Wolasi – Sub-urban district in Konawe Selatan, Southeast Sulawesi
Wolasi is a kecamatan (district) in Konawe Selatan Regency, Southeast Sulawesi, in the wider Sulawesi region. It is located in the northern part of Konawe Selatan Regency on the southern fringe of the Kendari urban area, in hill country south of the provincial capital, at roughly -4.2044 latitude and 122.4899 longitude. Konawe Selatan Regency is a regency in Southeast Sulawesi south of Kendari, with a coastal plain on the Bay of Bone and a hilly interior of cocoa and oil-palm landscapes, with its seat at Andoolo. District-specific figures such as named villages and precise population are not independently verified for this guide and are not stated here.
Tourism and attractions
Wolasi is not promoted as a stand-alone tourist destination, so its scenery and cultural life are best read through the broader Konawe Selatan Regency context. In Konawe Selatan Regency, of which Wolasi is part, the most commonly cited attractions include the beaches of the Bay of Bone south coast, Tolaki cultural traditions, and the inland river-valley landscapes between Andoolo and Tinanggea. The Sulawesi climate is tropical, with rainfall patterns varying significantly between the western and eastern coasts of the island, which shapes the seasonality of outdoor activity in and around Wolasi. Daily life in the district is anchored in village markets, places of worship and seasonal farming or fishing cycles rather than ticketed sites.
Property market
There is no published district-level property index for Wolasi; the market is best read through Konawe Selatan Regency and Southeast Sulawesi as a whole. In broader terms, Southeast Sulawesi has a coastal-and-island geography, an economy built on nickel mining and processing, fisheries, cocoa and cashew, and formal property markets concentrated in Kendari and Kolaka. Within Konawe Selatan the economy is built on wet-rice farming, cocoa, cashew, oil palm, fisheries, and a growing service-and-housing sector spilling over from the Kendari urban area, which shapes what is built and traded as real estate. The most common housing in districts of this profile is owner-occupied family housing on village plots, often combined with productive land for crops, livestock or ponds. Formal subdivisions and shophouses tend to cluster in the regency seat and along main inter-regency roads.
Rental and investment outlook
Formal rental supply specific to Wolasi is limited, in line with most rural Indonesian kecamatan. The rental segment is dominated by kost (boarding) rooms and small contract houses serving teachers, civil servants, health workers and local cooperative staff. In wider Konawe Selatan, rental demand is shaped by the same drivers as its economy and by the role of Andoolo. Investor options here tend to be productive agricultural or fishery land, roadside commercial plots and modest residential or kost projects near the regency seat.
Practical tips
Access to Wolasi is normally by road from Andoolo and from the nearest provincial gateway in Southeast Sulawesi; sea or air links may also matter in Sulawesi. Puskesmas (primary healthcare clinics), schools, mosques or churches and daily markets cluster around the kecamatan office and larger desa; hospitals, banks and government offices concentrate in Andoolo. Mobile coverage is generally available along main roads but can weaken in side valleys, outlying islands or deep forest. The climate is tropical, with rainfall patterns varying significantly between the western and eastern coasts of the island. Indonesian land rules — the ban on freehold (Hak Milik) for foreign nationals and the use of Hak Pakai or Hak Guna Bangunan for foreign-linked investment — apply throughout the district.

