indo.rent logo
indo.rent
Properties
ExploreGuidesTools
...
Sign InSign Up

Navigation

PropertiesPackagesFAQContact
AboutGuidesHelp CenterExplore

Legal

Terms of ServicePrivacy Policy

Useful

Indonesian Property TerminologyProperty FAQLand Zoning Investor GuideTools
BlogSite Map

Download

indo.rent mobile app

App StoreApp StoreGoogle PlayGoogle Play

Community

InstagramFacebookX (Twitter)TikTok

indo.rent

A professional real estate marketplace that connects Indonesian landlords with tenants from all over the world

© 2026 indo.rent. All rights reserved

v10.4.1

    Home/Indonesia/Central Java/Demak/Karanganyar/Ngemplikwetan

    Properties in Ngemplikwetan

    Karanganyar, Demak, Central Java

    0 properties available

    No properties here yet — be the first! List yours free in 2 minutes.

    Own a property in Ngemplikwetan? List it for free →

    Browse Demak →

    About Ngemplikwetan

    Ngemplikwetan – a village in Karanganyar district, Kabupaten Demak

    Ngemplikwetan is a small Javanese village (desa) located in Karanganyar kecamatan (subdistrict) of Kabupaten Demak in Central Java (Jawa Tengah). According to its coordinates (-6.8697, 110.7987), it is situated in the central-eastern part of the regency, in an inland area close to the northern coast of Java island. Administratively, it belongs to Kabupaten Demak, whose administrative seat is in Kecamatan Demak. Beyond regency-level sources, detailed public documentation specific to the village is currently unavailable, so the following description largely presents the broader Kabupaten Demak context, clearly indicating this framework.

    General overview

    Ngemplikwetan is one of the smaller villages belonging to Karanganyar kecamatan. It does not appear in widely recognized tourism or administrative sources in its own right, indicating that it is primarily an agricultural, locally inhabited, relatively quiet rural settlement. According to data for Kabupaten Demak as a whole, the regency covers an area of 897.43 km² and had a population of 1,158,772 in 2019. The kabupaten is bordered to the west by the Java Sea, to the north by Kabupaten Jepara, to the east by Kabupaten Kudus, to the southeast by Kabupaten Grobogan, and to the west by Kota Semarang and Kabupaten Semarang. This geographical location means that Ngemplikwetan falls within the zone where the densely populated, economically active northern Javanese coastal region meets the internal agricultural areas. Due to the lack of available public sources on the precise village-level population and area of Karanganyar district, more detailed data cannot be provided.

    Real estate and investment

    Village-level data specific to Ngemplikwetan's real estate market is not available. However, in the broader context of Kabupaten Demak, it is worth noting that the regency is in direct proximity to Semarang, the capital of Central Java province, which is one of the most dynamically developing urban centers on the island. This proximity generally exerts upward pressure on land and property prices in surrounding kabupatens, particularly in areas related to infrastructure and industrial development. In rural, agriculturally-oriented villages like Ngemplikwetan, properties typically undergo limited commercial transactions and are mainly exchanged among local actors. According to the general framework of Indonesian land ownership regulations, foreigners cannot hold direct freehold land ownership in Indonesia (Hak Milik); for them, primarily Hak Pakai (use rights) and Hak Sewa (lease rights) structures are available, and longer-term property use is possible within special investment frameworks. Any property transaction must be conducted according to the regulations of the local Badan Pertanahan Nasional (BPN, land office).

    Safety and security

    Village-level statistics or police data on safety and security in Ngemplikwetan are not publicly available. Based on the general picture for the broader region—namely Kabupaten Demak and the rural areas of Central Java generally—it can be said that in the internal, agricultural areas of Java, public safety is typically stable, and strong local community life provides effective social control. In villages far from major Indonesian cities, problems related to organized crime are less common, although minor property crimes can of course occur anywhere. Since specific crime statistics are not available, this assessment is based solely on general trends characteristic of rural areas in Central Java and does not constitute an evaluation of Ngemplikwetan's specific security situation.

    Tourist attractions

    No sources report named tourist attractions within Ngemplikwetan itself. However, from the broader Kabupaten Demak area, it is well known that the regency is one of the historical centers of Javanese Islamic culture: the former Demak Sultanate was established here, and the Masjid Agung Demak (Grand Mosque of Demak) located in Demak city is one of the most significant Islamic pilgrimage sites throughout Java, with historical roots reaching back to the 15th–16th century Sultanate era. This mosque and its associated historical heritage constitute Kabupaten Demak's most important documented landmark and a regionally attractive destination for both domestic and foreign visitors. Ngemplikwetan and Karanganyar kecamatan represent a closer territorial context to this main attraction, but specific road distances cannot be provided due to the lack of village-level sources. No verified sources are available regarding other named natural or cultural attractions linked to the kecamatan.

    Summary

    Ngemplikwetan is a small rural village in Karanganyar kecamatan, Kabupaten Demak in Central Java. Because no independent public documentation exists for the village, the description presented here relies primarily on regency-level data and the broader Central Javanese rural context. Due to Kabupaten Demak's proximity to Semarang, it holds an economically non-negligible position, while its historical heritage is embodied by the former Demak Sultanate and the Masjid Agung Demak. Based on these factors, Ngemplikwetan itself is a quiet, agriculturally-oriented community shaped more by local life than by external traffic.


    More about Karanganyar

    Karanganyar – Rice-growing district in central DemakKaranganyar is a central district of Demak Regency in Central Java, occupying the broad rice-growing plain that defines the…

    Karanganyar – Rice-growing district in central Demak

    Karanganyar is a central district of Demak Regency in Central Java, occupying the broad rice-growing plain that defines the regency's agricultural identity. It should not be confused with the larger Karanganyar Regency near Solo; this is a modest but productive farming area where village life still revolves around rice cultivation and the daily rhythm of paddy work. Flat terrain, an extensive irrigation network and fertile soils place Karanganyar firmly within Demak's reputation as one of the premier rice-producing regions on Java's north coast.

    Tourism and attractions

    Karanganyar is not a tourism destination in any conventional sense, which is itself part of its character for anyone interested in authentic Javanese rural life. At elevations of roughly five to eighteen metres above sea level the landscape is open, with rice paddies stretching to the horizon in every direction, and during planting season the flooded fields reflect the sky like a sheet of mirrors. Irrigation canals crisscross the district, villages are compact clusters of houses shaded by coconut palms, mango trees and bamboo groves, and the cycles of planting, harvesting and threshing set the visible community calendar. The climate is hot and humid all year, with daytime temperatures of about twenty-seven to thirty-four degrees Celsius and heavy monsoon rainfall from November to March. Weekly markets, mosque life and traditional village ceremonies, rather than curated attractions, are what visitors encounter here.

    Property market

    Property in Karanganyar is genuinely affordable by Javanese standards and is almost entirely agricultural in nature. Paddy land trades for roughly Rp 50,000 to Rp 170,000 per square metre, and residential village plots generally change hands for Rp 100,000 to Rp 350,000 per square metre, with values primarily shaped by proximity to the main roads and the quality of irrigation on adjoining parcels. The market is entirely local in character, with transactions conducted through village networks and informal intermediaries rather than through developers, and there is essentially no external investment activity. The principal store of value is agricultural productivity: well-irrigated Demak rice land produces reliable yields that generate income through crop sales or tenant-farming arrangements. Land values have appreciated slowly but steadily over time, driven by the underlying scarcity of productive agricultural land in densely populated Java, and any foreign participation must work within the Indonesian rules that govern agricultural land.

    Rental and investment outlook

    Karanganyar does not have a meaningful tourism rental market, and residential rental demand is largely limited to the modest local service economy. The investment proposition is agricultural rather than hospitality-led: farmland with reliable water from the regional irrigation network can generate steady income either through direct cultivation or through sharecropping arrangements with local farmers. Investors who look at the district typically treat it as a long-term land-banking play, accepting that appreciation will be gradual and driven by regional agricultural dynamics rather than visitor flow. Agricultural-support businesses such as rice milling, grain storage or seed and fertiliser supply are realistic niches given the concentration of rice farmers. The overall risk profile is low but returns are correspondingly modest, and exit timelines should be planned in years rather than months.

    Practical tips

    Karanganyar is approximately fifteen to twenty minutes from Demak town along paved but narrow rural roads. The district has a puskesmas for basic healthcare, primary schools, several mosques and village shops for daily needs, while more comprehensive services including the regency hospital, banks, secondary schools and the main market are available in Demak town itself. Public transport consists of angkot minibuses on the main routes and ojek motorbike taxis for village access. Mobile coverage is adequate in the settlements and electricity supply is reliable. Daily life follows traditional patterns, with early-morning fieldwork, midday rest and afternoon socialising, and community bonds remain strong through gotong royong and religious gatherings. Visitors and residents benefit from engaging respectfully with village customs and the Islamic calendar observed across the regency.

    More about Demak

    Demak – Cradle of Java's Islamic SultanatesDemak Regency lies on the northern coast of Central Java province, between Semarang and Kudus. The regional capital is Demak town. Demak…

    Demak – Cradle of Java's Islamic Sultanates

    Demak Regency lies on the northern coast of Central Java province, between Semarang and Kudus. The regional capital is Demak town. Demak is one of the most important sites in Indonesian Islamic history: Java's first Islamic sultanate was founded here in the 15th century, and Masjid Agung Demak is Java's oldest mosque.

    Attractions and Activities

    Masjid Agung Demak (Grand Mosque of Demak) is Java's first mosque, built partly by Sunan Kalijaga, one of the Wali Songo (nine Islamic saints) – the original teak pillars and Javanese Islamic architectural style are unique. The bazaar around the mosque sells religious souvenirs, Javanese textiles and local sweets. The Demak Sultanate Palace Museum displays the sultanate's crowns and weapons. Morosari Beach and Surodadi Beach are quiet Java Sea coastlines of fishing villages – bordered by mangrove forests.

    Culture and Cuisine

    Demak is a deeply religious Javanese community – the sultanate's legacy lives in the synthesis of Islamic practice and Javanese tradition. The Grebeg Besar festival (Mawlid, the Prophet's birthday) is Demak's largest religious celebration. The cuisine is characteristically Central Javanese: nasi gandul (rice with spiced beef stew), lontong tuyuhan, and bandeng presto (pressure-cooked milkfish) are local favourites.

    Public Safety

    Demak is a safe region. You can walk around the town and mosque area freely at night. Currents on Java Sea beaches can be strong – do not swim deep. Traffic on the pantura highway is heavy. Medical care is basic locally; Semarang is approximately 30–40 minutes by car.

    Practical Information

    From Semarang Ahmad Yani Airport, approximately 30–40 minutes east by car. Good bus network along the pantura highway. The best time to visit is April to October. Accommodation: simple hotels and guesthouses in Demak town.

    More about Central Java

    Central Java is Indonesia's cultural heart, where the world's largest Buddhist and Hindu temples, living Javanese traditions, and volcanic highlands together create the province's…

    Central Java is Indonesia's cultural heart, where the world's largest Buddhist and Hindu temples, living Javanese traditions, and volcanic highlands together create the province's appeal. If you had to choose one Indonesian province for culture and history, Central Java would be it.

    Where is Central Java?

    The province is located in the central part of Java island. Semarang is the capital, accessible by international flights. Yogyakarta and Solo are the other two important cities in the region.

    What to See?

    1. Borobudur – The World's Largest Buddhist Temple

    The 9th-century Borobudur is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the world's largest Buddhist monument. Watching sunrise from the temple, above volcanoes and jungle, is an unforgettable experience.

    2. Prambanan Temple

    The slender towers of this 9th-century Hindu temple complex are stunning architectural masterpieces. The evening Ramayana ballet performance in front of the temple is a special cultural experience.

    3. Dieng Plateau

    A volcanic plateau at 2,000 meters elevation with ancient Hindu temples, colorful crater lakes, and geothermal phenomena. Sunrise from Sikunir Hill is breathtaking.

    4. Solo (Surakarta)

    One of the centers of Javanese culture with two royal palaces (Kraton). Batik markets, traditional gamelan music, and local gastronomy provide an authentic Javanese experience.

    5. Semarang – Colonial Heritage

    Semarang's old town features Dutch colonial buildings, Chinese temples, and multicultural gastronomy. The Lawang Sewu building and Sam Poo Kong temple are the most famous.

    When to Visit?

    April–October is the dry season, ideal for temple visits and the Dieng Plateau.

    How Long to Stay?

    5–7 days:

    • 1–2 days: Borobudur and surroundings
    • 1 day: Prambanan temple
    • 1–2 days: Solo and Javanese culture
    • 1 day: Dieng Plateau
    • 1 day: Semarang

    Renting or Investing in Central Java?

    If you're considering renting or investing in property in Central Java, these resources on our site can help you make informed decisions:

    • Indonesian Property FAQ – answers to the most common questions about renting and buying
    • Land Zoning Guide – understanding Indonesian land use regulations
    • Indonesian Real Estate Terminology – key terms explained
    • Property Guide – comprehensive guide to Indonesian real estate
    • Living in Indonesia – essential guide for expats
    • Semarang Guide – local insights and practical tips

    Official Resources

    For further information about Central Java, these official sources may be helpful:

    • Indonesia Travel – official tourism portal
    • Central Java Provincial Government – regional government information
    • Bank Indonesia – currency and exchange rate data
    • BMKG – weather and climate information
    • Directorate General of Immigration – visa regulations for foreign visitors

    Summary

    Central Java is Indonesia's cultural treasure house. Borobudur and Prambanan are world-famous attractions on their own, but the traditions of the Javanese court, batik, and local cuisine complete the experience.

    Own a property in Ngemplikwetan?

    Be the first to list your property in Ngemplikwetan

    List Your Property — It's Free