At the port of Tanjung Perak, one of Southeast Asia's most active, thousands of shipping containers stack under a blazing sun. Surabaya never tried to be beautiful — it tried to be effective. Indonesia's second city, three million inhabitants, industrial and logistics hub for the entire eastern half of the archipelago, Surabaya is the city that keeps the Indonesian economy turning while Jakarta plays the role of political showcase. And for an expat who has a concrete reason to be there — business, industry, logistics, research — it offers something Jakarta can no longer deliver: a city of this size, at this infrastructure level, without the infernal traffic, without the record pollution, and at half the price.
Surabaya in 2026 — the second city nobody thinks to evaluate
Surabaya suffers from a persistent image deficit. It's not in travel guides. It has no viral Instagram hashtag. Nomads fly over it to land in Bali. Executives on assignment pass through it to inspect their East Java factories. And yet, the city of Surabaya — or Sby in locals' shorthand — is one of the few Asian metropolises that simultaneously offers: regional capital-level urban infrastructure, secondary-city cost of living, remarkable safety, and a dense industrial fabric that generates real business opportunities.
It's a city for profiles with a mission. Not a city for wandering — a city for building. And for those who choose it deliberately, the reward is considerable: quality of life clearly superior to Jakarta at a budget 30 to 40% lower, in a city where traffic is manageable and where the expat community — primarily made up of industry executives, regional subsidiary directors and university professors — is discreet but very tight-knit.
Surabaya is the entry point for goods across all of eastern Indonesia (Kalimantan, Sulawesi, Nusa Tenggara, Maluku, Papua). Tanjung Perak port handles around 30% of Indonesian maritime freight. The city also hosts East Java's largest industrial estate (PIER, Pasuruan Industrial Estate Rembang).
The city — identity & soul
Surabaya is a city of architectural contrasts that tell Indonesia's history in layers. The Kota Lama (old town) district, around the Kalimas river, is an open-air museum of the Dutch colonial era: 17th-century red-brick warehouses, Art Nouveau colonial bank façades, trading houses that served as spice trading centres for two centuries. A few streets away, the Arab quarter (Jalan Ampel) and Chinatown (Jalan Kembang Jepun) testify to centuries of commercial mixing between Java, the Middle East and China.
Surabaya is also the city where one of Indonesia's founding battles for independence took place. On 10 November 1945, popular Surabayan militias held off British troops — sent to re-establish Dutch control — for several weeks. The event is commemorated every year as Hari Pahlawan (Heroes' Day), a national holiday. Surabaya's pride is historical, visceral, and very much present in its inhabitants' identity.
The food scene is, in the view of many connoisseurs, the finest in Java. Rawon (black beef soup made with keluak, an Indonesian nut that gives it its unique dark colour), rujak cingur (a salad of sliced beef muzzle with fruit and spiced sauce), lontong balap (compressed rice, bean sprouts, fried tofu) — these Surabayan specialities are gastronomic experiences that food lovers seek out specifically in this city.
Surabaya doesn't sell you a dream. It offers you a deal: a serious, efficient life, far cheaper than Jakarta, in a city where people actually work.
Neighbourhoods — where to live?
Daily life & housing
Surabaya's rental market is significantly more accessible than Jakarta without sacrificing quality. A studio or 1-bedroom apartment in the Gubeng or Darmo neighbourhoods rents for between $200 and $350 per month. A furnished apartment with pool in a recent building starts at $350–500. For a villa in Pakuwon or Citraland residential complexes, expect $500–900 monthly — 30 to 40% less than an equivalent in Jakarta or the SCBD.
Food is one of Surabaya's great pleasures. Local warungs serve meals for $1.50–3. Quality local cuisine restaurants (rawon, soto, bebek goreng) run $3–6 per person. The city's modern malls house well-stocked food courts and international chains for days when you want something different. Wonokromo market, one of Java's largest, is an experience in itself and a source of fresh produce at rock-bottom prices.
Transport deserves attention. Surabaya has no metro — projects are in development but none operational in 2026. The scooter remains the most practical solution. Traffic jams exist but are far less severe than Jakarta — a typical 15 km journey takes 30 to 45 minutes at peak hour versus 1.5 to 2 hours in Jakarta. Gojek and Grab work well across the centre.
Working from Surabaya
Surabaya's digital infrastructure is solid in modern residential districts and business zones. Fibre is available (IndiHome, Biznet, MyRepublic) with typical speeds of 80 to 150 Mbps. Outages are rare in central areas. Coworking spaces exist but remain less developed than in Jakarta or Bali — Regus Surabaya, CoHive and several coworking cafés in the Gubeng area cover essential needs from $50–80 per month.
Surabaya's real work advantage isn't coworking — it's access to the real economy. The city is surrounded by industrial estates (PIER, SIER, KIEC) housing hundreds of manufacturing plants, food processing facilities, chemical production and logistics operations. For an industrial executive on assignment, a regional subsidiary director, a supply chain consultant or an international buyer, Surabaya is the most operationally efficient base in eastern Indonesia. Direct flights to Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong and Indonesia's major cities make Juanda International Airport (SUB) a well-connected regional hub.
Health & safety
Surabaya has one of Indonesia's best private healthcare systems outside Jakarta. Siloam Surabaya, Premier Surabaya and Mitra Keluarga hospitals offer quality care with English-speaking doctors across most specialities. Costs remain very competitive — a specialist consultation runs $30–70. For serious cases requiring complex interventions, Surabaya's best surgeons and equipment meet Southeast Asian regional standards — better than Yogyakarta, slightly below Singapore for the rarest cases. International health insurance remains recommended, but medical evacuation to Singapore is less frequently necessary than elsewhere in Indonesia.
Surabaya is one of Indonesia's safest cities. The dense community fabric (jaringan kampung) and strong Surabayan civic identity create an environment poorly suited to street crime. Pickpockets and scooter theft remain the most common incidents — rare in expat residential neighbourhoods. The city has seen no major security incident targeting expats for many years.
Anecdotes & History
On 10 November 1945, sixty days after Sukarno's proclamation of Indonesian independence, British troops landed in Surabaya with orders to rearm and repatriate Japanese soldiers and return the city to Dutch control. What they didn't know was that they were about to face one of the most tenacious resistance efforts in all of Asian decolonisation. Tens of thousands of Surabayans — young men, workers, students, traders — organised into militias (laskar) under neighbourhood leaders and galvanised by the radio harangues of local warlord Bung Tomo, held out for three full weeks. The British lost their commanding general (Mallaby, killed in an ambush). The battle cost tens of thousands of Indonesian lives, but Surabaya's resistance shocked the world and accelerated international recognition of Indonesian independence. November 10th is today Hari Pahlawan — Heroes' Day — Indonesia's national holiday. Its origin: the streets of Surabaya.
Chairil Anwar (1922–1949) is the founding poet of modern Indonesian literature — the man who transformed Bahasa Indonesia into a literary language capable of carrying inner revolt and brutal modernity. Born in Medan but deeply linked to Java and the independence generation, he wrote most of his work between 1942 and 1949 — seven years, around a hundred poems, a death at 26 from tuberculosis. His poem "Aku" ("I"), written in 1943, is an individual's declaration of independence against the world: Aku ini binatang jalang / dari kumpulannya terbuang — "I am a wild beast / cast out from my pack." His work, translated worldwide, remains the starting point of any conversation about Indonesian literature.
Who is Surabaya right for?
The profile Surabaya is built for. Access to East Java industrial zones, Tanjung Perak port, regional supply chains, multinational subsidiaries. The most efficient operational base in eastern Indonesia.
Possible but not optimal. Decent internet, low cost, safe city. But near-absence of a nomad community, few trendy coworking cafés and a more "business" than "lifestyle" urban atmosphere. For profiles who don't need a creative bubble.
Viable for a retiree who enjoys lively large cities and local gastronomy. Less immediate nature than Bali or Yogyakarta. Good private healthcare. The absence of a mature international community may weigh over the long term.
One of Java's best choices for expat families. Several quality international schools (Surabaya International School, Singapore School), secure residential complexes, competent hospitals, lower costs than Jakarta.
Surabaya: Jakarta without the drawbacks, for those with real work to do
Surabaya is one of Southeast Asia's most underrated cities in the expat imagination. It's not a destination — it's an operational base. For anyone with a concrete professional reason to be in eastern Indonesia, it offers the country's most favourable equation: regional capital infrastructure, secondary-city costs, remarkable safety, and direct access to the real economy of the archipelago.
What Surabaya cannot offer: the atmosphere, creativity and lifestyle of Bali. The deep cultural life of Yogyakarta. Jakarta's international startup ecosystem. It's not a city for reinventing yourself — it's a city for executing. If your mission is clear, Surabaya is probably the best city in Indonesia for accomplishing it.
✓ Strengths
- Eastern Indonesia's industrial and logistics hub
- 30–40% cheaper than Jakarta, comparable quality
- Manageable traffic — nothing like Jakarta
- Remarkable safety for a city of 3M people
- Local gastronomy among Java's finest
- Solid international schools — great family choice
- Juanda SUB airport well-connected regionally
✗ Limitations
- Near-absence of international nomad community
- No metro — scooter/car essential
- Intense tropical heat and humidity year-round
- Little tourist or lifestyle appeal within the city
- Moderate pollution — industrial in some areas
- Limited nightlife compared to Jakarta or Bali
- Uneven internet outside premium residential zones
Frequently asked questions
Is Surabaya really worth considering over Jakarta for a professional expat posting?
What is rawon exactly — and where should you eat it?
Can you do day trips from Surabaya — Mount Bromo, Madura island?
What international schools are available for expat families in Surabaya?
WiggMap — Indicative data: Lamudi.co.id / OLX property Jan. 2026, BPS Jawa Timur 2024, Speedtest Ookla 2025, IQAir Surabaya 2025. Rents in USD (reference IDR/USD rate). This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, real estate or legal advice.