Since 2010, the Global Law Experts annual awards have been celebrating excellence, innovation and performance across the legal communities from around the world.
posted 3 hours ago
Understanding how to acquire a fintech company in Indonesia requires navigating a multi‑layered regulatory framework that touches corporate law, financial‑services supervision, competition rules, foreign‑investment screening and data protection. Indonesia’s fintech sector, spanning peer‑to‑peer (P2P) lending, e‑money issuance, payment switching, digital banking and crypto‑asset trading, is supervised by several regulators, each with distinct approval gates that must be cleared before, during or after closing. This guide sets out the complete fintech M&A process Indonesia buyers and sellers will encounter in 2026, from eligibility screening through to post‑close licence transfer and integration.
A fintech acquisition in Indonesia can be structured as a share purchase (acquiring the majority or entirety of a target company’s equity) or, less commonly, as an asset purchase. Because most fintech businesses operate under regulated licences issued to a specific legal entity, a share purchase is the dominant structure, it preserves the licence‑holding entity and avoids the need to apply for an entirely new licence.
The regulators involved depend on the target’s licence type:
Each licence type, P2P lending, e‑money, payment switching, crypto‑asset trading, carries its own regulatory approval conditions. Acquirers must map these gates at the outset and build them into the transaction timeline as conditions precedent to closing.
Before issuing a letter of intent, buyers must confirm they are eligible to acquire the target and that the target itself is in a condition suitable for regulatory transfer. The fintech acquisition Indonesia requirements differ depending on whether the buyer is a domestic entity or a foreign investor.
The first screening question is whether the target operates under a licence that imposes change‑of‑control conditions. The main licence categories and their primary regulators are:
If the target holds any of these licences, the acquisition will require regulatory notification or prior approval as a condition of closing.
Foreign ownership of Indonesian fintech companies is governed by Perpres No.10/2021 on Investment Business Fields, which classifies business activities as open, conditionally open, or closed to foreign investment. Many fintech sub‑activities are open to majority or full foreign ownership, but certain categories, particularly those involving sensitive payment infrastructure, may carry conditions or caps. Acquirers must verify the target’s specific business classification (KBLI code) against the current Perpres list and register the investment through BKPM’s Online Single Submission (OSS) system.
Before committing resources to a full due‑diligence exercise, acquirers should screen for:
The fintech M&A process Indonesia acquirers must follow runs through seven principal stages. The timeline table at the end of this section consolidates typical durations for each stage.
The acquirer’s legal and regulatory team, together with local Indonesian counsel, maps every licence held by the target and identifies which regulators must be notified or must grant approval. This stage includes:
The LOI or term sheet should include:
Due diligence for a regulated fintech acquisition must cover standard corporate and financial matters and an additional layer of regulatory diligence:
After diligence confirms no deal‑breaking issues, the parties negotiate and execute the share purchase agreement (SPA). In parallel, counsel prepares regulatory filing packages:
Once filed, each regulator follows its own review process:
Closing occurs once all CPCs are satisfied. Key closing actions include:
Even after closing, the acquirer must complete operational integration and confirm regulatory compliance:
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory scoping & pre‑deal calls | Buyer legal + local counsel + regulator liaison | 2–4 weeks |
| LOI with regulatory CPCs | Buyer counsel / seller counsel | 1–4 weeks |
| Full due diligence (legal + regulatory + AML/PDP) | Buyer diligence team + external advisors | 30–90 days |
| Prepare regulatory filing packages (KPPU / OJK / BI / BKPM) | Seller & buyer counsel; regulatory consultant | 2–6 weeks |
| KPPU merger notification review | KPPU (filing by buyer/seller) | Variable; multiple stages, verify current timelines with KPPU |
| OJK / BI licence re‑authorisation or transfer | OJK/BI (application by acquirer or continuing entity) | 4–12+ weeks (depends on licence type and completeness) |
| Closing (subject to approvals) | Parties / escrow agent / notary | Same day as final regulatory clearance |
| Post‑close integration & compliance checks | Acquirer operations & compliance | 1–6 months |
The documents needed for regulatory filings, due diligence and closing form an extensive checklist. The table below sets out the core documents, who issues them and practical notes on format and validity.
| Document | Notes (Issuer / Format / Validity) |
|---|---|
| Articles of Association, shareholders register, Deeds of Establishment | Issued by company / notary, certified copies; required for BKPM, OJK, KPPU and closing |
| Audited financial statements (last 2 years) | Issued by company / external auditor, audited figures commonly required by all regulators |
| Regulatory licences (P2P, e‑money, payment switching, crypto) | Issued by OJK / BI, scanned and certified copies, including licence numbers and conditions |
| Regulatory correspondence (enforcement letters, show‑cause notices) | Obtained from regulators or target’s legal files, critical for regulatory diligence |
| AML/KYC files on management and shareholders | Company records, passport/ID, proof of address, PEP screening; necessary for OJK fit‑and‑proper reviews |
| Data protection records and DPIAs | Company data protection policies, impact assessments, vendor contracts, required under UU No.27/2022 |
| Customer contracts and terms of service | Needed to assess re‑consent or notice obligations post‑acquisition |
| Material contracts (vendor agreements, tech licences, custody) | Reveals technology‑sourcing risk, cloud‑provider dependencies and data‑localisation compliance |
| Board and shareholder resolutions for change of control | Notarised minutes, required for company registry filings and BKPM updates |
| KPPU merger notification form and supporting documents | KPPU electronic filing forms, see KPPU guidance for required attachments |
| Powers of attorney and authorisation letters | Issued by company / signatory, necessary for regulatory filings and SPA execution |
The overall acquisition timeline for a fintech company in Indonesia typically ranges from 6 to 12 months, measured from initial regulatory scoping to completion of post‑close integration. The main variable is the speed of regulatory approvals: a simple share purchase of an unlicensed fintech entity may close in 3–4 months, while a transaction involving an OJK‑licensed P2P platform and a KPPU filing may extend to 12 months or longer.
| Phase | Typical Calendar Time from Project Start |
|---|---|
| Regulatory scoping & LOI | 1–2 months |
| Due diligence | 1–3 months (concurrent with scoping tail‑end) |
| Regulatory filings & regulator reviews (KPPU / OJK / BI / BKPM) | 1–6 months (filings may overlap) |
| Closing | Immediate upon fulfilment of all CPCs |
| Post‑close licence transfer & integration | 1–6 months |
Key deadline considerations that shape the acquisition timeline include:
Transaction costs for acquiring a fintech company in Indonesia span regulatory filing fees, professional advisory fees and potential tax liabilities. The table below provides illustrative ranges, all figures should be verified with the relevant regulator or adviser before being relied upon for budgeting purposes.
| Item | Typical Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| KPPU filing fee | Variable (nominal administrative fee), verify with KPPU | Electronic notification; complex reviews attract additional consultant and legal costs |
| OJK application / licence re‑authorisation fee | Variable (depends on licence type), verify with OJK | OJK publishes fee schedules for certain filing types; confirm directly with OJK |
| Bank Indonesia filing / processing fee | Variable, verify with BI | Fees depend on licence type, integration scope and technical review requirements |
| Legal and advisory fees | USD 50,000 – 500,000+ | Depends on deal size, complexity and number of regulatory workstreams; local counsel plus regulatory specialists recommended |
| Due‑diligence accountants / tax advisers | USD 20,000 – 200,000+ | Size and complexity dependent; cross‑border tax structuring increases cost |
| Notary and company registry fees | IDR administrative amounts (vary by service) | Notarial deed execution and Ministry of Law filings |
| Integration / remediation reserve | 1–10% of deal value | Typical escrow or holdback sizing for regulatory or compliance remediation |
Tax considerations that affect the overall cost of the transaction include stamp duty on share transfer documents, potential withholding tax on cross‑border payments to foreign sellers, and corporate income tax implications arising from any gain on the sale. Value‑added tax may apply to advisory services. Acquirers should obtain a tax opinion from Indonesian tax counsel before finalising the transaction structure.
Several regulatory developments in the 2024–2026 period directly affect how fintech acquisitions are structured, approved and integrated:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Putu Raditya Nugraha at UMBRA – Strategic Legal Solutions, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Member
No results available
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.