Kalumpangloe – village in Arungkeke District, South Sulawesi
Kalumpangloe is an Indonesian village (desa) located in Sulawesi Selatan (South Sulawesi) province, within the administrative unit of Kabupaten Jeneponto, in Kecamatan Arungkeke district. According to its geographic coordinates (-5.6620106, 119.7860302), it is situated in the coastal strip of the southern tip of Celebes Island. Kabupaten Jeneponto lies near the Makassar Strait and constitutes one of the region's smallest yet administratively well-organized regencies. Since no independent, detailed encyclopedic source is available about Kalumpangloe, the vast majority of the known facts presented below derive from regency-level data and broader regional context.
General overview
Kalumpangloe, as part of Kecamatan Arungkeke, falls under the administration of Kabupaten Jeneponto. According to available data, Kabupaten Jeneponto covers an area of 749.79 km² and had a population of 418,182 in 2023. The entire regency is divided into 11 kecamatan (districts), as well as 32 kelurahan (administrative villages) and 82 desa (villages); Kalumpangloe is one of the latter. The kabupaten seat is the village of Bontosunggu, located in Kecamatan Tamalatea district. Kecamatan Arungkeke comprises the eastern, coastal portion of the regency, where livelihoods have traditionally been based on agriculture and fishing. Villages along the South Sulawesi coast are generally characterized by rice cultivation, traditional fishing, and small-scale commerce forming the backbone of the local economy. Kalumpangloe is likely a similarly-oriented, predominantly agricultural and fishing-based community of smaller population size, though no concrete, citable figures on this point appear in available sources.
Real estate and investment
No real estate market data specific to Kalumpangloe is available. In broader context, Kabupaten Jeneponto as a whole is considered one of South Sulawesi's smaller, primarily agricultural regions, where real estate prices and investment activity significantly lag behind the provincial capital, Makassar. Land plots in the coastal strip show some interest owing to fishing and tourism development opportunities, though this trend cannot be directly verified for Kalumpangloe from available sources—it rather reflects dynamics generally characteristic of the region. It is important to note that Indonesian property acquisition regulations impose serious restrictions on foreign nationals: foreign natural persons cannot, as a general rule, acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) to Indonesian real estate and may only hold limited title rights—such as Hak Pakai (use rights)—under specified conditions and time limitations. Any investment intention requires the involvement of an Indonesian legal expert.
Safety and security
No village-level statistics or detailed sources on Kalumpangloe's public security are available. The broader region, South Sulawesi province and Kabupaten Jeneponto within it, is generally classified among moderate-risk rural regions of Indonesia: government presence is ensured through the local administrative system, and internal cohesion within rural communities is typically strong. In coastal, agricultural-character small areas, minor property-related conflicts and petty crimes stemming from poverty are characteristically present, though serious violent crime is statistically rare. These general observations pertain to the South Sulawesi rural context and should not be construed as an explicit assessment of Kalumpangloe.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attractions specific to Kalumpangloe can be identified in available sources. The environs of Kecamatan Arungkeke and the broader Kabupaten Jeneponto are characterized by coastal landscapes and traditional fishing villages that may offer authentic rural experience; however, no concrete, verifiable named attractions—such as a nature reserve, sacred site, or well-known beach—can be cited from available data as being in Kalumpangloe's immediate vicinity. Within the broader attraction sphere of Kabupaten Jeneponto, the South Sulawesi coastal landscape, the coastal areas of the Makassar Strait, and Bugis-Makassar cultural heritage are generally present, but designating these as specific village-level sites would not be warranted given the lack of sources. For interested parties, identifying better-documented nearby destinations is possible by starting from the kabupaten seat, Bontosunggu.
Summary
Kalumpangloe is a small coastal village in South Sulawesi belonging to Kecamatan Arungkeke district of Kabupaten Jeneponto, forming part of a regency spanning 749.79 km² with a population approaching 420,000. No independent, detailed source on the village is available, so its data are known solely from regency-level and general regional context. The locality is likely a small rural community based on agriculture and fishing; concrete, village-specific statements regarding the real estate market, public security, and tourist offerings cannot be made on the basis of existing data.

