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    Home/Indonesia/Lampung/Tanggamus/Pematang Sawa/Tirom

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    Pematang Sawa, Tanggamus, Lampung

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    About Tirom

    Tirom – a rural settlement of Lampung in Pematang Sawa District

    Tirom is an Indonesian settlement located in Pematang Sawa District, Tanggamus Regency, situated in the southern part of Lampung Province on the island of Sumatra. The settlement represents one of Lampung's rural, community-oriented residential areas, with its geographic position at coordinates -5.7600539 latitude and 104.6238048 longitude. Tirom's environment and development opportunities are determined by the broader structure and infrastructure of Tanggamus Regency, whose administrative center is located in Kota Agung District.

    General overview

    Tirom is a small Indonesian settlement belonging to Pematang Sawa District within Tanggamus Regency. It can be regarded as a typical example of rural areas in Lampung, where community life and agricultural or social economy play significant roles. The administrative organization of Tanggamus Regency was established on March 21, 1997, based on Law No. 2 of 1997, which was subsequently developed by the Indonesian government. The total area of the regency is 4,654.98 square kilometers, and as of mid-2024, its population was 638,652 inhabitants, representing a population density of approximately 225 persons per square kilometer.

    Pematang Sawa District, to which Tirom belongs, functions as part of Lampung Province's infrastructure. The settlement's environment is characterized by the three-tiered administrative organization typical of rural Indonesia: village (pekon or desa), district (kecamatan), and regency (kabupaten) levels. Similar to other communities in Tanggamus, Tirom exhibits characteristics typical of rural Indonesian development and spatial organization. The regency seat, Kota Agung, is located in Kota Agung Timur District, which is situated in the Kampung Baru village.

    To understand the settlement's location, it is important to note that the island of Sumatra belongs to Indonesia's resource-rich but infrastructurally developing regions. Lampung, as the country's southern Sumatran region, has undergone slow but steady development over recent decades. Regarding Tanggamus Regency, detailed settlement-level information about Tirom is not readily available, but the broader regency context suggests a rural, community-oriented area where life still follows traditional community and economic patterns.

    Real estate and investment

    Tirom's real estate market, within the general context of rural settlements in Tanggamus Regency, represents an arena in rural Indonesian development. Within the rural areas of Tanggamus Regency, the real estate market is generally less developed and dynamic than in urban centers, but costs remain fundamentally lower. In rural Lampung regions, real estate investments and land-based investments typically connect with agriculture and resource-oriented economies.

    Due to the lack of settlement-level data, real estate market opportunities can only be discussed based on broader regional dynamics. Tanggamus Regency, with its population of 638,652, is a medium-sized regency unit where real estate market activity is continuous, though in rural areas development is guided more by local community needs and traditional economic patterns rather than by speculative or international investment interests. Tirom, as a rural village, likely operates in a similar manner.

    Indonesia's current land and real estate regulations permit limited property ownership by foreigners. According to Indonesian law, foreign individuals cannot own land, though long-term usufruct rights are possible for periods of 30 or 80 years. This generally applies to rural Indonesian settlements as well. Real estate development projects and investments are thus typically limited to local or Indonesian investors and Indonesian enterprises. Rural Lampung, including the Tirom area, is generally not a focus of international real estate development, and thus remains oriented toward local economic dynamics and Indonesian investors.

    Safety and security

    Detailed source data regarding Tirom's public safety as a specific settlement-level issue are not readily available. At the broader Tanggamus Regency level, however, Lampung and rural Sumatra generally rank among relatively stable regions regarding public safety when compared with urban centers and their concentrated problem areas. In rural Indonesian settlements, the frequency of crime per capita is generally lower, though rural communities face their own security and law enforcement challenges.

    In Sumatra's regions, including Lampung and Tanggamus, recent years have witnessed gradual improvements in infrastructure and public safety institutions. In rural villages like Tirom, law and order maintenance typically relies on local community institutions and police cooperation. The Indonesian National Police (Polri) is organized at the national level and operates with presence in rural regions as well. In the case of Tanggamus Regency with its population of 638,652, the administrative and security infrastructure indicates medium-level organization that ensures public order in rural settlements, though service accessibility may vary depending on location.

    Tourist attractions

    No specific tourist-related attractions or notable sites regarding Tirom settlement itself are available in verifiable published sources. Given the settlement's rural and community-oriented character, it likely does not function as a developed tourism destination with established infrastructure. However, regarding Tanggamus Regency and the broader Lampung region, mention may be made of wider tourism and natural resources.

    Lampung Province, though less known as a tourism destination than neighboring Sumatran regions, possesses certain natural and cultural points of interest. Indonesian rural settlements like Tirom typically operate within the circuits of traditional community life, agricultural economy, and local culture rather than within international tourism orientation. The rural character of Tanggamus Regency suggests that for travelers, tourism is not the primary economic activity; instead, agriculture, forestry, and social economy dominate. Kota Agung center, as the regency seat, is likely the most institutionalized point of administrative and commercial operations, but remains limited in terms of tourism infrastructure development.

    The natural and anthropological interests for travelers in the vicinity of Tirom or its immediate region may stem from Sumatran ecosystem characteristics, vegetation, and cultural features. Rural Lampung offers opportunities for experiencing authentic Sumatran settings and communities, though development remains constrained by infrastructural limitations.

    Summary

    Tirom is a rural Indonesian settlement in Pematang Sawa District of Tanggamus Regency in Lampung Province, serving as a typical example of Sumatran rural communities. Based on available information, concrete settlement-level data regarding tourism, real estate markets, or security are limited; however, the broader regency and provincial context indicates a medium-level developed, rural-character Indonesian administrative unit. As part of rural development in Indonesia, Tirom characteristically operates within agricultural and community economies, local administration, and Indonesia's multicultural matrix. For international investors and travelers, the settlement remains less well-known, though it may be considered an authentic representative of rural Indonesian life.


    More about Pematang Sawa

    Pematang Sawa – Kecamatan in Tanggamus Regency, LampungPematang Sawa is a kecamatan in Tanggamus Regency, in the Indonesian province of Lampung, in the Sumatra region. It sits at…

    Pematang Sawa – Kecamatan in Tanggamus Regency, Lampung

    Pematang Sawa is a kecamatan in Tanggamus Regency, in the Indonesian province of Lampung, in the Sumatra region. It sits at approximately -5.6960 degrees latitude and 104.6165 degrees longitude. In wider geographic context, Lampung is the southernmost province of Sumatra, separated from Java by the Sunda Strait and gateway to the island via the Bakauheni ferry port. District-level information in widely accessible English sources is limited, so the rest of this guide draws on verified regency- and province-level context, clearly framed as such.

    Tourism and attractions

    Pematang Sawa is not packaged as a stand-alone leisure destination, and named ticketed attractions specific to the kecamatan are not extensively documented in widely accessible sources. Its setting in Tanggamus Regency places it within reach of the natural and cultural landmarks for which the wider regency and province are better known. Tanggamus Regency, of which Pematang Sawa is part, sits within Lampung. For broader visitor context, the province is known for Way Kambas National Park and its Sumatran elephants and rhinos, the Krakatau volcano islands, surf beaches on the western Pesisir Barat coast and the Saibatin and Pepadun Lampung cultural traditions.

    Property market

    Detailed property-market data specific to Pematang Sawa are not published in widely accessible sources, which is consistent with the rural and small-population character typical of many kecamatan in Tanggamus Regency. Housing is dominated by single-storey landed houses and simple shophouses built on family-owned land, with no record of branded housing estates or apartment projects within the kecamatan itself. Land transactions across the regency mix formal BPN certification in established desa centres with traditional or customary tenure on agricultural land, so verification of title status and consultation with village leadership is essential before any acquisition. At the regency and provincial level, Lampung's economy combines smallholder coffee, pepper, rubber and palm oil cultivation with shipping and logistics around Bandar Lampung and Bakauheni; most investment-grade product is concentrated in the regency capital rather than in outlying kecamatan such as Pematang Sawa.

    Rental and investment outlook

    Formal rental supply in Pematang Sawa is modest and largely informal, dominated by civil servants, teachers and small-scale traders posted into the kecamatan rather than by tourism, so demand follows the rhythm of public-sector and project employment in Tanggamus Regency rather than visitor flows. For investors, the wider economic backdrop is that Lampung's economy combines smallholder coffee, pepper, rubber and palm oil cultivation with shipping and logistics around Bandar Lampung and Bakauheni, which sets the realistic ceiling on rental yields and capital growth in Pematang Sawa; any acquisition here is more honestly framed as a long-horizon land or smallholder-property bet on the wider Tanggamus corridor than as an income-yielding rental project comparable to metropolitan Java or Bali.

    Practical tips

    Pematang Sawa is reached primarily by road from the regency capital of Tanggamus and the wider Lampung road network. Basic services such as puskesmas primary healthcare clinics, primary and secondary schools and small markets and warungs are organised at desa or kelurahan and kecamatan level, while larger hospitals, banks and notaries are concentrated in the regency seat. In terms of climate, the climate is tropical with a wet season from October to April and is cooler in the western highlands, so visitors and residents should plan around seasonal rainfall. Foreign investors should note that Indonesian regulations restrict freehold land title (Hak Milik) to Indonesian citizens; foreigners typically operate via long leases or use-rights titles such as Hak Pakai, and customary or adat land arrangements remain important in many parts of Sumatra.

    More about Tanggamus

    Tanggamus – Coffee Plantations and Kiluan Bay DolphinsTanggamus Regency lies in the western part of Lampung province, at the southern tip of Sumatra. Its capital is Kota Agung. The…

    Tanggamus – Coffee Plantations and Kiluan Bay Dolphins

    Tanggamus Regency lies in the western part of Lampung province, at the southern tip of Sumatra. Its capital is Kota Agung. The region is one of Lampung’s most natural areas: coffee plantations around Tanggamus volcano and the wild dolphins of Kiluan Bay attract visitors.

    Attractions and Activities

    Kiluan Bay with dolphin watching (wild bottlenose dolphins). Tanggamus volcano area with coffee plantations and waterfalls. Quiet beaches of Semaka Bay. Visiting local pepper plantations.

    Culture and Cuisine

    Lampung culture is defining. Cuisine: seruit (grilled fish with sambal), gulai taboh, robusta coffee, and local pepper.

    Public Safety

    Tanggamus is safe. Medical care: hospital in Kota Agung. Bandar Lampung (approx. 2 hours) more advanced.

    Practical Information

    From Bandar Lampung Radin Inten Airport, approximately 2 hours. Accommodation: simple guesthouses, homestay in Kiluan.

    More about Lampung

    Lampung is the southernmost province of Sumatra, where elephants, dolphins, volcanoes, and surfing together create the region's appeal. The province is easily accessible from Java…

    Lampung is the southernmost province of Sumatra, where elephants, dolphins, volcanoes, and surfing together create the region's appeal. The province is easily accessible from Java by ferry and is an increasingly popular nature destination.

    Where is Lampung?

    Lampung is located at the southern tip of Sumatra, facing Java across the Sunda Strait. Bandar Lampung is the capital, accessible by air and ferry.

    What to See?

    1. Way Kambas National Park – Elephants and Rhinos

    One of Indonesia's most important wildlife reserves, home to Sumatran elephants, rhinos, and tigers. At the elephant conservation center, you can get up close with these magnificent animals.

    2. Kiluan Bay – Wild Dolphins

    Kiluan Bay is famous for wild dolphins that swim near the shore at dawn. The boat trip and dolphin watching is one of the most memorable Lampung experiences.

    3. Krakatau (Anak Krakatau)

    The successor of the legendary Krakatau volcano, Anak Krakatau is accessible by boat from Lampung. The volcanic island and surrounding waters are a spectacular sight.

    4. Tanjung Setia – Surf Paradise

    One of Sumatra's best surf spots with consistent waves and few tourists. The local surf community is friendly and helpful.

    5. Coffee Plantations

    Lampung is one of Indonesia's largest robusta coffee-producing regions. Visiting coffee plantations makes for an interesting side program.

    When to Visit?

    May–October is the dry season. The best surfing period is June–September. Dolphins can be observed year-round.

    How Long to Stay?

    3–5 days:

    • 1 day: Way Kambas elephant park
    • 1 day: Kiluan Bay and dolphins
    • 1 day: Krakatau excursion
    • 1–2 days: Tanjung Setia surfing

    Renting or Investing in Lampung?

    If you're considering renting or investing in property in Lampung, 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 Lampung, these official sources may be helpful:

    • Indonesia Travel – official tourism portal
    • Lampung 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

    Lampung is a paradise for nature-loving travelers. Elephant encounters, dolphins, volcano, and surfing together make it one of Sumatra's most versatile provinces.

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