Deli Muda Hilir – a village in North Sumatra's Serdang Bedagai regency
Deli Muda Hilir is a small settlement in Indonesia's North Sumatra (Sumatera Utara) province, one of the villages belonging to the Perbaungan district (Kecamatan Perbaungan). Administratively, it falls under the Serdang Bedagai regency (Kabupaten Serdang Bedagai), whose administrative center is the city of Sei Rampah. Based on the settlement's coordinates (3.567° N, 98.958° E), it lies in the interior, lowland zone of Sumatra's eastern coastline. Its direct, settlement-level description does not appear in publicly available sources, so the following presentation of broader regency and provincial contexts will help place the village.
General overview
Deli Muda Hilir is little known to the broader public, and its name does not appear independently in available sources. The Perbaungan kecamatan, to which the village belongs, is one administrative unit of Serdang Bedagai regency; the regency is divided into a total of seventeen kecamatan and 243 villages. Serdang Bedagai regency lies on the eastern coast of North Sumatra province and covers approximately 1,900 square kilometers. The region faces Malaysia and has roughly 95 kilometers of coastline. The regency also surrounds the independent city of Tebing Tinggi, with the Tebing Tinggi district bordering it on the west and the Tebing Syahbandar district on the east. Villages in this area are characteristically agricultural in nature; on the lowland terrain crisscrossed by rivers, rice and palm oil cultivation have traditionally been important economic activities. The exact population of Deli Muda Hilir cannot be determined from available sources; the regency's total population according to the 2020 census was 657,490 inhabitants, and by mid-2025 the regency's population is estimated at 700,077.
Real estate and investment
No specific, verifiable data is available regarding Deli Muda Hilir's real estate market. Within the broader context of Serdang Bedagai regency, it can be said that agrarian areas on North Sumatra's eastern coast typically offer lower property prices than more industrialized areas farther from the province's capital, Medan. The regency's agricultural assets—primarily palm oil and rubber plantations—may primarily attract investor interest in agricultural land real estate. It is worth considering the general framework of Indonesian property ownership regulations: foreign individuals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over property in Indonesia; they can participate in the real estate market only through limited title forms—for example, long-term lease arrangements (Hak Sewa) or certain special legal forms. On this basis, involvement of local legal and market experts is recommended for investment decisions affecting the village and its immediate surroundings.
Safety and security
Specific, settlement-level data on Deli Muda Hilir's public safety does not appear in available sources. Generally speaking, rural, agriculturally oriented areas of North Sumatra province—including villages in Serdang Bedagai regency—tend to be considered more peaceful than more urbanized and bustling areas of the province; however, this provides no guarantee, and we cannot make crime-statistic-backed claims here. What applies generally to the region is that firsthand experience and local knowledge are essential for understanding everyday safety and local conditions. When planning travel or extended stays, it is advisable to also consider relevant consular information and reliable current sources.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attractions appear for Deli Muda Hilir in available sources. However, Serdang Bedagai regency does possess known natural assets: the roughly 95-kilometer coastline running along the regency's eastern border offers coastal areas in several places in North Sumatra's eastern part. These beaches and coastal zones—which are found along the regency's eastern, coastal districts—are noted locations from the perspective of local tourism. Additionally, the historical heritage of the Serdang Sultanate and Padang Bedagai Sultanate shapes the region's cultural character: the name "Serdang Bedagai" itself derives from these two sultanates. Based on available data, concrete information cannot be derived regarding the distance of Deli Muda Hilir village from these attractions requiring more precise location, but given the regency's administrative size and road network, the coastal zones may be reachable by car within a reasonable timeframe.
Summary
Deli Muda Hilir is a small, poorly documented village in North Sumatra province, part of Kecamatan Perbaungan within the administrative framework of Serdang Bedagai regency. The regency is a coastal, agriculture-oriented area with a population of nearly 700,000 inhabitants, whose historical roots extend back to the Serdang and Padang Bedagai sultanates. Independent, verifiable data on the village is not currently publicly available, so broader regional context provides the foundation for assessing real estate market, public safety, and tourism aspects. Detailed and current local information can be obtained through on-site inquiry and involvement of local experts.

