Taliabu Barat Laut – Northwest coastal kecamatan of Pulau Taliabu, North Maluku
Taliabu Barat Laut is a kecamatan on the northwestern side of Taliabu Island in Pulau Taliabu Regency, North Maluku province. According to the Indonesian Wikipedia entry, the district covers about 186.05 square kilometres and recorded 5,538 inhabitants in 2025 across five desa (Beringin Jaya, Kasango, Nggele, Onemay and Salati), giving a density of around 30 people per square kilometre. It is bounded by the kecamatan of Lede to the north, Taliabu Utara to the east, Taliabu Barat to the south and the Banggai Strait to the west, separating Taliabu from the Banggai islands of Central Sulawesi. Indonesian regulations on land ownership apply to foreign investors, and the broader Maluku regional context shapes climate, infrastructure and connectivity.
Tourism and attractions
Taliabu Barat Laut itself is not packaged as a tourist destination, and named ticketed attractions inside the kecamatan are limited; the visual interest lies in the coastal landscape facing the Banggai Strait. The wider Pulau Taliabu Regency is centred on Taliabu Island, west of Mangoli, with a coastline of beaches, mangroves and reef habitats typical of the Sula-Taliabu archipelago. Wikipedia notes that the population of the kecamatan is overwhelmingly Muslim (about 97 percent), with small Protestant and Catholic minorities reflected in the six mosques, two mushola, one Protestant church and one Catholic church recorded in the kecamatan. The kecamatan's contribution to the regency tourism economy lies in this contextual support role rather than in stand-alone destinations.
Property market
Detailed property-market data for Taliabu Barat Laut are not published in widely accessible sources, which is consistent with the low population density and small-island character of the kecamatan. Housing is overwhelmingly single-storey landed houses on family plots, with traditional coastal construction in fishing desa and small clusters of shophouses near jetties. Across Pulau Taliabu Regency, of which Taliabu Barat Laut is part, fishing, copra and smallholder plantations set the underlying value of land. Land tenure mixes formal BPN certification in built-up centres with older family, clan and adat-based tenure on the outlying coast. Verification of title status, road access and zoning history is important before any acquisition, given the mix of formal and customary tenure typical of Indonesian rural and peri-urban markets.
Rental and investment outlook
Formal rental supply in Taliabu Barat Laut is modest and largely informal. Demand is driven mainly by civil servants, teachers, healthcare staff and small traders serving the five desa, with very little tourism-related rental. Investors should treat the area as a long-horizon fisheries and small-trade location and pay attention to inter-island transport reliability and exposure to Indonesia's eastern weather patterns. Indonesian regulations restrict freehold land title (Hak Milik) to Indonesian citizens, and foreign investors typically work through long-leasehold (Hak Pakai or Hak Sewa) and corporate (PT PMA / Hak Guna Bangunan) structures with proper notarial documentation.
Practical tips
Access to Taliabu Barat Laut is by sea, with regional connections via Sanana in Kepulauan Sula, the Banggai islands of Central Sulawesi and onward sea and air links to Ternate and Ambon. Basic services such as the kecamatan puskesmas, primary schools, mosques, churches and small markets are organised at desa level, while larger hospitals and the regency administration sit on the regency's main island. The climate is tropical with a wet and dry season typical of Maluku, and travellers should plan road journeys around the wet-season pattern. Modest courtesy in dress at religious sites and the use of basic Indonesian phrases ease daily interactions.

