Ranoeya – A small settlement in Wawotobi District, Konawe Regency
Ranoeya is part of Wawotobi Kecamatan (district), which falls under Konawe Kabupaten (regency) in Southeast Sulawesi Province (Sulawesi Tenggara). The village is located in the eastern part of the Indonesian archipelago, on the island of Celebes (Sulawesi), positioned within the region's continental agricultural zone. Like many settlements in Southeast Sulawesi, Ranoeya is integrated into the regency's traditional economic system, which has long been one of the province's primary sources of rice production.
General overview
Ranoeya is not considered a primary tourism destination; rather, it is a small local community operating within the Wawotobi district system. The kecamatan (district) is a collection of settlements that do not form part of internationally recognized travel routes. The village is part of Konawe Regency's federation, which—although the administrative system of the area has undergone numerous changes since the 1960s—continues to be organized around agricultural economy and local community networks. Unaaha serves as the regency's capital, functioning as both the administrative and commercial center.
Ranoeya is likely a small-population village where household labor, local commerce, and basic public services form the structure of daily life. Wawotobi District, which comprises the eastern part of the regency, exhibits characteristic rural Sulawesian features: a hilly, vegetation-rich area where life unfolds between Indonesian federal administration and local traditions. Following Indonesian independence, the village was integrated into the NKRI (Negara Kesatuan Republik Indonesia, Republic of Indonesia) municipal and administrative structure, which continues to define the character of its infrastructure and service networks.
Real estate and investment
Ranoeya's real estate market is not documented in detail; however, considering Konawe Regency as a whole, such small settlements typically demonstrate low real estate value dynamics. Konawe Regency—which had a population of 257,011 according to the 2020 census and was estimated to have approximately 270,829 inhabitants in mid-2025—is a center of agricultural production. Real estate market activity essentially follows the conditions of the rural area: land acquisition, plot sales, and small-scale construction for local communities are dominant.
For foreign nationals, property acquisition under Indonesian law is restricted to strict frameworks. Under the 1960 Basic Agrarian Law (Undang-Undang Pokok Agraria), foreign persons typically cannot acquire long-term ownership rights to land in Indonesia; instead, legal options include a 30-year lease right (hak sewa) or an 80-year usage right (hak guna usaha) for certain sectors such as agriculture. Due to Ranoeya's rural nature, such investments would primarily be limited to agricultural or tourism-related projects; however, given the village's small size, it practically lacks formal investor infrastructure. Local banking and credit services are minimal; due to uneven development between settlements, smaller villages lack institutions that would facilitate larger-scale real estate transactions. Because of fluctuating agricultural income throughout the year, low per-capita income, and infrastructure constraints (road networks, electricity supply), investor interest is typically sparse in this region.
Safety and security
Specific information about Ranoeya's public safety is not available through international sources; however, the general security situation in Konawe Regency—and more broadly Southeast Sulawesi—follows Indonesian rural norms. Rural parts of Sulawesi have long been subject to fluctuating central Indonesian governmental control, and the political turbulence of the mid-20th century left marks on the region's community structures. Today—following the 2000s—such rural villages generally operate in relatively peaceful environments where obedience to basic public order takes precedence over family and local community customs.
The Indonesian national police force (Kepolisian Negara Republik Indonesia, Polri) and municipal administration jointly maintain basic public order functions. Associated risks—such as banditry, organized crime, or large-scale violent incidents—are far rarer in such small settlements than in Indonesian cities. However, it should be noted that infrastructure weakness, low individual income levels, and fluctuating education levels can be sources of social tension. For travelers, standard travel safety recommendations (secure storage of valuables, local transportation wisdom, following local authority advice) apply, but there are no recent reports indicating extraordinary threats.
Tourist attractions
Ranoeya village does not possess internationally recognized tourist attractions. As a small village, it typically remains in the background for tourism purposes; travelers rarely appear in places where neither accommodation infrastructure nor established tourist services exist. Wawotobi District generally, and Konawe Regency as a whole, is a closed area not frequented by international tourism. Indonesian rural tourism—where it exists—tends to target ecological interests (national parks, coral reefs, tropical vegetation) or ethnographic research (local communities, traditional craftsmanship).
Southeast Sulawesi Province—and thus Konawe Regency—is known internationally through the Banggai Islands, the Togean Islands, and their coral reef systems; however, these are closed, insular territories, and Ranoeya is located on the mainland, outside maritime zones directly. At the regency level, the capital's vicinity in Unaaha would be the administrative and ideal meeting point; however, travel away from Ranoeya would be necessary to reach any documented attraction. The tourist value of small villages typically lies in observing local life, studying the daily routines of Indonesian rural communities, rather than seeking specific structures or natural features. Accordingly, for those who might visit the Ranoeya area, expectations would be directed toward local culture, the daily practice of agricultural economy, and the structure of Indonesian rural society, rather than searching for tourism-type "attractions."
Summary
Ranoeya is a small Indonesian village in Wawotobi District under Konawe Regency, located in the agricultural zone of Southeast Sulawesi Province. Neither international tourism nor large-scale economic activity characterizes the settlement; the village is typical of rural Indonesia, where local communities organize around agricultural economy, traditional administration, and federal institutions. It does not qualify as a notable destination for investment or tourism markets; however, it may be an interesting micro-center for research into Indonesian rural life and the community-economic structure of Sulawesi Island.

