Indonesian last names are unlike family names almost anywhere else in the world. The Indonesian archipelago is home to over 300 distinct ethnic groups, and naming traditions vary dramatically from one island to the next, so what looks like a “surname” in one context might be a clan name, a patronymic, a title of nobility, or simply a single inherited name passed down through one specific community. Many Indonesians, particularly in Javanese culture, have historically used only one name total, with no surname at all.
The Indonesian last names that do exist are some of the most culturally layered in the world. Javanese, Batak, Minangkabau, Balinese, Sundanese, Madurese, Bugis, and Chinese-Indonesian communities all have distinct surname traditions with roots in Sanskrit, Dutch colonial records, Arabic, Old Javanese, Proto-Austronesian, and local ancestral languages. This list covers real Indonesian family names across those traditions, with honest notes on meaning, origin, and cultural context.
Javanese Last Names
Javanese naming culture is famously mononymic, single names are the norm, but surnames do appear, especially in more formally registered families, elite lineages, or those with noble (priyayi) heritage. Many carry Sanskrit roots filtered through Old Javanese.
Santoso
From Sanskrit via Old Javanese, meaning “peaceful” or “calm.” One of the most common Javanese surnames in formal administrative use, and a name that carries a quiet dignity.
Wijaya
Derived from Sanskrit vijayameaning “victory.” This is a widely used Javanese surname that also appears across Balinese and broader Indonesian contexts.
Kusuma
From Sanskrit kusumameaning “flower” or “blossom.” Often appears in compound aristocratic names and is especially associated with Javanese royal court culture.
Wibowo
From Sanskrit vibhavameaning “power,” “glory,” or “prosperity.” A solid, formal Javanese family name with strong associations with professional and official identity.
Susanto
Combines the Sanskrit-derived prefix su- (“good,” “well”) with santo (“peaceful”), making it a close relative of Santoso. Very common in Central and East Java.
Suryadi
From Sanskrit surya (“sun”) plus the Javanese suffix -adi (“noble” or “first”). The name literally evokes the noble sun, and it has the stately feel of old Javanese aristocratic naming.
Prabowo
From Sanskrit prabhavameaning “power,” “origin,” or “glorious emanation.” Well-known as a Javanese family name in military and political circles.
Hartono
Derived from Sanskrit artha (“wealth,” “meaning,” “purpose”) with the Javanese suffix -no. A practical, grounded surname that has been common across generations.
Nugroho
From Sanskrit anugrahameaning “grace” or “divine favor.” The compression into Nugroho is distinctly Javanese, and the name carries a spiritual warmth.
Budiono
Rooted in Sanskrit bodhi or buddhimeaning “wisdom” or “enlightenment.” The Javanese suffix -no softens and localizes it. A name with deep intellectual resonance.
Soekarno
From Sanskrit su- (“good”) and karna (“ear,” or the name of the Mahabharata hero Karna). Carried most famously by Indonesia’s founding president, this surname-style name is iconic in the country’s modern history.
Haryanto
Combines harya (a Javanese noble title) with the suffix -antoa common Javanese name-ending. It signals aristocratic lineage and is widely used as both a given name and family name.
Batak Last Names
The Batak peoples of North Sumatra, including the Toba, Karo, Simalungun, Pakpak, and Mandailing subgroups, have one of Indonesia’s most formalized surname traditions. Batak family names are called margapatrilineal clan identifiers that carry enormous social weight. A marga is never just a name; it is a statement of kinship, obligation, and identity.
Simatupang
One of the most recognized Toba Batak marga names. The prefix Si- is a common Batak nominal marker, and matupang relates to an ancestral clan identity. Widely known internationally through figures in Indonesian military history.
Hutabarat
A Toba Batak marga meaning, roughly, “from the western land” or “western settlement,” combining huta (village, settlement) with barat (west). One of the major Batak clans.
Panggabean
A significant Toba Batak marga. The name connects to the word gabeanrelating to a type of tree, and marks one of the prominent clan lineages of the Toba region.
Napitupulu
A Toba Batak marga whose literal meaning relates to “the one who came from Pitupulu.” Like many marga names, it encodes ancestral geography and migration history.
Situmorang
One of the five major clan groups within the Toba Batak system. Tumorang carries references to ancestral place and lineage, and the name is deeply embedded in Toba Batak oral tradition.
Sinaga
A widespread Toba Batak marga. The name is believed to derive from an ancestral figure, and it is one of the most common Batak surnames encountered across Indonesia.
Lumban Tobing
A compound Toba Batak marga. Lumban means “hamlet” or “village settlement,” and Tobing names the specific ancestral clan. Compound marga names like this one are characteristic of Batak naming depth.
Simbolon
A Toba Batak marga connected to the ancestral village of Simbolon on Samosir Island. The name carries strong geographic and genealogical memory.
Ginting
A major Karo Batak marga, one of the five founding clans of the Karo people. Karo marga names function similarly to Toba ones but reflect a distinct subgroup with its own dialect and customs.
Tarigan
Another of the five core Karo Batak marga names. It is one of the most common surnames among Karo Batak people and carries centuries of clan history.
Sembiring
The third of the five Karo marga. Sembiring is associated with clans that historically had connections to outside groups, including Indian traders, which is reflected in some of its sub-clan names.
Karo-Karo
One of the five foundational Karo marga, with the doubled form emphasizing identity with the Karo people themselves. This reduplicated structure is a distinctive feature of Karo naming.
Perangin-angin
The fifth of the core Karo marga, literally meaning “wind” or “breeze” in Karo. A poetic name that has been carried as a clan identifier for generations.
Nasution
A prominent Mandailing Batak marga, well known across Indonesia. The Mandailing Batak are Muslim, and their marga names often have a distinct character from those of Christian Toba or Karo Batak communities.
Lubis
Another major Mandailing Batak marga, extremely common across Sumatra and beyond. Simple, strong, and immediately recognizable as Mandailing in origin.
Harahap
A Mandailing Batak marga. The name is widespread across North Sumatra and has become one of the best-known Batak surnames in national Indonesian public life.
Siregar
A large Mandailing and Toba Batak marga. Siregar is among the most frequently encountered Batak surnames in Indonesia and carries a long lineage of community leadership.
Minangkabau Last Names
The Minangkabau people of West Sumatra are one of the world’s largest matrilineal societies. Their clan names, called sukuare inherited through the mother. These aren’t surnames in the Western sense, but they function as inherited family identifiers and are deeply meaningful.
Dt. Rajo Nan Sati
A traditional Minangkabau datuak (nobleman) title-name attached to a lineage. Title-names like this one are passed down within specific suku lines and carry both political and spiritual authority in Minangkabau adat (customary law).
Chaniago
One of the major Minangkabau suku names. It traces back to the founding clans of Minangkabau society and is widely used as a hereditary family identifier.
Piliang
One of the two founding clans (lareh) of the Minangkabau people, alongside Koto. Piliang suku names appear across West Sumatra and Minangkabau diaspora communities in Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia.
Tanjung
A widespread Minangkabau suku name, also meaning “cape” or “headland” in Malay/Indonesian. Used as both a place reference and a hereditary clan identifier.
Caniago
A variant spelling of Chaniago, used across different Minangkabau communities. Both forms are in genuine use as family names in West Sumatra.
Balinese Last Names
Balinese naming is one of the most structured in Indonesia. Names reflect caste (wangsa) and birth order simultaneously. First-born children are Wayan or Putu, second-born are Made or Kadek, third-born are Nyoman or Komang, and fourth-born are Ketut. Surnames or clan titles often indicate wangsa.
Agung
From Sanskrit, meaning “great” or “exalted.” Used as a title and surname element among the Balinese nobility, particularly those of the Ksatria (warrior-noble) wangsa.
Ngurah
A Balinese noble title meaning “lord” or “master,” derived from Old Javanese. It appears as a prefix in many Balinese names and functions as a clan/caste identifier for Ksatria families.
Ida Bagus
A compound title-name used by male members of the Brahmin (Brahmana) wangsa in Bali. Ida is a term of respect and Bagus means “handsome” or “fine.” Together they function as a hereditary caste marker passed through the male line.
Dewa
From Sanskrit devameaning “god” or “divine being.” Used as a hereditary title-name among Balinese Ksatria families and immediately signals noble lineage.
Anak Agung
A compound Balinese noble title meaning “great child” or “child of the great,” marking descent from royal Balinese families. It functions as an inherited name and social identifier for Ksatria nobility.
Gusti
A Balinese and Javanese noble title, from Sanskrit, indicating a person of the Wesia wangsa (merchant-noble caste). Used as a hereditary first element in names across Bali and parts of Java.
Sundanese Last Names
Sundanese people, from West Java, do use surnames more commonly than Javanese. Their family names often reflect Islamic influence (given the strong Muslim identity of the Sundanese), Sundanese language roots, and sometimes Dutch colonial administrative practices.
Suherman
A Sundanese surname combining the Sanskrit-Javanese prefix su- with the name element Hermanintroduced during Dutch colonial contact. A genuinely hybrid name that tells the history of colonial-era West Java.
Permana
From Sanskrit pramanameaning “measure,” “wisdom,” or “proof.” Used across Sundanese and Javanese families as a surname with intellectual and philosophical connotations.
Suhendar
A Sundanese surname with the su- prefix (“good”) combined with hendara local name element. Common in West Java as a family name passed through generations.
Koswara
A Sundanese surname with roots in Sanskrit kosa (treasury, sheath) and vara (noble, excellent). A dignified family name associated with Sundanese cultural and academic identity.
Nataprawira
A Sundanese aristocratic compound surname. Nata means “king” or “ruler” (Sanskrit) and prawira means “brave” or “hero” (Sanskrit pravira). Compound surnames like this one signal high-ranking Sundanese (menak) nobility.
Chinese-Indonesian Last Names
Chinese Indonesians, whose families arrived over many centuries from Fujian, Guangdong, and other southern Chinese provinces, traditionally carried Chinese surnames. After a 1967 government decree under Suharto, many were pressured to adopt Indonesian-sounding names. The surnames below are those that Chinese Indonesians actually use, both in their Chinese forms and the Indonesianized versions.
Tanaka / Tan
Tan is the Hokkien (Min Nan) pronunciation of the Chinese surname Chen (陳), one of the most common Chinese surnames in the world. Among Chinese Indonesians, Tan is extremely prevalent, especially among Hokkien-speaking Peranakan families.
Lim
The Hokkien rendering of the Chinese surname Lin (林), meaning “forest.” One of the most common Chinese-Indonesian surnames, particularly in Java and Sumatra.
Widjaja
The Indonesianized form that many Chinese Indonesians adopted, often replacing the Chinese surname Huang or others. Derived from Sanskrit vijaya (“victory”), it allowed families to maintain a meaningful name while complying with assimilation policies.
Tjandra
From Sanskrit candrameaning “moon.” This is a name Indonesian-Chinese families adopted as a Indonesianized surname, and it remains in use today as a genuine family name.
Susilo
From Javanese/Sanskrit meaning “good conduct” or “virtuous.” Adopted by some Chinese-Indonesian families as an Indonesianized surname and also used by Javanese families as a genuine name element.
Halim
From Arabic halimmeaning “gentle” or “forbearing.” Used as a surname by Muslim Indonesian families of various ethnic backgrounds, including Chinese Indonesians who converted to Islam.
Gontha / Gonta
A family name used in Chinese-Indonesian communities, particularly associated with prominent business families in Jakarta. The form reflects the adaptation of Chinese names into Indonesian phonology.
Arabic-Influenced and Islamic Last Names
Islam arrived in the Indonesian archipelago from the 13th century onward, and Arabic names entered Indonesian naming culture alongside it. Many Indonesian families of Hadhrami Arab descent, or families with strong Islamic scholarly traditions, carry surnames rooted in Arabic.
Al-Habsyi
An Arabic-origin surname indicating descent from Hadhramaut (Yemen), used by families of Hadhrami Arab descent in Indonesia. Habshi historically referred to an Abyssinian (Ethiopian) connection, but in Indonesia the Al-Habsyi name is associated with the Hadhrami Arab community and Sufi traditions.
Assegaf
A Hadhrami Arab surname, from Arabic al-saqqaf meaning “the roof-maker” or relating to a specific sayyid (descendant of the Prophet) lineage. Prominent in Arab-Indonesian communities in Java and Sumatra.
Al-Attas
Another Hadhrami Arab surname used by sayyid families in Indonesia. The Al-Attas family is historically significant in Islamic scholarship across the Malay-Indonesian world.
Barakbah
A Hadhrami Arab family name used in Indonesian Arab communities. The root relates to baraka (blessing), and the name is associated with Islamic scholarly lineages in Sumatra.
Shahab
From Arabic shihabmeaning “meteor” or “shooting star.” Used as a surname by Arab-Indonesian families and also among broader Muslim Indonesian communities as a meaningful Islamic name.
Musyafa
From Arabic, related to shafa (healing, intercession). Used as a surname in Muslim Indonesian communities, particularly in Java, reflecting the deep integration of Arabic vocabulary into Javanese Islamic culture.
Bugis and Makassar Last Names
The Bugis and Makassar peoples of South Sulawesi are seafarers whose trading networks once stretched across the entire archipelago and beyond. Their naming traditions include noble titles that function as hereditary surnames within aristocratic families.
Daeng
A Bugis and Makassar title of nobility, meaning roughly “elder” or “noble.” It functions as an inherited prefix in family names across South Sulawesi and in Bugis diaspora communities throughout the archipelago.
Andi
A Bugis noble title used as a hereditary name prefix, marking descent from Bugis aristocracy. It is one of the most recognizable markers of Bugis noble lineage and is used as a surname-prefix across generations.
Karaeng
A Makassar noble title, the equivalent of the Bugis Daeng for higher-ranking nobility. Families carrying Karaeng in their names trace lineage to the royal houses of Gowa and other Makassar kingdoms.
Mappasomba
A Bugis family name combining elements of Bugis language with ancestral clan identity. Names beginning with Mappa- are characteristic of Bugis naming, where the prefix relates to “the one who does” or carries a specific ancestral reference.
Dutch Colonial-Influenced and Mixed-Heritage Last Names
Three and a half centuries of Dutch colonial presence left a real mark on Indonesian surnames. Some Indonesian families, particularly those of mixed Dutch-Indonesian (Indo) heritage or those who worked closely with the colonial administration, adopted Dutch or Dutch-influenced surnames that are still carried today.
Manusama
A surname associated with the Moluccan (Maluku) community, many of whom served in the Dutch colonial army (KNIL). The name has Ambonese roots and reflects the distinct history of Maluku under Dutch rule.
Pattiasina
An Ambonese (Maluku) surname with Portuguese and local roots, characteristic of the Maluku Islands where Portuguese colonial influence preceded Dutch rule. The Patti- prefix is common in Ambonese family names.
Wattimena
Another Ambonese family name from the Maluku Islands. The -mena suffix and the overall form are characteristic of Ambonese clan names, shaped by centuries of contact with Portuguese and Dutch traders.
Latuharhary
A prominent Ambonese surname, well known in Indonesian legal and political history. Like other Maluku names, it reflects the layered colonial and local heritage of the islands.
How to Understand and Use Indonesian Last Names
The most important thing to know about Indonesian last names is that they do not follow a single system. Before assuming someone has a surname, it is worth knowing their ethnic background. A Javanese person may have one name only. A Batak person’s last name is their marga, which tells you their patrilineal clan. A Balinese person’s name tells you their birth order and caste before it tells you their family. Treating all Indonesian names as if they follow Western surname logic will cause real misunderstandings.
For researchers tracing Indonesian family history, the marga system of the Batak peoples is one of the most genealogically rich traditions in Southeast Asia. If you know someone’s marga, you know something meaningful about their ancestry going back many generations. Batak families can identify distant relatives purely through marga, and there are formal rules about which marga groups may marry each other.
For writers naming Indonesian characters, the most authentic approach is to match the surname tradition to the character’s specific ethnic background. A Javanese character from a noble family might carry a Sanskrit-derived title-name. A Bugis character from South Sulawesi might have Andi or Daeng in their name. A Chinese-Indonesian character might carry a Hokkien surname like Lim or Tan, or a post-1967 Indonesianized name. Specificity is respect.
Finally, if you encounter an Indonesian person whose name does not seem to have a surname at all, that is entirely normal and culturally correct. Indonesia is one of the few places in the world where a single name is a complete identity, not a gap in the paperwork.
Indonesian last names, in all their variety, are a living record of the archipelago’s extraordinary complexity: Hindu-Buddhist kingdoms, Islamic scholarship, Chinese trade networks, Austronesian seafarers, European colonialism, and the resilience of hundreds of distinct local cultures. Each name on this list carries all of that, in just a few syllables.
