Zameera
An Indonesian island coastline above a clear lagoon
Indonesia

Seventeen Thousand Islands. Most of Them Still Undiscovered.

Indonesia is the largest archipelago on earth, stretching across 5,000 kilometres of the equatorial Pacific and Indian Oceans. It contains more active volcanoes, more endemic species and more cultural diversity within its borders than almost any country on earth. Most visitors see one island. The ones who come back have begun to understand that they have barely started.

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Rice terraces carved into a hillside
Horses on clifftop savannah above the ocean
A remote Indonesian island seen from above
The Destination

An Archipelago That Rewards Those Who Go Further

The country spans seventeen thousand islands across a geography so vast that the western tip of Sumatra and the eastern edge of Papua are as far apart as London and Tehran. Each island carries its own language, its own food, its own relationship to the sea and the land and the centuries of civilisation that have shaped it. To understand Indonesia properly is to move through it with time, care and a willingness to let each place speak in its own way.

Bali earns its reputation. The rice terraces of Ubud, the temple ceremonies, the surf breaks of the Bukit Peninsula, the cooking that is unlike anything produced anywhere else in the region, all of it is real and all of it is worth experiencing properly. Yet the islands surrounding it reveal another side of the country. Komodo, where dragons the size of a man move through dry scrub above water that divers consider among the finest in the world. Sumba, where horses still run across clifftop savannah above beaches that have no infrastructure and receive almost no visitors. Raja Ampat in West Papua, where the marine biodiversity is the highest recorded anywhere on earth and the landscape above the water is its own kind of extraordinary.

The finest experiences in Indonesia depend on timing, sensitivity and a clear sense of place. The country is large enough and varied enough that the difference between a simple visit and an exceptional one is often found in the details, the right season, the right route and the moments most travellers never know to ask for.

Signature Experiences

Extraordinary Experiences Available on Request

Some of the most remarkable experiences we offer cannot be booked instantly, by their nature, they require a private conversation.

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The Zameera Collection

Experiences Crafted by Zameera

A series of original experiences, conceived and curated entirely by Zameera. Coming soon.

Zameera Collection
Experiences That Exist Nowhere Else
Zameera Collection

Experiences That Exist Nowhere Else

The Zameera Collection is a series of original journeys conceived, designed and operated entirely by Zameera, created for those who have seen much of the world and still believe it has more to offer.

Before You Go

What to Know About Sumba

The official language is Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia), spoken alongside regional languages such as the local Sumbanese tongues. The currency is the Indonesian rupiah (IDR). Cards are widely accepted in Bali and at NIHI Sumba, though Sumba itself remains a largely cash economy, with limited ATMs outside the airport towns of Tambolaka and Waingapu; it is sensible to carry rupiah in small denominations for villages and markets.

Sumba and Bali both observe Central Indonesia Time (WITA), UTC+8. Indonesia does not operate daylight saving, so the time remains constant throughout the year.

The dry season, from roughly April to October, offers the most settled weather, with sunny days, lower humidity and daytime temperatures generally between 25 and 30°C. June to September is the most reliable window. The wetter months from November to March bring greener landscapes and dramatic waterfalls, with occasional heavy downpours.

Most visitors enter Indonesia on a visa on arrival or electronic visa on arrival, valid for 30 days and extendable once for a further 30. A passport with at least six months' validity and proof of onward or return travel are required, and a digital arrival declaration applies at the main airports. Exact requirements vary by nationality, and your Zameera team will confirm the current rules for your passport before you travel.

Travellers arrive into Bali's Ngurah Rai International Airport (DPS) at Denpasar, then connect by a short onward flight, around ninety minutes, to Tambolaka (TMC) on Sumba. From there it is roughly a ninety-minute drive to NIHI Sumba; the resort includes return airport transfers. Private plane and helicopter charters from Bali can also be arranged, and your Zameera team will coordinate the full itinerary.

Resort life on Sumba is relaxed and informal, with lightweight, breathable clothing suited to the tropical climate. When visiting villages, markets or places of worship, modest dress is appreciated, with shoulders and knees covered. Shoes are removed before entering homes and sacred spaces.

A treehouse villa above the Indonesian forest and ocean
From the Journal

Indonesia, Through Our Eyes

For those who want to understand the destination before they arrive.

The Journal