Protect a server or network anywhere in Indonesia — Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, or beyond — at the Singapore edge, a short submarine-cable hop from Java. Self-serve GRE / VXLAN / WireGuard tunnels or real BGP sessions, sub-second mitigation, and typically ~20-30ms from Jakarta. Free trial, per-hour billing, from $25/mo.
Sucura protects Indonesian servers and networks by scrubbing attack traffic at our Singapore edge — the closest in-region scrubbing point to Indonesia. Jakarta typically sees only around 20-30ms to that edge, and Batam, just across the strait, closer to 10ms — a small delta next to the 150-250ms many distant US or EU cloud scrubbers add to Southeast Asian traffic. Setup is self-service — a GRE, VXLAN, or WireGuard tunnel, or a real BGP session — with sub-second mitigation, a free trial, and per-hour billing from $25/mo.
Cloud DDoS services headquartered across the Pacific or in Europe backhaul Indonesian traffic thousands of kilometers. We scrub next door, at the Singapore edge.
Filtering happens at the Singapore edge, a short cable hop from Java — not backhauled across the Pacific or to Europe.
Announce your own IP space (BYOIP) or take a protected IP over a tunnel — deployed yourself in the panel, no sales gate.
Spin up a protected tunnel on a trial and convert it to a paid subscription in place — no teardown, no long contract.
Pay by the hour or $0.05/GB scrubbed, not a flat enterprise minimum. Transparent USD pricing.
Clean-traffic tiers in USD, identical across every Sucura edge. Usage-based scrubbing at $0.05/GB, hourly billing available. All tiers include L3/L4/L7 mitigation, GRE/VXLAN/WireGuard tunnels or BGP, and sub-second detection.
Two ways to route your traffic through the Singapore scrubbing edge — both self-service in the Nexus panel.
Terminate a protected tunnel from our Singapore edge to your origin server in Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, or anywhere else in Indonesia. You get a clean, protected IP; attack traffic is filtered before it reaches you. Works on Linux and Windows.
Announce your own /24 to AS398999. Inbound traffic routes through our scrubbing network first, and clean traffic returns to you over the tunnel. IRR and RPKI aware.
Volumetric SYN/UDP/ICMP floods are dropped at the edge; application-layer (L7) abuse — including scripted bot traffic against e-commerce and fintech logins — is filtered with protocol-aware rules. Always-on, no manual toggling.
Mobile Legends: Bang Bang, Free Fire, and PUBG Mobile private and community servers stay online under attack. Protocol-aware filtering keeps real players connected while floods are dropped at the edge.
Singapore is the natural scrubbing point for Indonesia — a short cable hop from Java, not a detour through a distant continent.
Jakarta typically sees roughly 20-30ms to our Singapore scrubbing edge depending on carrier and route — a short submarine-cable hop, not a cross-ocean detour. Batam, just across the strait, runs closer still at roughly 10ms.
Generic cloud DDoS services headquartered in the US or Europe backhaul Indonesian traffic thousands of kilometers round-trip, often adding 150-250ms. We scrub next door, at the Singapore edge, instead.
Whether your traffic arrives over Telkom/IndiHome, Biznet, or Indosat, it reaches our Singapore edge over established Indonesia-Singapore routes — Singapore is the region's standard interconnection point, not a detour.
Mobile Legends: Bang Bang, Free Fire, and PUBG Mobile servers, plus e-commerce and fintech backends running out of Jakarta, Surabaya, or Bandung — protected without migrating a single server.
Common questions about anti-DDoS for Indonesia, Jakarta, and the wider archipelago.
Closer than most people expect. Jakarta typically sees roughly ~20-30ms round-trip to our Singapore scrubbing edge depending on carrier and route — a short submarine-cable hop, not a cross-ocean detour. That's a fraction of the 150-250ms many distant US or European cloud scrubbers add to Southeast Asian traffic. Treat this as a typical range rather than a guaranteed number, since actual latency varies by carrier and path.
Yes. Terminate a GRE, VXLAN, or WireGuard tunnel from our Singapore edge to your existing server in Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, or anywhere else, or announce your own IP space via BGP to AS398999. Attack traffic is filtered at the Singapore edge before it ever reaches your origin, and clean traffic flows back over the tunnel. There's no migration, no DNS juggling, and no re-hosting outside Indonesia.
Yes — game servers are one of the most common uses of this setup. Whether you're running a private Mobile Legends: Bang Bang tournament backend, a Free Fire community server, or a PUBG Mobile custom-match host, we filter volumetric L4 floods and application-layer L7 abuse at the Singapore edge while keeping the added latency for Indonesian players small.
Yes. Batam sits just across the strait from Singapore, and routes from Batam to our scrubbing edge typically run around ~10ms — tighter than the Jakarta figure. If your infrastructure, transit, or backup site already touches Batam, that proximity works in your favor.
We don't operate those networks, but Indonesian traffic — whether it originates on Telkom/IndiHome, Biznet, or Indosat — generally reaches Singapore over established regional paths, since Singapore is the standard interconnection point for Southeast Asia. Your exact path and latency depend on your carrier and routing, which is why we quote latency as a typical range rather than a fixed number.
Plans start at $25/mo for 100 Mbps of clean capacity, scaling to $500/mo for 5 Gbps, plus usage-based scrubbing at $0.05/GB. Billing can be per-hour, and you can start with a free trial self-service in the Nexus panel, then convert it to a paid subscription in place with no teardown. Prices are in USD.
2 Tbps+ of scrubbing capacity across our global anycast network with sub-second (under 1s) detection and mitigation. Frankfurt, Singapore and Toronto anchor the three-continent footprint.
Deploy a protected tunnel or BGP session at the Singapore edge in minutes — free trial, per-hour billing.
One anycast anti-DDoS network across three continents.