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/Highland Papua/Yahukimo/Korupun/Dagi

    Properties in Dagi

    Korupun, Yahukimo, Highland Papua

    0 properties available

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

    Own a property in Dagi? List it for free →

    Browse Yahukimo →

    About Dagi

    Dagi – a small highland settlement in Yahukimo Regency, Highland Papua province

    Dagi is a small settlement belonging to Korupun district (kecamatan) within Yahukimo Regency (Kabupaten Yahukimo) in Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) province, in the eastern, Papuan macroregion of Indonesia. Based on its coordinates (-4.4834213, 139.6426587), the area is located in the interior, mountainous part of Papua. The official seat of Kabupaten Yahukimo is Sumohai district; however, due to limited infrastructural capacity, the temporary administrative and governmental center is currently located in Dekai district. Regarding Dagi and its broader region, only regency-level sources are available, so the following description is primarily based on the generally known characteristics of the kabupaten and the region.

    General overview

    As part of Korupun district, Dagi is situated in an area that belongs to one of Indonesia's least explored and least populated regencies, Kabupaten Yahukimo. The kabupaten had a recorded population of 355,612 people as of mid-2024, with an average population density of merely 21 people/km², which in itself indicates that the area is extremely sparsely populated and has largely retained its natural state. Settlements in the kabupaten typically consist of small, isolated highland villages, most of which are accessible only by air, since the network of roads crossing the terrain is very limited or does not exist at all. In the case of Dagi, there is no data indicating that it is accessible by road; the scarcity of transportation infrastructure in the region represents a challenge characteristic of Yahukimo Regency as a whole. Local communities traditionally live from agriculture, gathering, and small-scale farming, and culturally are connected to the heritage of the indigenous peoples of the Papuan highlands.

    Real estate and investment

    No concrete real estate market data is available for Dagi and Korupun district. In the broader context of Kabupaten Yahukimo, it can be stated that the kabupaten as a whole is characterized by an extremely limited formalized real estate market: due to the high degree of isolation, lack of infrastructure, and sparse public services, the area does not attract significant commercial real estate investment. In Indonesia generally, foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over real estate; for them, primarily long-term lease rights (Hak Sewa) or usage rights (Hak Pakai) are available, the details of which are governed by Indonesian land law (Undang-Undang Pokok Agraria) and its amendments. Across Highland Papua province, the underdevelopment of the real estate market, unclear land registry conditions, and the institution of communal (adat) land ownership present serious obstacles to any form of formal investment. Before conducting real estate transactions in such areas, thorough investigation of the local legal and administrative context is essential.

    Safety and security

    No concrete public safety statistics or official data are available for Dagi settlement. Generally speaking, Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) province and within it Kabupaten Yahukimo region is considered a territory subject to heightened attention by Indonesian authorities and international organizations. In Papuan highland regions, inter-tribal conflicts occasionally occur, and the security situation in certain areas can be variable. For foreign travelers, both the Indonesian government and the foreign affairs services of several countries recommend increased caution for staying in the region. Detailed and current information can be obtained through each country's official travel advisory portals and from Indonesian authorities, as the situation may vary spatially and temporally. The high degree of isolation and lack of infrastructure are themselves risk factors for movement within the region.

    Tourist attractions

    No concrete, source-identified tourist attractions are known at the Dagi settlement level. The broader region of Korupun district and Kabupaten Yahukimo, however, is noteworthy for its natural endowments: the Papuan highlands possess vast, largely untouched rainforests, unique flora and fauna, and extensions of the Jayawijaya mountain range system, which belong among the geomorphological characteristics of the region. The kabupaten and the highland Papuan region in general are also a rich area in terms of indigenous cultural heritage, where the traditional ways of life, ceremonies, and craftsmanship of local communities may represent cultural interest. However, all of this can only be mentioned in the general, publicly known context of Yahukimo Regency; in the case of Dagi, no specific attractions can be specified due to the absence of named, concrete sources. For those interested in highland nature trekking and ecotourism, the region could potentially offer opportunities in principle, but due to infrastructural and logistical constraints, this potential remains severely limited.

    Summary

    Dagi is a small, difficult-to-access highland settlement in Indonesia's Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) province, belonging to Korupun district and Kabupaten Yahukimo. The kabupaten's extremely low population density, underdeveloped infrastructure, and high degree of isolation characterize the area's features from every perspective—whether concerning the real estate market, tourism potential, or public security situation. Currently, no publicly available data specific to Dagi exists; available knowledge can be drawn from regency and provincial-level background. For anyone considering decisions affecting the region, consultation with current, on-site, and authority-sourced information is recommended.


    More about Korupun

    Korupun – Highland district in Yahukimo Regency in the central highlands of Highland PapuaKorupun is a district in Yahukimo Regency, in the rugged central highlands of Highland…

    Korupun – Highland district in Yahukimo Regency in the central highlands of Highland Papua

    Korupun is a district in Yahukimo Regency, in the rugged central highlands of Highland Papua Province (Papua Pegunungan). The regency was created from the eastern part of the former Jayawijaya Regency and covers a vast and very mountainous interior. It sits at approximately -4.4934°, 139.6563°, in country shaped by the geographic and economic character of the wider Yahukimo area. Detailed published material specific to Korupun itself is limited; the description that follows leans on verifiable Yahukimo and Highland Papua context, clearly framed as such.

    Tourism and attractions

    Korupun itself is not promoted as a stand-alone tourism destination, and there is no widely published list of named attractions inside the kecamatan beyond the local mosques, markets and village squares that anchor everyday life. Yahukimo Regency, of which Korupun is part, offers the broader cultural and natural context that visitors to the area encounter. Papua and West Papua are characterised by very large geographic distances, limited road networks in much of the interior and a heavy reliance on air and sea transport. In Highland Papua, traditional cuisine, weekly market days and religious festivals organised around the dominant local communities give the regency its visible cultural rhythm, and visitors based in Korupun can usually reach the regency capital and its main public spaces without difficulty.

    Property market

    The property market in Korupun reflects its position in Yahukimo Regency rather than any independent developer cycle of its own. There is effectively no broad formal property market in most of this part of Papua in the way the term is used in urban Indonesia. Housing is overwhelmingly traditional and owner-occupied on customary land, with formal sertifikat hak milik titles concentrated near the few administrative buildings and town centres. Land tenure is dominated by adat Papuan arrangements, and transactions require the consent of clan or village leaders before any documentation through the regency land office. Branded housing estates inside Korupun are limited or absent, and most transactions are conducted directly between local owners with the involvement of a notary in the regency capital.

    Rental and investment outlook

    Formal rental supply in a kecamatan of this profile is limited and centred on occasional informal accommodation for visiting government officials, teachers, health workers and the small number of researchers and contractors who pass through. Investment interest is typically best framed as part of the wider regency or province economy rather than as a residential-yield play. Speculative interest from outside the regency in a district of Korupun's profile is limited, and the most realistic investment cases are anchored in the local economy and in the slow build-out of regency-level infrastructure. Foreign investors are bound by Indonesian land-ownership rules for non-citizens and typically participate via PT PMA structures or long-term leases, with engagement with the regency land office and a reputable local notary.

    Practical tips

    Korupun is reached from the Yahukimo regency capital by the regency road network, and from the wider Highland Papua provincial road and air system via the relevant provincial capital. The climate is humid tropical year round with no pronounced dry season in most of Papua, with rainfall heavily influenced by elevation and exposure. Indonesian and Papuan Malay are the working languages, with a number of local Papuan languages still spoken inside villages. Basic services such as puskesmas primary healthcare clinics, primary and secondary schools, mosques or churches and small daily markets are available inside Korupun or in the nearest neighbouring desa, while larger hospitals, modern retail and government offices are concentrated in the regency capital and the provincial centre.

    More about Yahukimo

    Yahukimo – Papua's High Valleys and Tribal Heartland Yahukimo is one of the most remote regencies in Indonesia, covering the rugged Jayawijaya mountain range and the upper Star…

    Yahukimo – Papua's High Valleys and Tribal Heartland

    Yahukimo is one of the most remote regencies in Indonesia, covering the rugged Jayawijaya mountain range and the upper Star Mountain foothills in Highland Papua province. The district capital, Dekai, is accessible almost exclusively by small aircraft from Wamena or Jayapura; sealed road connections are negligible, and the terrain of steep ridges, fast rivers, and dense rainforest makes overland travel arduous even in the dry season. Home to the Yali, Hubula (Dani), and Korowai peoples, the regency spans extraordinary cultural and ecological diversity across an area larger than many provinces.

    What to See and Do

    Yahukimo's draws are ethnographic and natural rather than touristic in the conventional sense. Mission airstrips at Anggruk, Sela, Ninia, and Suru-Suru in the upper Yalimo valleys serve as the only lifelines for remote communities. Traditional Yali and Hubula honai (round thatched roundhouses) and koteka culture remain visible in daily life. The southern lowlands of Yahukimo are home to the Korowai, one of the few peoples whose traditional longhouses are built in the canopy of large trees. Highland trekking along ancient trade paths connects villages between the Baliem Valley and the Yahukimo interior.

    Local Cuisine

    Bakar batu — the stone-cooking ceremony in which heated river rocks are placed in a pit layered with pork, sweet potato, leafy greens, and banana leaves — is the most important communal feast across the Papuan highlands, held at weddings, funerals, and inter-clan gatherings. Hipere (sweet potato, in dozens of local varieties) is the daily staple of highland communities. In the lowland Korowai areas, sago is processed from wild palms and forms the dietary base alongside river fish and forest game.

    Real Estate Market

    There is virtually no formal rental market in Yahukimo. A handful of mission guesthouses, NGO staff housing compounds, and government-issue quarters in Dekai are the only accommodation options for outsiders. Visitors — typically researchers, missionaries, aid workers, and adventure travellers — arrange stays directly with mission organisations or local church networks well in advance of arrival. Yahukimo is not a tourist-rental destination in any conventional sense; it is a destination for those with a serious interest in ethnography, highland ecology, or rugged exploration.

    More about Highland Papua

    Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) is the province of the Baliem Valley and Papuan highland cultures. Wamena is the capital and trekking hub; Dani and Lani villages, the traditional…

    Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) is the province of the Baliem Valley and Papuan highland cultures. Wamena is the capital and trekking hub; Dani and Lani villages, the traditional "smoke women" custom, and mountain scenery offer a unique experience. The province was created in 2022 when Papua was split.

    Where is Highland Papua?

    The province is located in the central highlands of Papua. Wamena is reachable by air from Jayapura (and sometimes Bali). The Baliem Valley is the heart of the province; villages are reached by trekking or local transport. Roads and flights are weather-dependent.

    What to See?

    1. Baliem Valley – Dani and Lani Villages

    The Baliem Valley is home to the Dani and Lani people. Traditional round houses, sweet potato gardens, and local markets (e.g. Jiwika) offer an authentic insight. Valley treks can last 1–5 days.

    2. Wamena – Gateway to the Highlands

    Wamena is the center of the Baliem Valley, with markets, accommodation, and trek organizers. The city is the starting point for Dani culture. The airport and local infrastructure serve tourism.

    3. "Smoke Women" and Traditional Customs

    In Dani communities the traditional "smoke women" custom (women who stay in huts and are exposed to smoke) can still be observed in some villages. Local guidance and respect are important.

    4. Mountain Treks and Viewpoints

    The mountains and gorges around the Baliem Valley offer trekking routes. The Wamena–Kurima–Wamena loop and other routes allow 2–4 day treks. The landscape is stunning.

    5. Baliem Festival

    The annual Baliem Festival (around August) attracts visitors with tribal games, dances, and (simulated) traditional warfare. Check the exact date in advance.

    When to Visit?

    May–October is the drier period; flights are more reliable and treks more comfortable. The August Baliem Festival is popular. In the rainy season flights often delay or cancel.

    How Long to Stay?

    4–6 days recommended:

    • 1 day: Wamena, markets, surroundings
    • 2–3 days: Baliem Valley trek, Dani villages
    • 1 day: other villages or rest

    Renting or Investing in Highland Papua?

    If you're considering renting or investing in property in Highland Papua, 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

    Official Resources

    For further information about Highland Papua, these official sources may be helpful:

    • Indonesia Travel – official tourism portal
    • Highland Papua 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

    Highland Papua is the region of the Baliem Valley and Dani/Lani culture. Wamena and valley treks provide an unforgettable, authentic experience.

    Own a property in Dagi?

    Be the first to list your property in Dagi

    List Your Property — It's Free