Live SOL-IDR rate from Phemex spot, with USD-IDR foreign-exchange from a daily-refreshed reference rate. Indonesia has one of Southeast Asia's most active retail crypto markets, with regulatory oversight under Bappebti (the commodity-futures regulator).
Pre-calculated at the live rate of 1 SOL = Rp1.451.385 IDR.
SOL-IDR has retail volume on INDODAX, Pintu, Tokocrypto, and Reku. Indonesia's 0.21% round-trip exchange-collected tax applies identically to SOL trades. Solana's faster transaction settlement than Ethereum has made it a popular network for Indonesian retail interested in DeFi participation, layering use-case demand on top of pure price-exposure interest.
Solana is a high-throughput blockchain that's become the dominant network for fast, cheap on-chain trading and a meaningful share of stablecoin transfers. SOL-fiat pairs are liquid on the larger exchanges but spreads can be a few basis points wider than BTC's on the same venue. The chain processes thousands of transactions per second at sub-cent fees — a structural difference from ETH that's reflected in the kind of activity SOL holders typically use it for (memecoins, perpetuals, NFT mints).
The rupiah was introduced in 1946 to replace the Netherlands East Indies guilder during Indonesia's independence struggle. Hyperinflation in the 1960s required a 1000:1 redenomination; subsequent decades saw further sustained depreciation against the dollar, though Bank Indonesia stabilised the currency progressively after the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. Bank Indonesia, the central bank, has run a flexible inflation-targeting regime since 2005. The rupiah currently trades around 16,000 per US dollar, having moved between roughly 13,500 and 17,000 over the past five years — relatively contained by emerging-market standards. Indonesia's resource exports (palm oil, coal, nickel, natural gas) provide an external balance buffer.
Used in: Indonesia exclusively. The rupiah serves the world's fourth-largest population (over 280 million) across more than 17,000 islands. Some Indonesian island provinces near Singapore (Riau, Batam) accept Singapore dollars in tourist economies, but the rupiah remains the only legal tender.
Indonesia has one of Southeast Asia's most active retail crypto markets, with regulatory oversight under Bappebti (the commodity-futures regulator). IDR-pair liquidity is dominated by domestic exchanges — INDODAX, Pintu, Tokocrypto — which collectively handle the bulk of rupiah-denominated crypto volume. Bali, Jakarta, and Surabaya are the heaviest user bases.
Domestic Bappebti-licensed exchanges include INDODAX (founded 2014, Indonesia's largest), Pintu, Tokocrypto (operated through Binance), and Reku. Foreign-domiciled exchanges accessible via VPN typically lack direct IDR rails. Tax treatment: a 0.1% income tax on every crypto sale (collected by the exchange at point of disposal) plus 0.11% VAT on each purchase — among the simplest crypto tax regimes in Asia, though it adds about 0.21% friction per round-trip. No capital-gains-style annual filing is required for retail. Domestic-bank rails (BCA, Mandiri, BRI) settle to exchanges in minutes via instant transfer (free under most account types). The crypto market's overall structure — exchange-collected taxes, regulator-supervised venues, no banking blocks — makes Indonesia one of the more frictionless jurisdictions in Asia for retail conversion.
Indonesia is one of Southeast Asia's most retail-active crypto markets — around 12-15% of adults hold some crypto, concentrated in the urban middle class of Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, and the digital-nomad communities of Bali. The Bappebti supervisory framework (commodity-futures regulator with crypto jurisdiction) is widely regarded as one of the more retail-friendly in Asia: licensed exchanges, exchange-collected taxes that remove individual filing complexity, and bank rails that integrate cleanly with crypto on-ramps. Stablecoin usage has grown rapidly as a savings hedge against rupiah volatility — particularly USDT and USDC held off-exchange. Bitcoin maximalism is muted; the dominant attitude is utility-driven (remittances, savings, USD-exposure-without-banking-friction). Indonesian retail typically uses smaller position sizes than Western markets but trades more frequently. The 0.21% round-trip exchange-collected tax is among the simplest globally — no annual filings, no rate uncertainty, just a small predictable friction baked into every trade.
1 SOL is worth Rp1.451.385 IDR at the current spot rate. The rate updates every minute against the Phemex price feed and the USD-IDR foreign-exchange rate refreshes hourly from a public reference source. Prices on individual exchanges differ by a few basis points owing to spread and venue-specific liquidity, but the spot rate above is a reliable reference point.
Yes, holding and trading Solana are legal in Indonesia. Indonesia is one of Southeast Asia's most retail-active crypto markets — around 12-15% of adults hold some crypto, concentrated in the urban middle class of Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, and the digital-nomad communities of Bali. See the regional context block above for the full picture on tax treatment, exchange access, and any restrictions on using SOL as a means of payment.
The exchange landscape for SOL-IDR in Indonesia is summarised in detail in the section above. Domestic Bappebti-licensed exchanges include INDODAX (founded 2014, Indonesia's largest), Pintu, Tokocrypto (operated through Binance), and Reku. Use the converter widget above to size your purchase against the current rate before opening the exchange.