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

v10.3.6

    Home/Indonesia/East Nusa Tenggara/Alor/Pantar Barat Laut/Kalondama Tengah

    Properties in Kalondama Tengah

    Pantar Barat Laut, Alor, East Nusa Tenggara

    0 properties available

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

    Own a property in Kalondama Tengah? List it for free →

    Browse Alor →

    About Kalondama Tengah

    Kalondama Tengah – settlement in Pantar Barat Laut district, in the island world of Kabupaten Alor

    Kalondama Tengah is a settlement belonging to Pantar Barat Laut (Northwest Pantar) district, located within the administrative territory of Kabupaten Alor, in Nusa Tenggara Timur (East Nusa Tenggara) province, Indonesia. The broader macro-region is the area encompassed by Bali and the Lesser Sunda Islands, whose eastern part is formed by members of the Alor island group. Based on settlement coordinates (-8.4084946, 123.9917222), Kalondama Tengah is localized in the western–northwestern part of Pantar island. Settlement-level statistical sources are currently unavailable; the following description therefore relies on verified data available at Kabupaten Alor level and the broader geographical–administrative context.

    General overview

    Kalondama Tengah is a smaller, lesser-known settlement in Pantar Barat Laut kecamatan, connected to the northwestern part of Pantar island. Kabupaten Alor itself is an island-based administrative unit: the regency's territory spans 2,928.88 km², composed of numerous islands, and was home to 229,730 people by the end of 2024. The regency's seat is Kalabahi, in Teluk Mutiara kecamatan. Alor regency is situated near Indonesian–Pacific trade shipping routes, a factor that has shaped the region's economic and cultural connections for centuries. Pantar island, on which Kalondama Tengah is located, is Alor's second-largest island within the regency; the island is home to various local languages and cultures existing alongside one another. The settlement itself—judging by its name ("tengah" = "middle")—may form the middle part of a larger Kalondama group, but verified sources on this are unavailable. At regency level, infrastructure development is moderate: inter-island transport occurs primarily by sea and air, and the overland road network is limited.

    Real estate and investment

    Separate real estate market data for Kalondama Tengah or Pantar Barat Laut district are unavailable. Regarding the broader economic context of Kabupaten Alor, the regency recorded a 6.9% economic growth rate in 2006 and local revenue of around Rp 13 billion, with per capita income at Rp 1,200,000 in that year. This broader region indicates a relatively low level of economic development compared to the Indonesian average at that time, though conditions may have changed since then with no current data available. Under the general framework of Indonesian land ownership regulations, foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) to real estate in Indonesia; they have access to Hak Pakai (use rights) or long-term lease arrangements, whose legal conditions are uniformly applicable across the entire country. On Pantar island and similarly underdeveloped areas, real estate turnover is minimal, supply is narrow, and values are difficult to compare with better-known Indonesian islands among tourists. From an investment perspective, the regency as a whole occupies a peripheral position, with accessibility and infrastructure constraints keeping development activity low.

    Safety and security

    Verified, settlement-level public safety data are unavailable for Kalondama Tengah or Pantar Barat Laut district. Kabupaten Alor region is generally not counted among areas affected by internal conflicts in Indonesia; Nusa Tenggara Timur province as a whole has been regarded as a relatively stable public safety region over recent decades, although poverty and infrastructure deficiencies may generate certain social tensions. Due to island location and limited transport connections, the accessibility and response capacity of law enforcement agencies in peripheral areas may differ from urban standards. On this basis, no settlement-level specific assertions can be made regarding public safety; travelers should follow general travel advice issued by Indonesian authorities and foreign ministries.

    Tourist attractions

    No verified sources are available for Kalondama Tengah as a standalone tourist destination, and no named local attractions are known from available data. The broader Kabupaten Alor, however, possesses known natural and cultural values characteristic of the regency as a whole: the Alor region is recognized among diving enthusiasts for its rich coral systems, and the diverse traditional cultures of local communities living on various islands—including the bronze drum (moko) cult, which is documented across the entire Alor island group—represent an attraction for interested visitors. Pantar island features volcanic terrain and natural landscapes, but even these are characterized only at regency level in general terms, rather than through specifics tied to Kalondama Tengah. Access typically occurs via Kalabahi, by sea or small aircraft.

    Summary

    Kalondama Tengah is a poorly documented, small-sized settlement on Pantar island, in Pantar Barat Laut district, within Kabupaten Alor territory, Nusa Tenggara Timur province. Verified, settlement-level statistical or tourist sources are unavailable; characterization of the region relies on regency-level data and the broader geographical context of the Lesser Sunda Islands. Kabupaten Alor is a relatively low-density, island-based regency that occupies an economically and infrastructurally peripheral position within Indonesia. On this basis, Kalondama Tengah is not currently recognized as a destination of note from either a tourism or real estate market perspective.


    More about Pantar Barat Laut

    Pantar Barat Laut – The Remote Northwest Tip of Pantar Island Pantar Barat Laut (Northwest Pantar) occupies the remote northwestern extremity of Pantar island, the most distant…

    Pantar Barat Laut – The Remote Northwest Tip of Pantar Island

    Pantar Barat Laut (Northwest Pantar) occupies the remote northwestern extremity of Pantar island, the most distant corner from the regency capital Kalabahi. At this geographic remove – requiring a ferry crossing from Kalabahi to Baranusa and then onward travel by boat or rough track along the western and northwestern coast – the district represents one of the most isolated inhabited areas in all of East Nusa Tenggara. The northwestern tip of Pantar faces the Flores Sea in multiple directions, exposed to the open water between Pantar and the island chains of Flores and Solor to the northwest. The terrain is characteristically volcanic in origin: basaltic rock formations, red laterite soils, dry monsoon forest, and the occasional fertile valley where water availability concentrates agricultural activity. The communities here are small fishing and farming villages whose economic and cultural life is almost entirely self-contained – the combination of distance from Baranusa and the seasonal difficulties of sea travel means these communities have a high degree of practical autonomy. The cultural traditions – language, weaving, moko ceremonies – are maintained in their most unmodified form precisely because the isolation has protected them from the blurring influences that affect more connected communities.

    Tourism & Attractions

    The northwestern tip of Pantar is the definition of off-the-beaten-path Indonesian travel. For those equipped to handle the logistics, the rewards include snorkelling and diving on completely undisturbed Flores Sea coral reefs – no commercial fishing boats, no tourist snorkellers, just intact reef ecosystems in crystalline water. The deep Flores Sea channels between Pantar's northwest tip and the smaller islands in the vicinity are likely to host the full range of pelagic species that make Alor's waters so extraordinary. The cultural encounters available here – visits to traditional villages where outside visitors are genuinely a rarity rather than an occasional presence – offer a depth of authenticity that is difficult to find elsewhere in Indonesia. The landscape, while harsh and dry for much of the year, has a spare beauty: low forest, volcanic rock, coconut palms along the coast, and the open sea horizon in multiple directions.

    Real Estate Market

    There is no property market of any kind in Pantar Barat Laut. This is among the most remote and least commercially developed districts in Alor Regency, and the concept of a real estate market simply does not apply. All land is under customary adat management. Coastal areas are community fishing territory. The volcanic and rocky terrain limits agricultural land quality. There are no commercial structures, no utilities, and no administrative infrastructure for property transactions beyond the basic land administration at the district level in Baranusa. For any outside party, the first step would not be property acquisition but years of community relationship-building before any conversation about land use could even begin in a productive way.

    Rental & Investment Outlook

    Any investment interest in Pantar Barat Laut must be premised on genuine long-term commitment to community partnership and a complete acceptance that commercial returns, if they come at all, are years away. The theoretical opportunity – authentic cultural tourism, undisturbed marine exploration, and a truly remote experience for niche travellers willing to pay for rarity – is real but requires pioneering work at every level. The district currently has no visitor infrastructure of any kind. Building even the most basic eco-lodge here would require solving supply chain, water, power, and community consent challenges simultaneously. This is not for conventional investors; it is for adventurous social enterprises or individuals with deep personal connection to the community and genuine long-term commitment to the area's development.

    Practical Tips

    Reaching Pantar Barat Laut is a serious logistical undertaking: fly or ferry to Kalabahi (main Alor island), take the inter-island ferry to Baranusa (Pantar), then travel onward to the northwest coast by local boat or the rough coastal track. The entire journey from Kupang to the northwestern tip of Pantar can take two to three days in good conditions and much longer when sea conditions or ferry schedules interfere. All supplies for a multi-day stay must be carried from Baranusa or Kalabahi. The northwest coast is completely off-grid – no electricity, no mobile signal, no running water infrastructure. Water from local springs or streams must be treated or boiled. Weather and sea conditions should be the primary planning factor for any movement between Pantar's districts; the Flores Sea can be rough and dangerous, and local boatmen's assessment of conditions must be respected absolutely. This is a destination for experienced, self-sufficient travellers who regard the logistics as part of the adventure rather than an obstacle to it.

    More about Alor

    Alor – Indonesia's Diving ParadiseThe Alor Archipelago sits at the eastern tip of East Nusa Tenggara province and is one of Indonesia's least explored yet most stunning…

    Alor – Indonesia's Diving Paradise

    The Alor Archipelago sits at the eastern tip of East Nusa Tenggara province and is one of Indonesia's least explored yet most stunning destinations. The main island, Alor, boasts volcanic mountains and steep cliff faces.

    Diving and Snorkeling

    Alor's waters are a diver's dream. Strong currents bring nutrient-rich water that sustains extraordinary coral life and marine biodiversity. Manta rays, hammerhead sharks, and colorful soft corals await divers.

    Traditional Culture

    The Alor islands are home to tribes speaking dozens of different languages. Moko (bronze drums) are the islands' unique cultural heritage, still used in ceremonies and as part of bride prices.

    Getting There

    Kalabahi, Alor's capital, is reachable by flight from Kupang (about 1 hour). Ferry services from Timor are also available.

    More about East Nusa Tenggara

    East Nusa Tenggara (Nusa Tenggara Timur) is one of Indonesia's most diverse provinces: the world-famous Komodo Islands dragons, Flores' volcanic lakes, and traditional Flores…

    East Nusa Tenggara (Nusa Tenggara Timur) is one of Indonesia's most diverse provinces: the world-famous Komodo Islands dragons, Flores' volcanic lakes, and traditional Flores culture create a unique combination. Labuan Bajo is the gateway to Komodo National Park, and Flores is home to Kelimutu's colored lakes and rice terraces.

    Where is East Nusa Tenggara?

    The province is located in the eastern Lesser Sunda Islands, with the islands of Timor and Flores. Kupang is the capital, on Timor. Labuan Bajo at the western end of Flores is the departure point for the Komodo Islands, reachable by air from Bali and Jakarta.

    What to See?

    1. Komodo National Park – Komodo Dragons

    Komodo National Park is the only place in the world where the Komodo dragon lives. On Rinca and Komodo islands, tours let you see the dragons up close. The park is also famous for diving and snorkeling – Manta Point and Pink Beach are highlights.

    2. Kelimutu – Colored Volcanic Lakes

    Kelimutu's three crater lakes in central Flores are unique: the lakes' colors change over time (green, blue, black). Sunrise is the most dramatic. Located near Ende.

    3. Labuan Bajo and Surroundings

    Labuan Bajo is the gateway to the Komodo Islands, a lively port town. Padar Island's viewpoint is iconic; Kanawa and Sebayur islands offer crystal-clear waters. Sunset over the islands is unforgettable.

    4. Flores Rice Terraces and Culture

    Inland Flores has rice terraces, traditional villages, and ngada culture. Bajawa and surrounding villages (Bena, Wogo) showcase ancient traditions.

    5. Timor and Kupang

    Kupang is the capital of East Nusa Tenggara, on Timor. Christ King Cathedral and local markets offer insight. The region is less touristy and offers an authentic experience.

    When to Visit?

    April–October is the dry season, ideal for Komodo tours and diving. Komodo dragons can be seen year-round. July–August is peak season.

    How Long to Stay?

    5–8 days recommended:

    • 2–3 days: Komodo NP, Rinca, Padar, snorkeling
    • 2 days: Flores, Kelimutu, Ende
    • 1–2 days: Labuan Bajo and islands

    Renting or Investing in East Nusa Tenggara?

    If you're considering renting or investing in property in East Nusa Tenggara, 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
    • East Flores Guide – local insights and practical tips

    Official Resources

    For further information about East Nusa Tenggara, these official sources may be helpful:

    • Indonesia Travel – official tourism portal
    • East Nusa Tenggara 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

    East Nusa Tenggara is the region of Komodo dragons and Flores' natural wonders. The world-famous park and Kelimutu lakes together provide an unforgettable experience.

    Own a property in Kalondama Tengah?

    Be the first to list your property in Kalondama Tengah

    List Your Property — It's Free