Deploy Robots in Indonesia — ASEAN's Largest Economy & EV Supply Chain Hub
Indonesia is ASEAN's largest economy with the world's largest nickel reserves and a booming automotive sector. We help you deploy automation across automotive, electronics, palm oil processing, and nickel/battery manufacturing — with Making Indonesia 4.0 alignment and BKPM support.
Robotics in Indonesia
Key industries driving robotics adoption
Automotive & EV Manufacturing
Toyota, Honda, Suzuki, Mitsubishi, Hyundai — Indonesia is ASEAN's #2 auto producer (1.5M+ vehicles/year) now transitioning to EVs. Welding, painting, assembly, and EV battery pack robotics across Java's industrial corridor.
Electronics Manufacturing
Samsung, LG, Panasonic factories — mobile phones, consumer electronics, and component assembly. Pick-and-place, SMT, soldering, and quality inspection robots across Batam, Bekasi, and Cikarang industrial zones.
Palm Oil & Agri-Food Processing
World's largest palm oil producer (60M tons/year). Fruit bunch processing, refining automation, and quality sorting robots — plus food and beverage packaging for the 280M-person domestic market.
Nickel & Battery Materials
World's largest nickel reserve — Sulawesi and Maluku operations by Vale, Antam, and Harita Group. Ore processing, smelting automation, and downstream battery material (NPI, MHP) production robotics for the global EV supply chain.
Our Services in Indonesia
End-to-end robotics solutions for enterprises, research labs, and institutions
Robot Leasing
Flexible rental programs for research, development & deployment. Access humanoid robots, cobots & quadrupeds with full technical support.
Get Pilot QuoteData Collection
Professional teleoperation & annotation. Build high-quality manipulation and locomotion training datasets for your AI models.
Request QuoteR&D Services
Collaborative research with leading universities & institutions. Joint grants, shared labs, and technology transfer programs.
Explore ProgramsEducation & Training
Hands-on robotics training for engineers, researchers & students. Certification programs and workshop series.
View CoursesIndonesia Robotics Policy & Government Initiatives
Public sector support for robotics deployment
Making Indonesia 4.0
National strategy targeting five priority sectors (food & beverage, textile, automotive, electronics, chemicals) for Industry 4.0 transformation including robotics and IoT adoption.
Learn more →BKPM Investment Incentives
Investment Coordinating Board provides tax holidays (5–20 years), import duty exemptions, and investment allowances for manufacturing automation in priority sectors.
Learn more →Positive Investment List (DNI)
Indonesia's updated investment list opens most manufacturing sectors to 100% foreign ownership — including robotics, automation, and industrial equipment.
Learn more →KEK (Special Economic Zones)
Kawasan Ekonomi Khusus offer reduced CIT (10%), streamlined customs, and infrastructure support — Sei Mangkei (palm oil), Kendal (manufacturing), and Morowali (nickel) are key for robotics.
Learn more →Making Indonesia 4.0 Robotics Guide 2026
BKPM Incentives, Nickel/EV Supply Chain & Manufacturing Automation
- BKPM tax holiday application guide for automation investments
- Nickel-to-battery supply chain automation roadmap
- Automotive EV transition robotics requirements for Indonesia
- TKDN local content compliance checklist for robot suppliers
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Research & Academic Partners in Indonesia
Leading institutions advancing robotics locally
ITB (Bandung Institute of Technology)
Indonesia's top engineering university — robotics, mechatronics, and automation research
Visit →UI (University of Indonesia)
Computer science, AI, and electrical engineering — strong industry partnerships in Greater Jakarta
Visit →ITS (Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember, Surabaya)
Marine robotics, industrial automation, and East Java manufacturing research partnerships
Visit →BRIN (National Research and Innovation Agency)
Indonesia's consolidated national research body — advanced manufacturing, materials science, and automation R&D
Visit →Local Companies
GoTo (Gojek/Tokopedia) · Semen Indonesia · Astra International · Vale Indonesia · United Tractors · Bukalapak
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about robotics services in Indonesia
Do food sector robots need Halal certification in Indonesia?
Robots handling food products may require Halal compliance certification from MUI (Indonesian Ulema Council) — particularly for food-contact surfaces and processing equipment. We ensure all food sector robots meet MUI guidelines and provide certification documentation.
Do I need a PT (local entity) to operate robots in Indonesia?
Foreign companies typically need a PT PMA (foreign-owned limited liability company) established through BKPM/OSS. We help structure robot leasing through existing PT PMA entities or assist with company registration — typically completed in 4–6 weeks.
What are the TKDN (local content) requirements for robotics?
TKDN regulations require minimum local content percentages for government procurement and certain sectors. We help maximize TKDN scores through local assembly, Indonesian service partnerships, and training programs — typically achieving 25–40% local content.
Do you provide Bahasa Indonesia support?
Yes — full Bahasa Indonesia documentation, operator training, and a local support team across Java, Sumatra, and Sulawesi. English-language support also available for international operations.
How do you handle multi-island logistics for robot deployment?
Indonesia spans 17,000 islands across 5,000 km. We maintain logistics hubs in Jakarta, Surabaya, and Makassar with inter-island shipping partnerships. Remote deployment to Sulawesi (nickel) and Kalimantan (palm oil) operations includes satellite connectivity and regional service teams.
Also Serving Nearby
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