Bali’s Villa Rental & Management Association has been working tirelessly to bring industry standards to the island’s booming private vacation rental sector.
With the increasing demand for private vacation rentals and rapid development of new properties, it is becoming increasingly evident that more accreditation and standardisation are needed.

The Bali Villa Rental & Management Association (BVRMA) has confirmed that it is receiving an increasing number of reports of villa fraud and scamming on the island, with more than 100 open cases.
The trend is hugely concerning for both tourists and industry leaders. Fraud ranges from reservation scams to fake social media accounts, to fake websites, and to dodgy agents using images of reputable villas in their scams.
This has led to financial losses and ultimately risks tarnishing the image of the accommodation sector on the island. With more than 7 million international tourists set to visit Bali in 2026, it is essential that prospective tourists feel that they can book with confidence.
The Chairman of BVRMA, Kadek Adnyana, told reporters his forecast for a worst-case scenario if serious action is not taken quickly. He shared, “Bali’s tourism image will definitely plummet. Because if something like this and that happens and it’s exposed on social media, it becomes public knowledge, it becomes global knowledge. Ultimately, Bali’s image will inevitably be tarnished as an unsafe tourist destination.”
He added, “The losses are already hundreds of millions of rupiah for tourists alone. A single booking can be worth anywhere from 10 million to hundreds of millions of rupiah. The villas on offer are quite luxurious and quite expensive.”
In an initial solution, BVRMA has taken concrete steps by introducing an official villa verification system accessible to the public via the official website.
Adnyana explained, “We’ve seen a rise in villa fraud, especially as the high season approaches. Through this verification system, travelers can easily confirm whether the villa or villa management is an official member of the BVRMA and has gone through the verification process.”
He revealed that BVRMA has also opened up collaborations with local governments, law enforcement officials, digital platforms, and Online Travel Agents (OTAs) to work collaboratively to crack down on fraudulent practices in the accommodation sector.
Adnyana explained,” We are ready to be a strategic partner with the government in creating a safe, healthy, and sustainable tourism ecosystem in Bali.”
The safest way for tourists to book private villas in Bali is directly with the property, or via a reputable online provider, after checking the property’s status on the BVRMA Official website. This process is quick and simple to complete, enabling tourists to book with confidence and supporting businesses that play an active role in the local economy.
Villa Scam Detector
100+ cases of fraud reported. Don’t be next. Tap a card to see the 4 steps to book safely.
The Golden Code
What to ask for
Tap for Info ↻Request Verification
The Ask: Before you transfer any money, ask the agent/owner for their BVRMA Verification Code.
The Red Flag: If they refuse or make excuses, walk away.
The Official Check
Using the System
Tap for Process ↻Validate It
Action: Enter the code on the BVRMA official website.
Success: Official company details will pop up on the screen. If nothing appears, the company is not verified.
Match the Data
Crucial Detail
Tap for Tip ↻Don’t Be Fooled
The Scam: Fraudsters use real photos but fake contacts.
The Fix: Ensure the email and phone number on the BVRMA result match exactly who you are talking to.
The Safety Net
Before You Book
Tap for Strategy ↻Order of Operations
The Rule: Buy comprehensive travel insurance before booking the villa.
Why: This ensures your accommodation deposit is covered under the policy if things go wrong.
The BVRMA website is a simple and straightforward site to use. Tourists must first request a verification code from their villa provider or travel agency. Then enter this code into the BVRMA checker.
BVRMA explains, “If the code is valid, the villa or company details will appear on the screen. Make sure the contact information and email match your booking details. If no details appear, please be cautious—you may be at risk. The company might not be verified as our member.”

Tourists traveling to Bali or anywhere in Indonesia are strongly advised to take out a fully comprehensive travel insurance policy before booking travel to the island.
Completing bookings this way around ensures that everything, from accommodation to flights to day trips and tours, is covered under the policy.

That said, tourists are encouraged to read their policy document in full before purchasing cover, as each policy offers different levels of cover, terms, and conditions.
It is very important that tourists understand how to make a claim before they travel to Bali, since, in the unlikely event they need to make one, it makes stressful moments much more manageable if the steps are clear.
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Shorty
Monday 19th of January 2026
Am I cynical ? Has the Association been set up to relieve the relevant Government agencies for policing?
M
Sunday 18th of January 2026
my 2 cents... if you book over booking.com, agoda, trivago, airbnb you're safe. You book over agents: Good luck!
it's not a Bali thing, just you don't book over internet with somebody you don't know and giving you no security... should be obvious.
Exp
Sunday 18th of January 2026
There is no information about price for BVRMA annual "membership" fees online. Price information should be transparent?
As a huge number of villas are foreign owned; appears no foreigners are part of BVRMA?
BVRMA are collecting a lot of sensitive information online like: 1. Company Business Identification Number (NIB) 2. Deed of Establishment approved by the Ministry of Law and Human Rights (Kemenkumham) 3. Company Director’s ID (KTP) 4. Company Tax Number (NPWP) 5. Letter of Business Address and Office Status 7. Passport and KITAS (for PMA/foreign-owned companies)
There is no statement by BVRMA that they are adhering strictly to the comprehensive Personal Data Protection (PDP) Law (effective October 2024), requiring transparency, purpose limitation, and secure handling of data?
In reality villas booked on e.g. airbnb, booking, agoda are fairly safe as these sites provide recourse/protection (money back) if something goes wrong.
James
Sunday 18th of January 2026
The funny thing is that on Bali they make their scams easy for themselves, but hard to carry out for the victims (in this case, villa owners who run a clean business). Because let's be clear, this is absolute nonsense. Their is already a government checked system in play. In order to rent out daily, you need a Pondok Wisata permit which makes sure you are operating fully legal under strict regulations. This plan is just to milk owners for even more money and make the booking process annoying (but they don't care about that). Mind you,operating villa owners following the rules already pay between 25% and 55% on taxes (and forced upon local middle agents).
Yes, true, there are lots of bule AND locals operating without having a pondok wisata, but instead of just going with the system in play you invent a new extra system to milk some more money. Insane. And if there is anything killing investors and tourists mood, it's bs like this.
Exp
Monday 19th of January 2026
@James, This new system will not force any dishonest villa owner to obey the rules. As you said designed to extract money from the honest ones and cast suspicion over the honest ones not willing to spend money and risk all their sensitive paperwork getting into the wrong hands.