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

v10.4.2

    Home/Indonesia/Central Java/Kebumen/Sruweng/Karanggedang

    Properties in Karanggedang

    Sruweng, Kebumen, Central Java

    0 properties available

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

    Own a property in Karanggedang? List it for free →

    Browse Kebumen →

    About Karanggedang

    Karanggedang – a settlement in Kecamatan Sruweng, Kabupaten Kebumen, Central Java

    Karanggedang is an Indonesian village located in the province of Central Java (Jawa Tengah), within the administrative area of Kabupaten Kebumen, belonging to the Kecamatan Sruweng district. Based on its coordinates, the settlement is situated in the central-northern band of the regency, approximately near -7.66 latitude and 109.59 east longitude. Kabupaten Kebumen itself is an extensive regency with an area of 1,581.11 km², with the Indian Ocean forming its southern border, Kabupaten Banjarnegara to the north, Kabupaten Wonosobo and Kabupaten Purworejo to the east, and Kabupaten Cilacap and Kabupaten Banyumas to the west. The regency's population in 2023 was 1,399,976, indicating a medium-sized, characteristically agrarian Javanese regency. No independent settlement-level statistical or encyclopedic sources are currently available for Karanggedang, so the following description is based primarily on information known at the level of Kecamatan Sruweng and Kabupaten Kebumen.

    General overview

    Karanggedang is not among Indonesia's widely known or touristy settlements. Kecamatan Sruweng is a district within Kabupaten Kebumen that falls within the regency's interior, hilly-lowland zone, and is primarily known for its agricultural activities. Kabupaten Kebumen itself was established on January 1, 1936, through the merger of the former Kabupaten Karanganyar (Roma) and Kabupaten Kebumen (Pandjer), and has since functioned as a unified administrative unit. Significant portions of the regency's territory are engaged in rice cultivation, horticulture, and small-scale industrial activity. Kecamatan Sruweng is positioned relatively close administratively to the regency's capital, Kebumen city (which is also the kabupaten seat), so the services and infrastructure available there serve as reference points for Karanggedang residents. The region is generally rural in character: the vast majority of the population lives from agriculture, small commerce, and local services. The specific population figure, territorial extent, and other village-level statistics for Karanggedang cannot be verified from available sources, so they are not included in this description.

    Real estate and investment

    Concrete real estate market data for Karanggedang—such as land prices, transaction volume, or development projects—is not available from verifiable sources. However, some general observations can be made based on the broader context at the Kabupaten Kebumen level. On the rural areas of the regency, property prices are typically significantly lower than in Indonesia's tourist or industrial hubs, and demand is more moderate. Investment dynamics are primarily determined by the development of local infrastructure, the condition of public roads, and proximity to Kebumen city center. It can be generally stated that real estate development in rural regions of Central Java proceeds at a slower pace than in the western or eastern, more industrialized areas of the island. Regarding foreign investors: in Indonesia, real estate and land acquisition by foreign individuals is legally restricted. According to current Indonesian regulations, foreign nationals cannot hold full property ownership (Hak Milik), but under certain conditions may exercise property use rights in the form of Hak Pakai (usage rights) or Hak Sewa (lease rights). This general legal framework applies both within Kabupaten Kebumen and throughout the country, and it is advisable to consult a legal expert before any investment decision.

    Safety and security

    Published crime statistics or specific data regarding local public security for Karanggedang are not currently available from verifiable sources. Similarly, no data on the public security of the broader region, Kabupaten Kebumen, are presented in this source material. In general terms, rural districts in Central Java—based on available literature—exhibit characteristics typical of Indonesian rural communities: close neighborly relations, community self-policing (rukun tetangga and rukun warga systems) that supplement formal police presence, and crime levels more moderate than in large cities. However, this is general regional context and does not replace concrete, current local information, which can be obtained through on-site inquiry or contact with local authorities.

    Tourist attractions

    No verifiable, source-documented data is available regarding named tourist attractions in the immediate vicinity of Karanggedang. The broader Kabupaten Kebumen, however, is not entirely unknown from a tourism standpoint in Central Java. The Indian Ocean coastline runs along the regency's southern portion, and some of its sandy beaches hold regional appeal, though these are likely not directly accessible from Karanggedang at short distance—specific kilometer figures cannot be provided due to the absence of verifiable sources. Kebumen city, the regency's seat, contains local cultural and administrative institutions. Interior areas of Sruweng district typically offer agricultural landscapes; the hilly terrain, rice fields, and rural lifestyle provide a sort of cultural-natural backdrop, but these are not identifiable, named tourist attractions. Those traveling to the Kabupaten Kebumen region are advised to consult regency-level tourism information for specific programs and sights, as these provide more authentic and current information about possibilities.

    Summary

    Karanggedang is a small, rural settlement in Central Java, in Kecamatan Sruweng, Kabupaten Kebumen. According to 2023 data, the regency is an administrative unit of nearly 1.4 million inhabitants covering 1,581 km², with the Indian Ocean forming its southern border. Detailed, verifiable settlement-level data for Karanggedang itself is not currently available, so the characterizations presented in this article rely on more general circumstances of the regency and kecamatan. The region's rural, agrarian character, moderate real estate market activity, and village community life are the main contextual factors generally applicable to this area.


    More about Sruweng

    Sruweng – Western Kebumen's transition between plain and karstSruweng is a western Kebumen district positioned in the transitional zone between the flat lowland rice plain and the…

    Sruweng – Western Kebumen's transition between plain and karst

    Sruweng is a western Kebumen district positioned in the transitional zone between the flat lowland rice plain and the karst hill landscape that dominates the Gombong area. The district benefits from its proximity to Gombong (Kebumen's second town) while maintaining its own market town character and agricultural economy. The terrain transitions from productive irrigated rice paddies in the eastern lowland to rolling hills and the beginning of the limestone karst formations in the west and north. This transitional geography creates agricultural variety – rice in the flat areas, dryland crops and tree gardens on the slopes, and the karst terrain providing a distinctive geological backdrop. The proximity to Gombong's military base, commercial facilities and tourism attractions adds an economic connectivity dimension.

    Tourism and attractions

    The transitional karst landscape provides Sruweng's visual interest – limestone outcrops and hills beginning to appear among the rice paddies create increasingly dramatic scenery as you move westward. The proximity to Gombong's Jatijajar Cave and military heritage makes Sruweng a convenient waypoint for travellers exploring the wider area. The market town has authentic Javanese commercial character, with periodic markets and roadside warung that follow the everyday rhythms of the local economy. The agricultural landscape combining rice paddies with karst hills provides varied photographic opportunities. Local cuisine is encountered most authentically at warung-style eateries and household kitchens, where dishes follow the wider Kebumen cooking tradition rather than menus designed for outsiders. Cultural and religious life follows the local Muslim calendar, with mosque observances structuring much of the public schedule throughout the year, and photography during religious observances or in private homes is best done with explicit permission, in line with general expectations across rural Indonesia.

    Property market

    Property in Sruweng benefits from Gombong proximity and from the transitional terrain. The market town has established commercial properties that generate steady trading income, and lowland rice paddies are productive and stably valued. Karst-edge land is more affordable but scenically distinctive, with some emerging interest from buyers attracted by the unusual landscape. The Gombong proximity provides value support above purely remote western districts, and residential properties serve the combined Gombong-Sruweng urban area's workforce. As across most of rural Indonesia, land here is bought and sold primarily within local networks, with prices set by community knowledge of soil quality, road access and proximity to village centres rather than by any formal listing market. Surveyed boundaries, irrigation rights and access easements should be checked carefully on any prospective parcel, since informal arrangements that have worked for generations are not always reflected in the formal cadastre. Foreign participation in property here operates under the same Indonesian legal framework that applies elsewhere in the country, restricting direct foreign ownership of agricultural and freehold residential land.

    Rental and investment outlook

    The Gombong adjacency provides Sruweng's strongest investment angle – overflow demand from the military town and the tourism traffic around the cave attractions support commercial property and small-scale rental stock. Agricultural land provides standard farming returns drawn primarily from rice with smaller contributions from vegetables and household livestock, and the transitional terrain creates diverse property options. Returns are moderate and enhanced by the connectivity to Gombong's economy. Diversifying any investment across a mix of productive land, residential rental stock and small commercial space tends to fit the structure of these markets better than a single concentrated bet. Smallholder agricultural finance and microbusiness lending are increasingly available through local banks and cooperatives, which can support both farm operations and modest commercial ventures aimed at the local economy. Investors evaluating districts of this character should weigh moderate cash returns against the strategic value of a long hold near an established secondary urban centre.

    Practical tips

    Sruweng is approximately 18 km west of Kebumen town and adjacent to Gombong. Roads on the main routes are adequate for ordinary cars and motorbikes. The transitional terrain provides varied scenery, and the karst landscape is most dramatic where limestone outcrops emerge from rice fields. Gombong's services are easily accessible for shopping, banking and routine healthcare, while Kebumen town provides the broader range of specialist services. The market town has basic infrastructure – electricity, mobile coverage and a puskesmas – sufficient for daily needs. Mobile data coverage is typically reliable along the principal roads but can drop in interior villages and around the karst hills. Healthcare beyond the puskesmas level usually means travel into Gombong or Kebumen town, and any extended stay should account for this in routine planning.

    More about Kebumen

    Kebumen – Cliff Beaches and Karst Caves on Central Java's Southern CoastKebumen Regency lies in the southern part of Central Java province, on the Indian Ocean coast. The regional…

    Kebumen – Cliff Beaches and Karst Caves on Central Java's Southern Coast

    Kebumen Regency lies in the southern part of Central Java province, on the Indian Ocean coast. The regional capital is Kebumen town. Kebumen has become an emerging Javanese beach-culture destination in recent years: hidden coves on the rocky coastline and the karst area's caves make it attractive.

    Attractions and Activities

    Pantai Menganti is one of Central Java's most beautiful beaches: white sand between steep green cliffs. Karangbolong Beach is known for its rock arches and swiftlet-nest-collecting caves. Gombong karst caves (Goa Jatijajar, Goa Petruk) have stalactites and underground rivers – one of Java's most impressive cave systems. Sempor Reservoir (Waduk Sempor) is suitable for boating and relaxation.

    Culture and Cuisine

    Kebumen is a traditional Central Javanese rural region: gamelan, wayang kulit and Javanese court tradition are part of cultural life. Lanting (cassava chips) is Kebumen's most famous product, sought across Java. Cuisine is Central Javanese: soto Kebumen (chicken soup), nasi megono, and sroto (local spiced broth) are local favourites.

    Public Safety

    Kebumen is a safe region. Indian Ocean currents on southern beaches are extremely strong – do not swim deep. A local guide is recommended in caves. Medical care: basic hospital in Kebumen town; Purwokerto (approx. 1.5 hours) has the nearest more advanced hospital.

    Practical Information

    From Yogyakarta YIA Airport, approximately 2 hours west by car. From Semarang, approximately 3 hours. The best time to visit is April to October. Accommodation: simple hotels in Kebumen town; guesthouses near the beaches.

    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 Karanggedang?

    Be the first to list your property in Karanggedang

    List Your Property — It's Free