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

v10.4.2

    Home/Indonesia/South Sulawesi/Gowa/Bajeng/Kalebajeng

    Properties in Kalebajeng

    Bajeng, Gowa, South Sulawesi

    0 properties available

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

    Own a property in Kalebajeng? List it for free →

    Browse Gowa →

    About Kalebajeng

    Kalebajeng – rural village in Kecamatan Bajeng, Kabupaten Gowa, South Sulawesi

    Kalebajeng is a small settlement in Indonesia's Sulawesi Selatan (South Sulawesi) province, belonging to the Kabupaten Gowa administrative unit, and within that to Kecamatan Bajeng. Based on its coordinates, it is located in the south-southwestern areas of the kabupaten, approximately at -5.30 latitude and 119.44 longitude. Direct, settlement-level statistical sources are not available, therefore the following describes verifiable relationships known at the Kabupaten Gowa and Kecamatan Bajeng levels, clearly indicating that these pertain to the broader region.

    General overview

    Kalebajeng does not appear independently in widely accessible tourism or administrative databases, indicating that it is typically a smaller, agriculturally oriented rural community. Kecamatan Bajeng is located in the central-southern part of Kabupaten Gowa and constitutes one of the kabupaten's basic administrative units. Kabupaten Gowa itself is an extensive administrative unit covering 1,883.33 km², with approximately 806,908 residents according to mid-2024 data; its seat is Kelurahan Sungguminasa, located in Kecamatan Sombaopu. Geographically, the kabupaten encompasses both lowland areas near the Makassar Strait and internal highland zones. Based on its coordinates, Kalebajeng may fall into the lowland-foothill transition band, though detailed description cannot be verified from sources. Kecamatan Bajeng – like other rural districts of the kabupaten – is generally characterized by the dominance of rice fields, small gardens, and mixed-use agricultural areas.

    Real estate and investment

    Independent local real estate market data for Kalebajeng is not available, therefore the broader kabupaten-level and provincial context is presented. Kabupaten Gowa as a whole is closely connected to the Makassar (Kota Makassar) agglomeration, which is Sulawesi's largest city and economic center. This proximity results in increasing real estate demand in several districts of the kabupaten – particularly in northern areas close to Makassar – mainly in the form of residential development and suburbanization. Kecamatan Bajeng is located further from the metropolitan agglomeration, so the real estate market there is expected to be less intense, instead based on local needs. It should be noted that in Indonesia, foreign citizens have limited property acquisition options: full ownership (Hak Milik) is a legal institution reserved exclusively for Indonesian citizens, while foreigners typically can only establish property relationships through Hak Pakai (usage rights) or through appropriate legal structures. These general rules apply throughout the country, including in Gowa.

    Safety and security

    Verifiable sources contain no specific public security data or crime statistics pertaining to Kalebajeng. With regard to rural areas of Kabupaten Gowa generally, it can be said that close community ties and traditional local norms play an ordering role in daily life. Considering Sulawesi Selatan province as a whole, larger urban centers are typically characterized by security challenges related to urbanization, while these are less pronounced in rural areas. Nevertheless, in the absence of precise data for Kalebajeng or Kecamatan Bajeng, more concrete statements cannot reliably be made.

    Tourist attractions

    Near Kalebajeng – in the Kabupaten Gowa area – the most well-known historical monument identifiable from Wikipedia sources is Benteng Somba Opu, the fortress of the Gowa Sultanate's capital from the 16th–17th centuries. During this period, the Gowa Sultanate operated one of Southeast Asia's most cosmopolitan trading cities, with Somba Opu as its seat, where Portuguese, English, Dutch, Danish, French, Chinese, Yemeni, and other Asian communities as well as Australian indigenous groups all traded. The sultanate's most famous ruler was Sultan Hasanuddin. These historical sites and their associated cultural heritage provide the general tourist appeal of the kabupaten, though they are not necessarily directly tied to Kalebajeng specifically. Natural attractions found in the highland areas of Kabupaten Gowa – such as waterfalls and mountain trails – also contribute to the region's appeal, but no source-based, detailed information is available regarding Kalebajeng in this context.

    Summary

    Kalebajeng is a rural settlement in South Sulawesi, in Kecamatan Bajeng, Kabupaten Gowa, for which no independent, detailed administrative or tourism sources are available. The kabupaten as a whole possesses rich historical heritage – as the former territory of the Gowa Sultanate and through Benteng Somba Opu – and its geographical proximity to Makassar provides relevant context from a real estate market perspective at the regency level. Nevertheless, Kalebajeng is primarily characterized as a quiet, agriculturally oriented rural community, and more precise documentation would require local-level data collection.


    More about Bajeng

    Bajeng – Lowland kecamatan neighbouring SungguminasaBajeng is a kecamatan in Gowa Regency, South Sulawesi (Sulawesi Selatan). According to the Indonesian Wikipedia article for the…

    Bajeng – Lowland kecamatan neighbouring Sungguminasa

    Bajeng is a kecamatan in Gowa Regency, South Sulawesi (Sulawesi Selatan). According to the Indonesian Wikipedia article for the district, it was created in 1960 through a reorganisation of the twelve former districts of Gowa into eight kecamatan, as a partition from the old Limbung district, at the same time as the neighbouring Pallangga kecamatan. Today Bajeng is divided into eleven desa and three kelurahan of low-lying land near the confluence of the Jeneberang and its tributaries, not far from the Makassar metropolitan fringe.

    Tourism and attractions

    Bajeng itself is not a promoted tourism destination and coverage in national travel publicity for the area is sparse. Looking at the wider regency context, Gowa Regency, with its seat at Sungguminasa just south of Makassar, is the historical heartland of the Gowa Sultanate, whose palace complex Balla Lompoa remains a major cultural landmark. The regency combines lowland rice and sugarcane plains along the Jeneberang river with upland coffee- and vegetable-growing areas around Malino. Across the wider Sulawesi context, the region combines the Toraja and Bugis-Makassar cultures of the south, the Minahasa highlands and diving sites of the north, and coastal Bajau traditions along its long shoreline, set against mountainous interior terrain. For most visitors the kecamatan or distrik features as a passing stop on a regency-wide itinerary.

    Property market

    Formal property data specifically for Bajeng is limited, and district-level market reports are not regularly published. Housing stock is typical of its setting: owner-occupied family homes on land held under a mix of certified and customary arrangements, with little speculative estate development. Sulawesi's property market is led by Makassar-Maros-Sungguminasa in the south and Manado-Bitung-Tomohon in the north, where apartments, cluster housing and modern shophouse developments predominate, while rural regencies rely on freehold village housing and plantation-economy land. Within Gowa Regency, property activity concentrates in and around the regency seat and main road corridors. Indonesian regulations on foreign land ownership apply throughout the district: overseas investors typically work with hak pakai (right-of-use) titles, long-term leasehold structures or PT PMA company holdings rather than freehold, and customary (adat) land arrangements must be respected in negotiations with local landowners.

    Rental and investment outlook

    The formal rental market in Bajeng is modest: most households own their homes, and rented accommodation is largely limited to teachers, healthcare workers, junior civil servants and, where relevant, plantation or mining staff. Rental demand on Sulawesi concentrates in the main university cities – Makassar and Manado – and around port, mining and plantation hubs; yields are typically moderate with steady long-term tenancies rather than high short-term turnover. Investment angles for a district of this profile lean toward agriculture, services and small-scale commercial property along the main roads, rather than residential yield plays, and outside investors should expect to work closely with the kecamatan or distrik office and customary landowners on due diligence and land titling.

    Practical tips

    Access to Bajeng is organised around the regency seat of Gowa, with road, air or sea links – depending on location – connecting it to the provincial capital of South Sulawesi. Makassar and Manado are Sulawesi's principal air gateways, and road networks are extensive along the coasts but steeper and slower in the central highlands; small aircraft and coastal ferries provide access to remote regencies and islands. Basic local services – puskesmas primary healthcare clinics, primary and junior-secondary schools, small warung shops and places of worship – are present in the kecamatan or distrik centre, while larger hospitals, banks and government offices are concentrated in the regency capital and the provincial capital. Visitors are expected to dress modestly in places of worship and villages and to check in with the local head (kepala desa or kepala kampung) when staying overnight in smaller communities.

    More about Gowa

    Gowa – The Gowa Sultanate and Highland Retreat in South SulawesiGowa Regency lies in the central part of South Sulawesi province, directly neighbouring Makassar city. The regional…

    Gowa – The Gowa Sultanate and Highland Retreat in South Sulawesi

    Gowa Regency lies in the central part of South Sulawesi province, directly neighbouring Makassar city. The regional capital is Sungguminasa. Gowa was the centre of the historic Gowa Sultanate – one of the most powerful maritime empires in eastern Indonesia. Today the region is also Makassar's highland retreat zone.

    Attractions and Activities

    Benteng Somba Opu (Somba Opu Fort) was the Gowa Sultanate's former capital and fortress – now an archaeological park with a museum. Balla Lompoa (Royal Palace) displays the sultanate's crowns, weapons and ceremonial objects. Malino Highland is a retreat approximately 2 hours from Makassar – cool climate, pine forests, strawberry farms and Takapala Waterfall. Tomanasa Waterfall is another spectacular highland waterfall.

    Culture and Cuisine

    Makassar culture draws from the sultanate's heritage: the pakarena dance (elegant women's dance) and sinrilik epic poetry are living traditions. Makassar cuisine is spicy and fish-based: coto Makassar (spiced beef offal broth), pallubasa (similar, with coconut milk), konro (spiced beef rib soup), and pisang epe (grilled banana with palm-sugar sauce) are unmissable.

    Public Safety

    Gowa is a safe region. Highland roads towards Malino are winding – drive carefully. Rocks near waterfalls can be slippery. Medical care: Makassar (approx. 20–30 minutes) has excellent hospitals.

    Practical Information

    From Makassar Sultan Hasanuddin Airport, approximately 30 minutes to Sungguminasa by car; Malino approximately 2 hours. The best time to visit is May to October. Accommodation: mountain villas and guesthouses in Malino; simple hotels in Sungguminasa.

    More about South Sulawesi

    South Sulawesi is one of Indonesia's culturally richest provinces, where Tana Toraja's unique funeral rites, Tongkonan houses, and Bugis seafaring culture converge. Makassar, the…

    South Sulawesi is one of Indonesia's culturally richest provinces, where Tana Toraja's unique funeral rites, Tongkonan houses, and Bugis seafaring culture converge. Makassar, the provincial capital, is a historic port city, and Bantimurung waterfalls are paradise for nature lovers. The region is home to coto makassar and pisang epe (fried banana).

    Where is South Sulawesi?

    The province is located in southern Sulawesi island, on the shores of the Flores Sea and Java Sea. Makassar is the capital, with an international airport and direct flights from Jakarta, Bali, and Singapore. Tana Toraja lies in the northern highlands, about 8 hours by car from Makassar.

    What to See?

    1. Tana Toraja – Unique Funeral Rites

    Tana Toraja is home to the Toraja people, famous worldwide for their unique funeral ceremonies. Rambu Solo ceremonies last several days, with buffalo fights, traditional dances, and honoring the dead. The ceremonies are central to Toraja belief.

    2. Tongkonan Houses

    Tongkonan are traditional houses of Toraja noble families, with distinctive boat-shaped roofs and horn-like decorations. Kete Kesu and Lemo villages are the best places to see them. Lemo's cliff graves hold the dead in wooden effigies (tau-tau).

    3. Makassar – Historic Port City

    Makassar (formerly Ujung Pandang) is a historically significant port city. Fort Rotterdam, a 17th-century Dutch fort, is the city's symbol. Losari Beach promenade and local gastronomy – coto makassar, konro, pisang epe – are must-tries.

    4. Bugis Seafaring Culture

    The Bugis people are famous for their shipbuilding and seafaring skills. Phinisi sailing boats are masterpieces of traditional craft. Bira Beach and Tanah Beru village are phinisi building centers.

    5. Bantimurung Waterfalls

    Bantimurung-Bulusaraung National Park's waterfalls and caves are popular excursion spots. The park is known as the "Kingdom of Butterflies" – many endemic butterfly species live here.

    When to Visit?

    May–September is the dry season. Rambu Solo ceremonies typically take place in July–August and December – check exact dates locally.

    How Long to Stay?

    5–7 days recommended:

    • 2–3 days: Tana Toraja, Tongkonan houses, ceremonies
    • 1 day: Makassar, Fort Rotterdam, gastronomy
    • 1–2 days: Bira Beach and phinisi boats
    • 1 day: Bantimurung waterfalls

    Renting or Investing in South Sulawesi?

    If you're considering renting or investing in property in South Sulawesi, 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
    • Makassar Guide – local insights and practical tips

    Official Resources

    For further information about South Sulawesi, these official sources may be helpful:

    • Indonesia Travel – official tourism portal
    • South Sulawesi 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 Sulawesi is where cultural discovery meets natural beauty. Tana Toraja ceremonies and Tongkonan houses offer a unique experience you won't find elsewhere in the world.

    Own a property in Kalebajeng?

    Be the first to list your property in Kalebajeng

    List Your Property — It's Free