printout of the visa details showing the passport number used
- Any correspondence from the visa system or airline about passport updates
Keep all of that in your carry-on, not checked baggage. If a counter agent asks why you are carrying two passports, the answer is plain: the new passport is current, and the old one holds related travel history or a linked approval. That is far easier to handle when the papers are together and ready.
Common Mistakes That Create Airport Stress
The most common mistake is thinking a passport renewal is a small clerical change. For international travel, passport numbers are part of the identity chain used by airlines, visa systems, and border officers. Change the number, and you may need to refresh the rest of the chain too.
The next mistake is relying on one source only. A traveler reads that Indonesia allows visa on arrival, then skips the fine print about passport validity or linked visa records. Or they read the airline booking email and never check whether the frequent-flyer profile still pushes the old passport into the reservation.
Another bad miss is packing the old passport in checked luggage. If your old passport helps explain a visa record or a name change, it needs to stay with you from the counter to immigration.
Last, some travelers wait until online check-in to see if the system accepts the new passport number. That is late in the game. Fixing a document mismatch the night before departure is rough. Fixing it at the airport can end the trip before it starts.
A Practical Rule For Bali Trips After Passport Renewal
Use one simple rule: the passport you carry should be the same passport that your Bali entry path expects. If the visa, e-VOA, airline booking, and arrival details all point to the new passport, you are in good shape. If any one of those still points to the old passport, sort it out before travel day.
That makes the answer clear. Yes, you can travel to Bali with a new passport. Just make sure the passport has enough validity, and make sure every document tied to your entry matches the passport you plan to show. Bali is easy enough when your paperwork tells one clean story.
References & Sources
- Directorate General of Immigration, Indonesia.“Electronic Visa on Arrival (e-VOA) Information.”States that travelers entering Indonesia must hold a passport valid for at least six months from arrival and may be asked to show an outbound ticket.
- U.S. Department of State.“Indonesia International Travel Information.”Lists passport validity of six months beyond arrival, two blank passport pages, and general entry details for U.S. travelers going to Indonesia.
