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/Pinrang/Mattiro Bulu/Bunga

    Properties in Bunga

    Mattiro Bulu, Pinrang, South Sulawesi

    0 properties available

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

    Own a property in Bunga? List it for free →

    Browse Pinrang →

    About Bunga

    Bunga – a small settlement in the northern part of Kabupaten Pinrang, South Sulawesi

    Bunga is an Indonesian village located in the province of Sulawesi Selatan (South Sulawesi), in the district of Kabupaten Pinrang, specifically within the Kecamatan Mattiro Bulu administrative area. Based on its coordinates (-3.8211607, 119.5977526), it is situated in the inland region within the regency. The seat of Kabupaten Pinrang is in Kecamatan Watang Sawitto, and the regency itself lies approximately 185 kilometers north of Makassar city, adjacent to Kabupaten Polewali Mandar located in Sulawesi Barat province. No independent encyclopedic source specifically about Bunga is available; therefore, the information presented below is based on regency-level and general regional data, which the reader should bear in mind.

    General overview

    Bunga is a relatively small, sparsely documented settlement within the framework of Kecamatan Mattiro Bulu. Detailed statistical or encyclopedic data specifically about the village is not publicly accessible, so data from the broader administrative unit, Kabupaten Pinrang, provides context. The total area of the kabupaten is 1,961.77 square kilometers, with a population of 425,640 as of the first half of 2025, averaging a population density of 210 inhabitants per square kilometer. The kabupaten is divided into a total of 12 kecamatan, which encompass 68 villages (desa), 36 kelurahan, as well as 86 lingkungan and 189 dusun. Mattiro Bulu is one of these kecamatan, and Bunga is counted among the settlements under its administration. Kabupaten Pinrang forms part of the Bugis cultural sphere; in this region, the Bugis ethnicity has traditionally played a determining role in agriculture, fishing, and small-scale commerce. The region's economy is characteristically agriculture-oriented, with rice cultivation and aquaculture being important sectors.

    Real estate and investment

    Specific real estate market data for Bunga is not available in publicly accessible sources. Considering the broader context of Kabupaten Pinrang, the regency is an economically moderately developed area of South Sulawesi, where real estate prices and investment activity typically operate at significantly lower levels than in the provincial capital, Makassar. Agricultural land and smaller residential properties dominate this region, with development projects largely organized around infrastructure and the agricultural sector. As a general note regarding the applicable Indonesian legal framework, foreigners cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over property in Indonesia; for them, Hak Pakai (usage rights) and in certain cases Hak Sewa (lease rights) represent the legal framework. This nationwide regulation is also in effect in Kabupaten Pinrang, including in the village of Bunga. Before any investment decision, it is always recommended to engage local legal experts and a notary, given the possibility of title issues that can occur with desa-level properties.

    Safety and security

    Specific public safety statistics concerning Bunga or Kecamatan Mattiro Bulu are not available in verifiable sources. In broader regional context, Sulawesi Selatan province and, within it, Kabupaten Pinrang are generally classified among areas with moderate security ratings within South Sulawesi rural districts; the province's more serious security incidents typically relate to larger cities or other areas. In rural, agriculturally-oriented villages, such as Bunga presumably is, daily life is generally peaceful, with lower rates of violent crime than in urban areas. However, this is merely a general characterization of the region and does not replace on-site information gathering. Before traveling or settling, it is advisable to make inquiries with local authorities or consult the Indonesian Interior Ministry's database for actual conditions.

    Tourist attractions

    No data is available in accessible sources regarding Bunga as a tourist destination. In the broader area of Kabupaten Pinrang, however, verifiable information shows that the regency possesses varied natural and cultural assets: the region is situated at the intersection of Sulawesi's highland and lowland landscapes, and Bugis cultural heritage is present in numerous villages and towns in the regency through architecture, customs, and craftsmanship. In the interior areas of the regency, rice fields and natural landscapes are characteristic, while along the regency's coastline, fishing communities and the marine landscape may attract interest. These characteristics generally describe the kabupaten as a whole and do not necessarily apply directly to the immediate vicinity of Bunga. In the absence of sources about Bunga, specific named attractions cannot be listed.

    Summary

    Bunga is a small South Sulawesi settlement administratively belonging to Kecamatan Mattiro Bulu, located in Kabupaten Pinrang, for which independent, detailed administrative or tourist documentation is not publicly accessible. Based on regency-level data, the kabupaten lies 185 kilometers north of Makassar, with an approximate population of 425,640 as of early 2025. The broader region is a rural area with an agriculture-oriented economic character and moderate development, whose real estate market and tourist infrastructure are considerably more modest than those of the provincial capital. Specific factual claims regarding the village can only be reliably substantiated through targeted fieldwork or direct queries to the databases of the Badan Pusat Statistik (Indonesian Central Statistics Agency).


    More about Mattiro Bulu

    Mattiro Bulu – Inland rice kecamatan in Pinrang Regency, South SulawesiMattiro Bulu is a kecamatan in Pinrang Regency, South Sulawesi, in the rice-and-fishery heartland of western…

    Mattiro Bulu – Inland rice kecamatan in Pinrang Regency, South Sulawesi

    Mattiro Bulu is a kecamatan in Pinrang Regency, South Sulawesi, in the rice-and-fishery heartland of western South Sulawesi between Pare-Pare and Polewali. According to the Indonesian Wikipedia entry, drawing on the work Asuransi Usahatani Padi di Kabupaten Pinrang, the kecamatan covers about 132.49 square kilometres, recorded a population of around 31,524 inhabitants in 2020 and is organised into seven desa and two kelurahan, giving a population density of roughly 238 people per square kilometre. The land area represents about 6.75 percent of Pinrang Regency, and around 4,686 residents are recorded as working as petani (farmers).

    Tourism and attractions

    Mattiro Bulu is not a packaged tourist destination on its own, and named ticketed attractions inside the kecamatan are limited in widely available sources. The character of the area is shaped by its strong agricultural identity, with extensive irrigated rice fields covering some 5,919 hectares, of which around 4,798 hectares use irrigation and 1,121 hectares are rain-fed. Visitors typically combine Mattiro Bulu with the wider Pinrang Regency, which is famous as one of South Sulawesi's leading rice and freshwater-fish producers and which markets coastal attractions on the Mamuju road, the Pulau Kamarrang area and the cultural traditions of the Pinrang Bugis. Cultural life in Mattiro Bulu follows the Bugis pattern of mosques, traditional pangadereng-based community organisation and a busy small-trade culture.

    Property market

    Detailed property-market data for Mattiro Bulu are limited, but the kecamatan benefits from being a productive rice area within a Bugis regency. Housing is dominated by single-storey landed houses, including traditional Bugis stilt houses in some areas and concrete construction in newer settlements, with small clusters of shophouses near the kelurahan centres. Land tenure mixes formal BPN certification in built-up centres with traditional family and adat-based tenure in rice-field and farmland areas, so verification of certificate status is important before any acquisition. Across Pinrang Regency the property market is shaped by rice and freshwater-fish economies, smallholder agriculture, government employment in Pinrang town and remittances from the Bugis diaspora.

    Rental and investment outlook

    Rental demand in Mattiro Bulu is driven mainly by civil servants, teachers, healthcare staff, farmers and small traders, with the agricultural sector providing the dominant economic anchor. The yield environment for irrigated rice is strong, with reported production of about 5.9 tonnes per hectare and total annual output of roughly 68,664 tonnes of dried-grain paddy in 2020. Investors weighing exposure should treat the area as a long-horizon residential and agricultural location rather than projecting metropolitan-style yields, and should pay close attention to irrigation infrastructure, exposure to plant-pest cycles (the so-called organisme pengganggu tumbuhan that periodically affect harvests) and the role of pest insurance and credit schemes in the local farm economy.

    Practical tips

    Access to Mattiro Bulu is by road from Pinrang, the regency capital, via the regional road network that links Pinrang with Pare-Pare to the south and Polewali (West Sulawesi) to the north. Basic services including the kecamatan puskesmas, nine primary schools, four junior secondary schools, two senior secondary schools and one vocational school are organised at desa and kelurahan level, while larger hospitals, banks and the regency administration sit in Pinrang town. The climate is tropical with a wet and dry season typical of western South Sulawesi. Foreign investors should note that Indonesian regulations restrict freehold land title to Indonesian citizens; leasehold and Hak Pakai are the usual alternatives.

    More about Pinrang

    Pinrang – Rice Granary of South SulawesiPinrang Regency lies in the northern part of South Sulawesi province, on the Makassar Strait coast. Its capital is Pinrang. The region is…

    Pinrang – Rice Granary of South Sulawesi

    Pinrang Regency lies in the northern part of South Sulawesi province, on the Makassar Strait coast. Its capital is Pinrang. The region is one of South Sulawesi’s most important rice-producing areas, the centre of Bugis agricultural culture.

    Attractions and Activities

    Scenic rice field landscapes. Suppa port and fishing villages. Hot springs (air panas Sulili) are natural thermal baths. Makassar Strait coastline with sunsets.

    Culture and Cuisine

    Bugis culture is defining. Cuisine is South Sulawesi: coto Makassar, pallubasa, buras.

    Public Safety

    Pinrang is a safe region. Medical care: hospital in Pinrang; Parepare (approx. 30 minutes) and Makassar (approx. 3.5 hours) have more advanced facilities.

    Practical Information

    From Makassar, approximately 3.5 hours north by car. The best time to visit is April to October. Accommodation: simple hotels.

    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 Bunga?

    Be the first to list your property in Bunga

    List Your Property — It's Free