Arung Dalam – a small settlement in Koba District on Bangka Island
Arung Dalam is an Indonesian settlement located in the Bangka Belitung Islands Province (Kepulauan Bangka Belitung), specifically within Bangka Tengah Regency, belonging to Koba District (Kecamatan Koba). Based on its geographical coordinates, it is situated in the south-central part of Bangka Island. The Bangka Belitung Islands Province is an offshore territory located southeast of Sumatra's coast, with its provincial capital in Pangkalpinang city. No settlement-level source material exists specifically about Arung Dalam itself; therefore, the following description relies substantially on verifiable data at the province and regency levels, with this clearly indicated in each section.
General overview
Arung Dalam belongs to the Kecamatan Koba administrative unit, which is one district of Bangka Tengah Regency. Bangka Tengah itself extends across the central portion of Bangka Island, and Koba city serves as the regency capital. The province itself, Kepulauan Bangka Belitung, became Indonesia's independent 31st province on December 4, 2000, having previously been part of South Sumatra Province. The province's land area totals 16,690.13 km²; according to 2020 census data, its population was 1,455,678; official estimates for mid-2024 indicate 1,531,530 people. Arung Dalam itself is a small, little-known village for which no independent sources document any particular tourist or economic significance. The entire province is characterized by an equatorial climate with tropical rainforests, though deforestation has resulted in a declining proportion of forested areas. The highest point on Bangka Island is Maras Mountain (Gunung Maras), with an elevation of 699 meters. Among the province's rivers, the Sebuku, Baturusa, and Mendo rivers are notable. In terms of ethnic composition, the province is home to Malays, Chinese (predominantly Hakka communities), and Javanese living together; Indonesian is the state language, while local Malay dialect and Hakka function as lingua francas in daily life.
Real estate and investment
No independent settlement-level real estate market data exists specifically for Arung Dalam. Looking at the broader regional context, the real estate market in Bangka Tengah Regency and Kepulauan Bangka Belitung Province typically reflects the dynamics of small towns and agricultural areas, where prices and investment activity lag far behind leading cities in Bali or Java. The province's economic history is built on tin mining and palm oil production, which also influences the character of the local real estate market. For foreign citizens, Indonesian land law generally does not permit direct land ownership (Hak Milik title); however, certain other titles—such as Hak Pakai (usage rights)—are available under specific conditions. Before making any investment decision, consultation with local legal and real estate experts is strongly recommended, particularly for areas classified as rural or smaller administrative units, where infrastructure development and market liquidity may be limited.
Safety and security
Concrete public safety statistics or criminal record data specific to Arung Dalam are not publicly available. The Kepulauan Bangka Belitung Province as a whole is generally classified within Indonesia as one of the less urbanized, relatively quiet regions, where public safety is typically viewed more favorably compared to crime levels in major cities; however, only province-level generalizations can be made from reliable sources. In rural small villages—as Arung Dalam is—community bonds are strong, and local social norms and village administration (the RT/RW system) traditionally contribute to public order. At the same time, in more isolated and infrastructurally underdeveloped areas, logistical challenges and limitations in access to state services may occur, which can indirectly affect everyday sense of security. Before any travel or settlement decision, consultation of current Indonesian and local government information is recommended.
Tourist attractions
No source-backed tourist attractions directly associated with Arung Dalam can be identified. The broader surrounding area, however—the Bangka Belitung Islands Province—is distinguished by several characteristics. Considering the province as a whole, its natural features—particularly the granite-studded coastlines known on Belitung Island—do attract visitors, but these lie at considerable distance from Arung Dalam. On Bangka Island, Gunung Maras (699 m) is the only naturally prominent point named at the province level. The province's historical roots extend back to Srivijaya, Majapahit, and the Palembang kingdom, followed by periods of Dutch, British, and Japanese colonial rule, which left cultural and architectural traces in certain areas. In Koba city—which is Arung Dalam's nearest administrative center and seat of Kecamatan Koba—basic commercial and public service functions can be found, but this small town itself does not qualify as a prominent tourist destination. Those wishing to become acquainted with the province's natural and cultural values would do well to explore the Pangkalpinang–Koba–Belitung axis.
Summary
Arung Dalam is a small, sparsely documented settlement in Bangka Tengah Regency, Kepulauan Bangka Belitung Province, within the Kecamatan Koba administrative framework. It possesses no independent, source-backed profile from either a tourist or real estate market perspective; its situation and characteristics can be outlined primarily on the basis of province and regency-level data. The province's equatorial climate, diverse ethnic and cultural composition, and economic history rooted in tin mining provide the broader context into which Arung Dalam fits.

