KPK Reports Over 96,000 Officials Have Yet to Submit LHKPN, Deadline 31 March
The Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) has recorded that tens of thousands of state organisers have yet to report their assets ahead of the LHKPN submission deadline for 2025. As of 11 March 2026, the compliance rate stands at only 67.98%.
KPK spokesperson Budi Prasetyo revealed that out of a total of 431,468 required reporters, more than 96,000 state organisers have not yet submitted their State Organisers’ Wealth Reports (LHKPN).
“This achievement is expected to improve before the set deadline, given that the LHKPN is a crucial instrument for promoting transparency and accountability in state administration,” Budi stated to journalists in Jakarta on Thursday.
He explained that all required reporters are obligated to submit their LHKPN accurately, completely, and on time no later than 31 March 2026 via the official KPK website.
“This obligation applies to leaders of state institutions, cabinet members, heads of government and non-structural bodies, regional heads, judges, directors of state-owned enterprises (BUMN) and regional state-owned enterprises (BUMD) across Indonesia, as well as other officials,” he said.
According to Budi, the category of “other officials” refers to parties with strategic functions in state administration, as regulated under KPK Regulation Number 3 of 2024. This group includes legislative leaders and members, heads of state universities, and special staff.
The KPK, he continued, will conduct administrative verification on every incoming report before publishing it to the public. “If deemed incomplete, the state organiser or required reporter must correct and resubmit it within 14 calendar days from notification,” he clarified.
He added that compliance with LHKPN reporting is part of the personal responsibility of officials as well as an institutional commitment to building integrity.
“LHKPN compliance embodies the personal responsibility of state organisers and the institutional commitment to realising clean and corruption-free state administration,” he stated.
As a form of transparency, the KPK also provides public access to verified LHKPNs via their official website. This step is expected to encourage public oversight and strengthen corruption prevention efforts among state organisers.