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

v10.4.5

    Home/Indonesia/South Papua/Mappi/Assue/Asaren

    Properties in Asaren

    Assue, Mappi, South Papua

    0 properties available

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

    Own a property in Asaren? List it for free →

    Browse Mappi →

    About Asaren

    Asaren – small Papuan settlement in the swampy lowlands of Assue District

    Asaren is a small settlement in South Papua (Papua Selatan) Province, Indonesia, which administratively belongs to Assue District (kecamatan) within the territory of Kabupaten Mappi. Based on its coordinates (-5.8173876, 139.1019233), it is located in the southern hemisphere within Papua's interior regions, in a vast flat, waterlogged zone between the Arafura Sea and forested highlands. No controlled, specifically targeted database source for this settlement is available; therefore, the following sections present general, known characteristics of the broader province and Kabupaten Mappi, with clear indication that the given information does not necessarily apply directly to Asaren itself.

    General overview

    Asaren itself does not appear in widely available Indonesian or international reference materials, and cannot be counted among the known or tourist-visited settlements of South Papua Province. What characterizes the province as a whole and Kabupaten Mappi within it is that the territory consists predominantly of low-lying, swampy, and forested areas. South Papua Province was established in 2022 through the division of the original Papua Province, based on Law No. 14 of 2022, which President Joko Widodo signed on July 25, 2022. The province consists of four regencies: Kabupaten Merauke, Kabupaten Mappi, Kabupaten Asmat, and Kabupaten Boven Digoel. According to data from late 2025, South Papua Province has a total population of 588,837, making it Indonesia's least populous province. Across this vast territory, people typically live in small riverbank and forest villages, often at great distances from one another across difficult terrain. Assue District, to which Asaren belongs, is likewise a rural area poorly served in terms of infrastructure, spanning waterways and primary forest. Indigenous communities living in the region maintain traditional lifestyles; sago palm and fishing are the main sources of livelihood in the river valleys. In Kabupaten Mappi, communication and cargo transport are conducted predominantly by water routes, using canoes and small boats.

    Real estate and investment

    No direct real estate market data is available for Asaren and Assue District. What characterizes South Papua Province as a whole, and particularly Kabupaten Mappi, is that the real estate market is extremely underdeveloped and opaque: formal purchase transactions are rare, and land use is regulated largely by local customary law and tribal territorial rights. Under generally applicable Indonesian regulation, foreign nationals cannot acquire direct ownership rights (Hak Milik) over property; for them, long-term lease agreements (Hak Sewa) or in certain cases the so-called Hak Pakai title are available. In Papua's provinces, beyond these, separate customary law and administrative regulations specific to indigenous Papuan communities' territories are also in effect according to local sources, which further complicate sale and lease transactions. As a consequence, Kabupaten Mappi and Assue District as a whole attract formal real estate investments only to an extremely limited extent; institutional capital appears in the area primarily in the form of development projects and state infrastructure investments.

    Safety and security

    No reliable, concrete statistics or incident reports on public safety are available for Asaren and Assue District. Regarding the broader region, South Papua Province, it can be said generally that the area is sparsely inhabited, difficult to access, and law enforcement presence necessarily remains limited away from larger cities due to infrastructure constraints. Tension of a primarily political nature between local independence movements and the Indonesian state has been present for decades in Papua's provinces; however, this affects various regions to different degrees, and the rural villages of Kabupaten Mappi are typically not considered affected conflict zones. More precise conclusions regarding public safety in Asaren cannot be drawn from available sources; before any travel, it is advisable to obtain current information from Indonesian authorities and relevant consular advisories.

    Tourist attractions

    No sources naming tourist attractions for Asaren are available. The prominent nature conservation area of the broader South Papua Province is Wasur National Park (Taman Nasional Wasur), located in the eastern part of the province, mainly in Kabupaten Merauke territory, and known for its rich wildlife: it is home to wallabies, musangs, giant ant mounds, and birds of paradise (cendrawasih), among others. This area, however, is at considerable distance from Asaren, located in another part of the province. In Kabupaten Asmat territory, in the neighboring regency, Asmat wood carvings and cultural heritage there are world-renowned; however, this likewise does not fall within the immediate vicinity of Assue District. Kabupaten Mappi and Assue District, by virtue of their high degree of natural intactness and rich water systems, could in principle interest nature hikers and ethnographically-minded visitors; however, organized tourism and tourism infrastructure practically do not exist in the area.

    Summary

    Asaren is a small Papuan settlement located in South Papua Province, in Assue District of Kabupaten Mappi, for which detailed, reliable data is only sparsely available. The broader region is characterized by extremely low population density, swampy and difficult-to-traverse natural environment, strong dependence on water transport, and underdeveloped infrastructure. The province was established as an independent administrative unit in 2022 and is Indonesia's least populated province. In the absence of specific data on tourism, real estate markets, or public safety, Asaren can be understood primarily within the framework of broader Papuan natural and cultural contexts.


    More about Assue

    Assue – Lowland district in Mappi Regency, South PapuaAssue is one of the rural districts (distrik) of Mappi Regency in the Indonesian province of South Papua. According to data…

    Assue – Lowland district in Mappi Regency, South Papua

    Assue is one of the rural districts (distrik) of Mappi Regency in the Indonesian province of South Papua. According to data published by the Central Statistics Agency (BPS), the district covers an area of about 2,423 km2 and recorded a population of 10,549 at the 2020 Census, with a mid-2024 official estimate of around 10,480 inhabitants. The district administrative centre is the village of Eci, and the area is subdivided into 18 administrative villages (kampung). Mappi Regency itself was split off from Merauke Regency in November 2002 and is one of the largest but most sparsely populated regencies in eastern Indonesia.

    Tourism and attractions

    Detailed tourism information specifically for Assue is limited in publicly available sources. The wider context of Mappi Regency, of which Assue is part, is dominated by an extensive lowland landscape of rivers, swamps and tropical rainforest along the southern coast of New Guinea. Mappi Regency uses the slogan and event name Festival Sejuta Rawa, the Thousand Swamps Festival, which reflects the regency's strong association with its wetland environment, and the regional tourism narrative is built around traditional culture, river-based daily life and the natural setting of South Papua. Across South Papua more broadly, visitor experiences typically focus on indigenous culture, river travel and nearby protected areas rather than mass-market beach or city tourism. Anyone considering a visit to Assue should expect a remote, frontier-style environment in which most travel between settlements is on water rather than by sealed road, and where local guidance from village authorities is essential for any movement beyond the district capital.

    Property market

    There is no organised, transparent property market in Assue in the sense familiar from larger Indonesian cities; the district functions primarily through customary land tenure rather than through a formal commercial real estate sector. Mappi Regency, of which Assue is part, has a small total population of roughly 114,000 across more than 25,000 km2, and economic activity is concentrated around the regency capital of Kepi and a handful of larger settlements. Outside those centres, the housing stock is dominated by single-storey dwellings built in vernacular styles using locally available timber, with concrete construction limited to government buildings, schools and a small number of trader houses. For investors, the practical implication is that conventional residential property as understood in Java or Bali essentially does not exist in this district. Land is generally held under customary (adat) arrangements and Indonesian regulations on foreign land ownership apply throughout the regency, so any commercial use of land must be structured carefully and in cooperation with both customary leaders and the regency administration.

    Rental and investment outlook

    Formal rental data for Assue is not collected in any publicly available dataset, and there is no recognisable rental market in the conventional sense. Within Mappi Regency more generally, the small share of formal rental activity is concentrated in Kepi, where government employees, teachers, healthcare staff and traders occasionally rent simple houses or rooms. Investment opportunities in this part of South Papua are tied to public-sector spending, infrastructure works and sectors such as fisheries, small-scale agriculture and basic trade, rather than to property speculation. Risks include limited transport, high logistics costs, climatic challenges in the wet season and the usual considerations that apply to remote frontier districts with developing infrastructure. Outside investors interested in the area generally engage through partnerships with local government programmes or community-based initiatives rather than through standalone real estate ventures.

    Practical tips

    Assue lies in the lowlands of Mappi Regency, with district coordinates of roughly 6.26 degrees south and 139.30 degrees east. The regency capital, Kepi, in neighbouring Obaa District, is the main administrative gateway and the place where most regency-level services are concentrated. Travel within Mappi typically combines longboat trips on the river network with occasional small-aircraft flights to the larger airstrips in South Papua. Visitors should plan for the wet, equatorial climate typical of southern New Guinea and budget for considerable logistical lead time when moving supplies or equipment. Basic services such as puskesmas (primary healthcare clinics), schools and warungs (small shops) are present in larger kampung but facilities in remote villages are minimal. As with all of Papua, advance coordination with local authorities and respect for customary norms are important parts of any responsible visit.

    More about Mappi

    Mappi – Arafura Sea Wetlands of Central PapuaMappi Regency lies in the southern part of Central Papua province, on the Arafura Sea coast. Its capital is Kepi. The region is a vast…

    Mappi – Arafura Sea Wetlands of Central Papua

    Mappi Regency lies in the southern part of Central Papua province, on the Arafura Sea coast. Its capital is Kepi. The region is a vast lowland covered with swamp and mangrove forests at the lower reaches of the Digul River.

    Attractions and Activities

    The lower Digul River can be explored by boat expeditions: crocodiles, endemic bird species, tropical waterbirds. Mangrove forests and wetlands form a unique ecosystem. Local Papuan communities (Awyu, Yaqay tribes) traditional way of life can be experienced: wood carving, sago production. WWII Digul River historical memorial site.

    Culture and Cuisine

    Awyu and Yaqay tribes live a traditional lifestyle: communal longhouses, traditional ceremonies. Cuisine is simple: sago, freshwater fish, crocodile meat, and wild-foraged fruits.

    Public Safety

    Mappi is an extremely isolated region. Travel only with local guides and organised expeditions. Medical care: puskesmas in Kepi; Merauke (by air) is the nearest hospital.

    Practical Information

    Small aircraft from Jayapura or Merauke to Kepi airstrip (limited). The best time to visit is May to October. Accommodation: local hospitality.

    More about South Papua

    South Papua (Papua Selatan) is one of Indonesia's newest provinces, with Merauke as its center. The region is home to Asmat culture and woodcarving, Wasur National Park's native…

    South Papua (Papua Selatan) is one of Indonesia's newest provinces, with Merauke as its center. The region is home to Asmat culture and woodcarving, Wasur National Park's native wildlife, and vast wetlands. The province is less touristy and offers an authentic experience.

    Where is South Papua?

    The province is located in southern Papua, near the Papua–Australia border. Merauke is the capital, accessible by air from Jayapura and Jakarta. Asmat villages are reached by boat along coastal rivers. The region is remote and under development.

    What to See?

    1. Asmat Woodcarving and Culture

    The Asmat people are world-famous for woodcarving and bisj poles (ceremonial pillars). In villages you can see the carving process and traditional ceremonies. Agats is the main starting point for Asmat areas.

    2. Merauke – Provincial Capital

    Merauke is the southern gateway to Papua. The city's markets, the Maro River, and surrounding villages offer insight. The region is multicultural – Papuans, Indonesian settlers, and Melanesian communities.

    3. Wasur National Park

    Wasur National Park protects savannas, wetlands, and mangrove ecosystems. The park's birdlife is outstanding – species close to Australian types. Treks and birdwatching attract nature lovers.

    4. Sota Border Crossing and the "Last City"

    Merauke is often called "Indonesia's last city" (easternmost major city). Near the Sota border crossing the sense of remoteness is tangible. The area is less visited.

    5. Local Festivals and Ceremonies

    Festivals and ceremonies of the Asmat and other local communities can be seen on occasion. Check dates locally. Cultural programs offer a unique experience.

    When to Visit?

    May–October is the drier period; wetlands and rivers are more accessible. In the rainy season many areas are hard to reach. Festival dates vary.

    How Long to Stay?

    4–6 days recommended:

    • 2 days: Merauke, markets, Maro River
    • 2 days: Asmat villages (around Agats)
    • 1 day: Wasur NP or local programs

    Renting or Investing in South Papua?

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

    • Indonesia Travel – official tourism portal
    • South 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

    South Papua is the region of Asmat culture and pristine nature. Woodcarving and Wasur Park together offer an authentic, lesser-known destination.

    Own a property in Asaren?

    Be the first to list your property in Asaren

    List Your Property — It's Free