Wise Card in Indonesia (2026): Simple Guide for Travelers and Expats
You just landed in Indonesia. You’re tired and hungry, and the last thing you want is to guess at exchange rates or wonder if your card will even work. So here’s the real question: Will the Wise card actually work in Indonesia? How much will it cost you, and can you even get one?
In the next few minutes, you’ll learn when the Wise card works smoothly, when it doesn’t, the hidden fees most travellers miss, and how to avoid the common payment traps in Indonesia. No fluff, no hype. Just the clear reality travellers and expats actually face in 2026.
But before we talk about spending, there’s one important rule about who can actually get the Wise card, and it decides everything that comes next.
The 30-second reality check (before you get excited)
Ти можеш create a Wise account for free. That part is easy. But getting the Wise card itself depends on where you live. Wise only lets residents of certain places order the card, such as the UK, US, EEA, Australia, or Singapore (and a few other regions).
So the simple rule is:
- Eligible country resident? Ти можеш create your free Wise account, order the card, and use it as a travel card for Indonesia.
- Living in Indonesia as your registered address? Card availability and features can be different, especially after Wise changed how its Indonesia e-wallet features worked in 2024.
That’s it. Now let’s talk about the fun part: how it works when you’re travelling to Indonesia.
What the Wise card actually does

Wise is a financial technology company that offers a multi-currency account. You can hold, convert, and send money in different currencies through the app. It often costs less than traditional banks, and you can add a Wise debit card for everyday spending and travel.
“Do I have to exchange money first?”
Not always. If you already have the right local currency in your Wise balance, Wise just takes it. If you don’t, Wise can auto-convert from another balance using what it calls Smart Conversion (it picks the option with the lowest conversion fee).
So yes, the card lets you convert. You can convert your local currency before the trip, or let Wise convert at checkout. Either way, you’re aiming for that simple goal: local currency to spend in Indonesia, mostly Indonesian rupiah travel card style (IDR).
Using a Wise card in Indonesia for card payments
In big areas, such as airports, malls, hotels, and many shops and restaurants, you’ll find places that accept card payments. In those moments, the Wise card usually works like any other debit card.
But Indonesia is still very cash-friendly. Some small places only take cash. So it’s smart to plan for both: card payments when you can, and atm withdrawals when you need paper money for small buys.
One thing that can surprise you: a 3% “card fee”
Some businesses may try to add an extra fee, often around 3%, when you pay by card. A travel guide from BCD Travel notes that smaller merchants may impose an arbitrary 3% surcharge if they accept card payments.
At the same time, Indonesian payment rules say merchants are not supposed to pass a surcharge to the customer. DBS Indonesia even states that merchants are prohibited from charging consumers an extra “surcharge” for card transactions under Bank Indonesia regulation.
So what do you do if it happens?
Stay chill. Ask, “Is this a card surcharge or tax/service?” If they insist, you can switch to cash or choose another payment option. Keep your receipt.
Paying with your phone: Apple Pay and more
If you like tap-to-pay, this is where Wise feels modern. Wise supports adding the card to major mobile wallets, including:
- Apple Pay
- Google Pay
- Fitbit Pay
- Garmin Pay
That turns your phone into a travel card with phone setup. It’s basically “tapping a virtual travel money card” at checkout.
(Quick note: wallet support can depend on where your card was issued, so if a wallet option doesn’t show up, check Wise’s wallet support list for your region.)
Paying for Grab and Gojek (transport + food delivery)

Yes, many travellers add their Wise card as a payment method for rides and food. Wise even has guides on using Хапай! і Ґойк! in Bali, including steps like adding a card inside the app and using Wise to pay in IDR.
So your Wise card can cover:
- transport rides
- food delivery
- quick daily buys
That’s why expats call it a handy money card for Indonesia.
If a payment fails inside an app, don’t assume your card is “broken.” Some online merchants only accept locally issued cards, and Wise notes that this can happen with certain websites or merchants.
Cash in Indonesia: ATMs, fees, and the “choose IDR” rule

Even if you love cards, you’ll still want cash sometimes. The good news: you can withdraw IDR from ATMs in Indonesia using your Wise card, and you’ll usually get a fair rate compared to old-school exchange counters.
Wise markets access to 3 million ATMs worldwide for withdrawals.
Two types of ATM fees to watch
- Wise fees: Wise gives an allowance (like a limited number of free withdrawals and/or a free amount each month, depending on region), then charges after that.
- ATM owner fees: Some Indonesian ATMs add their own fee on the screen. Wise warns that third-party ATM fees can happen.
The Wise app ATM guide
Wise says the Wise app has a Travel hub and an in-app ATM guide where you can find an ATM and check the “free ATM fees network” info.
So if you’re at the airport or walking around new streets, open the Wise app, look for a Travel hub, and use the ATM guide.
The DCC trap: always choose local currency
Sometimes an ATM asks: “Pay in USD or IDR?” Always pick IDR. Choosing your home currency can trigger a worse exchange rate. Wise’s guidance is clear: decline conversion and stick to the local currency.
That’s how you enjoy the exchange rate you expect, instead of paying extra hidden costs.
Safety basics: freeze it fast if something feels wrong
Lose your card? Think it’s stolen? Wise says you can temporarily freeze your Wise card to stop new payments and ATM withdrawals. Then you can unfreeze it if you find it, or replace it.
Also, if a transaction gets declined, Wise says the fastest way to understand why is to check the payment in your activity feed in the app.
Is Wise really cheaper than banks?
Often, yes, especially when you compare exchange markups.
Wise explains that banks may say “0% fee,” but hide costs in the exchange rate markup.
Wise also points to independent price-comparison research (conducted in specific countries) in which Wise was found to be up to 5x cheaper for spending abroad than the bank accounts in that study.
So the exact number depends on your country and the comparison set, but the direction is real: fewer hidden markups, clearer fees.
If you live in Indonesia: still useful, even if the card part is tricky
If your goal is “spending and receiving Indonesian” money, remember: the card isn’t the only tool. Wise also supports sending IDR to Indonesian bank accounts and to major mobile wallets like GoPay, DANA, OVO, and ShopeePay (with limits that depend on the route).
And if you’re wondering “long does it take?” Wise’s own corridor page says many transfers can be very fast, with most arriving in under a day (timing depends on how you pay and the route).
That can help with “receiving Indonesian rupiah abroad” in a practical way: family abroad can send funds into Indonesia, or you can handle bills by sending to a local банківський рахунок.
Quick checklist
Before you go:
- Create a free Wise account.
- If you’re eligible, order the card (Wise will verify details like name and адреса).
- Add the card to Apple Pay / Google Pay (and Fitbit/Garmin if you use them).
- In the Wise app, open Travel hub and use the ATM guide.
- Plan for both card і cash.
On the ground:
- Сплатіть IDR when asked.
- Expect some places to be cash-only, and a few may try a 3% card surcharge even though rules say they shouldn’t.
- If the card goes missing, freeze it right away.
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