Kaburbur – a small settlement in Kayauni District, Kabupaten Fak-Fak
Kaburbur is a settlement in Kayauni District (Kecamatan Kayauni), which belongs to the administrative unit of Kabupaten Fak-Fak in West Papua Province (Papua Barat), located in the Papuan region of Indonesia. Based on its coordinates (-2.79 latitude, 132.30 longitude), it is situated in the south-southeastern part of the kabupaten. Currently, no independent settlement-level sources are available specifically for Kaburbur; therefore, in the following sections—where necessary—verified data available at Kabupaten Fak-Fak level will be presented, with clear indication of this framing.
General overview
Kaburbur is one of the villages in Kecamatan Kayauni, which lies within Kabupaten Fak-Fak. The kabupaten as a whole is located in the southern part of West Papua Province, along the southern edge of the so-called "bird's head peninsula" (kepala burung), and holds a strategically important geographical position: according to Indonesian sources, it is relatively close to the city of Ambon, which provides shorter connections than other Papuan cities in the region. The boundaries of Kabupaten Fak-Fak are marked by Bintuni Bay to the north, the Arafura Sea to the south, the Seram Sea and Berau Bay to the west, and Kabupaten Kaimana to the east and south. The kabupaten's most renowned characteristic is nutmeg cultivation: the region is also known as the "City of Nutmeg" (Kota Pala), as nutmeg has traditionally been the defining agricultural product of the area. The kabupaten's recorded population in mid-2025 was approximately 94,895 people. Kaburbur itself is a smaller, sparsely documented rural settlement that does not appear as an independent entry in currently available public databases; its exact population and internal infrastructure are not yet known from separate sources.
Real estate and investment
No settlement-level real estate market data is available for Kaburbur. Broader context is provided by data at the Kabupaten Fak-Fak level: according to Indonesian sources, approximately 722 hectares of residential and housing areas were in use in the kabupaten in 2003, indicating a regency with relatively low building density and fundamentally rural character. Nutmeg cultivation and associated agricultural use represent the dominant economic activities in the region. From an investment perspective, Kabupaten Fak-Fak, and thus Kaburbur's district, lies on the periphery of the Indonesian real estate market: major development projects and capital investments are concentrated primarily around Bali, Java, and the larger Sumatran cities. In Indonesia, foreigners' real estate acquisition opportunities are legally restricted: full ownership (Hak Milik) is reserved for Indonesian citizens, while foreigners may at most hold limited-duration usage rights (Hak Pakai) or employ long-term rental arrangements. This general Indonesian regulation naturally applies to Kaburbur's district as well.
Safety and security
No independent, verifiable data is available regarding Kaburbur's safety and security. Kabupaten Fak-Fak is generally known as one of the smaller, more rural kabupatens in West Papua Province, and like the Papuan region as a whole, is characterized by the predominant role of local community life and tribal traditions. Aggregate crime statistics published by Indonesian authorities for Papua Barat Province as a whole do not form part of the source material used for this article, so specific data cannot be provided. For safety assessments to inform travel decisions, it is advisable to consult current travel advisories issued by one's own country's foreign ministry, which provide regularly updated province- and region-level information.
Tourist attractions
The available source material contains no specific information on named tourist attractions in Kaburbur or Kecamatan Kayauni, making it impossible to reliably identify individual sites at this level. Regarding the broader Kabupaten Fak-Fak area, it can be noted with certainty that the kabupaten's physical geography is characterized by the Arafura Sea coastline, the interface zone with the Seram Sea, and the interior Papuan rainforest landscape. Through its nutmeg cultivation tradition, the kabupaten may possess local points of interest from an agricultural and cultural-historical perspective. Kaburbur itself, given its small rural character, is likely not a destination for organized tourism; travelers who may visit the region should expect Fak-Fak city, the kabupaten's administrative center, to serve as the nearest service and commercial hub.
Summary
Kaburbur is a small, publicly sparsely documented Papuan settlement belonging to Kecamatan Kayauni and Kabupaten Fak-Fak in West Papua Province. Based on data available at the kabupaten level, the region is fundamentally rural and agricultural in character, with nutmeg cultivation as its primary economic feature. Regarding Kaburbur's real estate market, safety and security characteristics, and tourist attractions, no independent, reliable data is accessible; broader regional information provides the framework for assessment. For planned visits or investments, on-site orientation and current official information are recommended.

