All candidates are required to be, at a minimum, graduates of senior high school or equivalent. Any approved candidates are required to resign from certain government positions, including legislative offices,
Armed Forces/
Police positions, civil servants, and employees of state-owned companies. The minimum age is 30 for gubernatorial candidates and 25 for mayor/regent candidates. Furthermore, a
two-term limit applies, including for different regions, and former governors/regents/mayors are not allowed to run for vice-leader of their previous position. On 30 May 2024, the
Supreme Court of Indonesia ruled that the age limit applied to the age of the candidates
on the date of swearing, in should they win the election (which are expected to take place in 2025), instead of the registration date of the election. In particular, this change allowed
Kaesang Pangarep, son of the 7th Indonesian President
Joko Widodo, to contest gubernatorial elections. A ruling by the
Constitutional Court of Indonesia reverted the criteria, setting the age benchmark to be the date of the official confirmation of candidates. The
General Elections Commission (KPU) initially noted that legislators newly elected in the
2024 Indonesian legislative election did not need to resign; however, this was later rescinded and elected legislators will also be required to resign. Candidates can either run as an independent or a party-backed candidate. To run with party backing, the candidate is required to secure the formal support of a party or a coalition of parties that collectively hold at least 20 percent of seats in the relevant
Regional House of Representatives (DPRD)
or between 6.5 and 10 percent of votes in the
2024 legislative election in the area, depending on the population. Independent candidates are required to submit photocopies of
identity cards as proof of support, numbering between 6.5 and 10 percent of the registered electorate in a given region. According to KPU, 168 independent candidates nationwide registered, down from 203 who registered for the
2020 elections. For all gubernatorial elections, eleven pairs of independent candidates registered, of which two pairs are confirmed to have submitted sufficient proof. One of the two resigned, leaving just one pair of independent candidates running for governor (
Dharma Pongrekun in
Jakarta). In total, KPU approved 1,553 pairs of candidates, including 103 gubernatorial tickets, 284 mayoral tickets, and 1,166 regency tickets. After they had been approved, but prior to the election date, at least five candidates had died, including
North Maluku gubernatorial candidate
Benny Laos, who died in a speedboat explosion. The other deaths include three vice-gubernatorial candidates (in
Aceh,
South Papua, and
Central Papua) and a vice-regent candidate (in
Ciamis,
West Java). A further four tickets were disqualified: one gubernatorial ticket (
Southwest Papua), two mayoral tickets (
Metro and
Banjarbaru), and one regency (
Fakfak). ==Electoral system==