Four coastlines. One archipelago of salt.
Tap an island to meet the farmers, see the harvest, and trace the mineral signature behind every jar.

Bali
On Bali's southeast coast, the village of Kusamba has made salt the same way since before the Majapahit kingdom. Black volcanic sand soaks up seawater at dawn, the sun does its quiet work, and by afternoon the rake-and-gather begins.

Madura
Madura is Indonesia's historical salt basket. A women-led cooperative of forty harvesters opens the season at the peak of the dry monsoon, when the evaporation pans bloom into coarse, iron-rich crystals.

NTT
On Sabu, salt is currency. Salt is dowry. Salt is offered before a journey. Reef-protected bays produce some of the most delicate, mineral-rich flakes in the archipelago — naturally bright with zinc and selenium.

Amed
An endangered craft. Only a few dozen families in Amed still pour seawater into hollowed coconut logs at sunrise, then chase the pyramid crystals that form by evening. Soft, low in bitterness, and almost cinematic to watch.
Or start from the map.
The interactive Indonesia map lives on the homepage — every glowing province is a salt origin.
Open the map