Jakarta · Fees & Costs
Under $10,000 a year for an international school in Jakarta gets you into a different market from the one most expat families picture. The schools at this price point serve a different audience - primarily Indonesian families and long-term residents choosing an international curriculum over the national system - and they operate on fundamentally different economics. Go in with clear expectations.
Written by Mia Windsor · Originally published: 24 February 2026 · 5 min read
TL;DR
- Under $10,000 a year at the senior end, five schools make the cut: SIS Kelapa Gading, Bina Bangsa, GMIS, Mentari Bintaro, and Mutiara Harapan Islamic School
- These schools serve predominantly Indonesian families. Expat enrolment exists but is not the primary audience
- Lower fees mean lower teacher salaries - which means a different calibre of applicant for teaching positions. This is the core trade-off
- All five offer recognised international exit qualifications - Cambridge IGCSEs, A-levels, or IB Diploma
- If your budget ceiling is $10,000, these are your options. Understand what each one offers before deciding
In this article
- What $10,000 a year gets you
- Schools under $10,000
- What you are trading off
- FAQs
What $10,000 a Year Gets You
Jakarta's international school market runs from around $5,000 at the bottom to over $30,000 at the top. The schools most expat families hear about - JIS, BSJ, ISJ - charge $24,000-$32,000 at primary and secondary level once capital levies are included. The premium bracket is real.
At under $10,000, you are in a bracket where the schools are typically Indonesian-founded SPK institutions offering a recognised international curriculum - IB, Cambridge, or a national-plus blend - at fee levels that reflect local rather than expatriate salary economics. The student body is majority Indonesian, the campus infrastructure is more modest, and the teaching staff is drawn from a different salary pool.
None of that makes them bad schools. Some have been operating for decades and hold legitimate international accreditations. But the experience is different from what a family transferring from a British or American school abroad will expect, and the teaching quality - on average - correlates with what the fee structure can support.
Schools Under $10,000
Fee ranges below use the high-end figure - the most expensive year group at each school, not the nursery entry fee. These are the schools where even senior secondary stays at or under $10,000 a year.
| School | Location | Curriculum / Exit Quals | Annual Fees (high end) |
|---|---|---|---|
| SIS Kelapa Gading | North Jakarta | Cambridge IGCSE, IB Diploma | ~$10,000 |
| Bina Bangsa School | West Jakarta | Cambridge IGCSE, A-levels | ~$9,300 |
| GMIS | Central Jakarta | IB (all 4 programmes), Cambridge IGCSE | ~$8,600 |
| Mentari Bintaro | Greater Jakarta | Cambridge IGCSE, IB Diploma | ~$8,000 |
| Mutiara Harapan Islamic School | Greater Jakarta | Cambridge IGCSE, A-levels | ~$8,000 |
All figures approximate. Verify directly with each school.
SIS Kelapa Gading
SIS Kelapa Gading is part of the wider SIS (Singapore Intercultural School) group and sits right on the $10,000 line at senior secondary. It offers a Cambridge pathway through primary and IGCSEs, with the IB Diploma available for the final two years. For North Jakarta families, geography alone makes it worth knowing about - most international schools cluster in the south. Verify current IB authorisation status and the specifics of the IB DP offering before shortlisting.
Bina Bangsa School
Bina Bangsa is a Christian school with multiple campuses across Jakarta. It runs a Singapore-influenced curriculum with Cambridge qualifications - IGCSEs and A-levels - as exit pathways. At 2,000+ students across campuses it has scale, and the Christian community around the school is active. Fees stay under $10,000 even at A-level stage. Worth visiting if West Jakarta works for your commute and the Christian ethos aligns.
GMIS (Gandhi Memorial Intercontinental School)
GMIS is the most established school in this bracket by decades. Over 70 years old, it holds IB World School authorisation for all four IB programmes - a breadth of IB offering that only a handful of Jakarta schools can match. It also offers Cambridge IGCSE as a parallel pathway and has Indian Board accreditation.
The student body is drawn primarily from Indonesian, Indian, Korean and Chinese families, reflecting its founding heritage. The campus is in Kemayoran - central, but not in the South Jakarta cluster where most expat families live. Ask about class sizes, teacher qualifications, and recent IB and IGCSE results before shortlisting.
Mentari Intercultural School Bintaro
Mentari Bintaro is the more affordable of the Mentari campuses (the Jakarta campus in Kebayoran Baru runs higher, topping out around $14,000). It offers Cambridge through primary and IGCSEs, with the IB Diploma at senior secondary. For families in the Bintaro and South Tangerang corridor, it is one of the few options that keeps senior fees under $10,000 while still delivering recognised international exit qualifications.
Mutiara Harapan Islamic School
Mutiara Harapan fills a specific gap: Cambridge qualifications combined with Islamic values education at a price point that stays under $10,000 through A-levels. For Muslim families who want internationally recognised exit qualifications and a faith-based school environment - without the fees of schools like Al Jabr ($12,000) - it is the main option. Verify the current A-level subject range and university destinations directly.
Just outside the cut
Sampoerna Academy ($11,000 high end), Global Sevilla ($11,000), and Tzu Chi School ($11,000) all sit just above the $10,000 line. Sampoerna Academy is notable for charging no building or development fees - unusual in Jakarta. Global Sevilla offers Cambridge through to A-levels across two campuses (Puri Indah and Pulo Mas). Tzu Chi runs Cambridge Primary into IB MYP and IB Diploma with a trilingual programme. If you can stretch the budget slightly, all three are worth a look.
What You Are Trading Off
The honest version. Lower fees fund lower salaries. Lower salaries attract a different pool of teaching candidates. That is how labour markets work.
Teaching staff. A school charging $5,000-$8,000 a year cannot pay what JIS or BSJ pays. The teachers who apply to lower-fee schools are - on average - less experienced internationally, less likely to hold qualifications from the country whose curriculum the school offers, and more likely to be locally hired. There are exceptions. But the odds are different.
Specialist provision. Learning support, counselling, EAL, dedicated music and sports coaching - these require additional specialist staff. Schools in this bracket run leaner. If your child needs any form of additional support, ask specifically what is available and who delivers it.
Facilities. Campuses at lower fee points tend to be more compact. Fewer playing fields, smaller libraries, less purpose-built infrastructure. Jakarta's land costs are high, and schools at this price point manage tighter capital budgets.
Peer group. The student body at under-$10,000 schools is predominantly Indonesian, with significant South and East Asian communities. If your family is looking for a diverse expat cohort - European, American, Australian families - you will find fewer of them at this fee level. Whether that matters depends on what you want from the school community.
Accreditation. All five schools in this article offer recognised international exit qualifications - Cambridge IGCSEs, A-levels, or IB Diploma. That is the baseline. Beyond that, check for CIS accreditation, BSO inspection reports, and current IB or Cambridge centre status. See our accreditation guide for what to look for.
