BPJS Health Contribution Amounts as of 23 March 2026
The BPJS Health contribution amounts still refer to the current scheme, with different nominal values depending on the participant category. Amid discussions on tariff adjustments, the government ensures protection for low-income communities remains a priority. Referring to the regulations still in effect as of 23 March 2026, BPJS Health contributions are divided into several participant groups, from aid recipients to formal and independent workers. For participants in the Aid Recipient (PBI) group, contributions are fully paid by the government. This group includes poor and vulnerable communities, so they are not burdened with monthly costs. Meanwhile, for Wage Recipient Workers (PPU), whether in government or private institutions, contributions are set at 5% of monthly salary. The breakdown is 4% borne by the employer and 1% paid by the worker. For independent participants or Non-Wage Recipient Workers (PBPU), contributions are differentiated based on service class. For Class III, the contribution is Rp42,000 per person per month. However, part of this contribution is still subsidised by the government. Then, for Class II, the contribution is set at Rp100,000 per person per month. Whereas for Class I, the contribution is Rp150,000 per person per month. In addition, there are additional contributions for family members outside the main dependents, such as the fourth child and beyond, parents, up to in-laws, charged at 1% of salary per person per month. Certain groups such as veterans, independence pioneers, as well as widows, widowers, and orphans from those groups, also have their contributions covered by the government under a special scheme. The government sets the payment due date for contributions on the 10th of every month. Although there has been no late payment fine since 2016, sanctions still apply if participants are in arrears and then access inpatient services within 45 days after reactivation. Based on Presidential Regulation 64/2020, the service fine amount is 5% of the initial diagnosis cost of inpatient health services multiplied by the number of months in arrears, with provisions including a maximum of 12 months in arrears, a maximum fine of Rp30,000,000, and for PPU participants, the service fine payment is borne by the employer. Regarding plans for contribution increases, Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin recently emphasised that the policy will not target poor communities. He stated that the subsidy scheme will remain in place so that low-income groups continue to be covered by the state. He said the BPJS Health system is designed as a mutual aid-based social insurance, where participants with higher economic capacity also help finance health services for the less fortunate.