Ngilngof – a small settlement in the Kei Islands region, Maluku Tenggara Regency
Ngilngof is a small settlement belonging to Maluku Tenggara Regency in Maluku Province (Provinsi Maluku), with administrative jurisdiction in Kecamatan Manyeuw district. The regency capital is Langgur village (Desa Langgur), which is located in Kei Kecil district. According to its coordinates (−5.657° S, 132.654° E), the settlement is situated in the Kei Islands region, in the easternmost part of Indonesia, within the Moluccas macroregion. Maluku Tenggara Regency was established in 1952, and in the decades that followed, parts of its territory were organized into separate administrative units, resulting in the creation of Kabupaten Kepulauan Aru and Kota Tual.
General overview
Ngilngof is one of the villages in Kecamatan Manyeuw district, which, as part of Maluku Tenggara Regency, is integrated into the administrative system of Maluku Province. The regency, as well as the broader Kei Islands region, is characterized by small-population, scattered coastal and island-adjacent communities whose livelihoods have traditionally been tied to fishing and small-scale commerce. The settlement itself is relatively little known in wider tourism and investment literature, which can be explained in part by limitations in connectivity and in part by the area's peripheral geographic location. Langgur, the center of Maluku Tenggara Regency, is the primary venue for administrative and commercial affairs in the region. It is important to emphasize that specific, source-based demographic or infrastructural data relating to Ngilngof is not present in available sources, and therefore the above characterization reflects the regency-level context.
Real estate and investment
No specific, verifiable real estate market data for Ngilngof is available in accessible sources. The broader real estate market of Maluku Tenggara Regency generally exhibits characteristics typical of eastern Indonesian regions: infrastructure development lags behind more developed, western areas; land prices and rental rates are typically lower; and market liquidity is limited. Indonesian law establishes a legal framework in which foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over real estate; however, certain more restricted property rights—such as Hak Pakai (usage rights) or Hak Sewa (rental rights)—are legally available to them. This general Indonesian land ownership regulation is applicable in Maluku Province as well, and it is advisable to engage legal experts before any specific transaction. The peripheral location and limited infrastructure simultaneously present both risk and potential development opportunities from an investor's perspective; however, these relationships can only be interpreted in regency-level context, not as specific data relating to Ngilngof.
Safety and security
No specific public security statistics or incidents relating to Ngilngof appear in available sources or broader accessible literature. Maluku Province, apart from the period around the turn of the millennium when religious and ethnic tensions occurred in the province, has generally stabilized over the past two decades. The Kei Islands region, to which Maluku Tenggara Regency belongs, remained outside the scope of earlier conflicts and today is typically home to peaceful rural communities. Regarding daily safety, general Indonesia-level guidelines and information provided by local authorities are the standard references, as field or statistical data specific to the settlement is not available. As in every smaller, peripheral Indonesian community, it is advisable to gather information about local conditions before arrival.
Tourist attractions
Available documentation makes no mention of any named, source-identified tourist attraction specifically relating to Ngilngof. The broader Maluku Tenggara Regency region, the Kei Islands, is generally regarded as one of the Moluccas' naturally rich areas, where the coastal and underwater environment, along with local traditional culture, form the basis of interest. Langgur, the regency capital, and the nearby city of Tual (Kota Tual) are the region's transportation and commercial hubs, from which other parts of the island archipelago are also accessible. However, since no specific, source-substantiated attraction identifiable with Ngilngof can be determined, regency-level information sources and recommendations from local tourism authorities can provide more precise guidance on such matters.
Summary
Ngilngof is a small Indonesian settlement belonging to Kecamatan Manyeuw district of Maluku Tenggara Regency, located in the eastern part of Maluku Province in the Kei Islands region. The regency has undergone multiple administrative reorganizations since its establishment in 1952, with its capital at Langgur. Specific source data relating to demographics, real estate market, public security, or tourism for Ngilngof is not available in accessible documentation, and therefore the above account necessarily relies on broader regency and province-level context. For those seeking more detailed, local-level information, the authorities of Kabupaten Maluku Tenggara and local communities may serve as the primary source for reliable orientation.

