List of foreign Liga 1 (Indonesia) players

Super League is the men's top professional football division of the Indonesian football league system from the 2008–09 season onwards.[1] Super League was known as Liga 1 from 2017 until 2025.[2][3] The following players:

  1. Have played at least one Super League game for the respective club (seasons in which and teams that a player did not collect any caps in Super League for have NOT been listed).
  2. Have not been capped for the Indonesia national team on any level, independently from the birthplace, except for players born in East Timor and active in the Indonesia national team before the first official match of the Timor-Leste national football team played on 21 March 2003 and players of Indonesian formation born abroad from Indonesian parents.
  3. Have been born in Indonesia and were capped by a foreign national team. This includes players who have dual citizenship with Indonesia.

Players are sorted by the State, according to the FIFA eligibility rules:

  1. They played for in a national team on any level. For footballers that played for two or more national teams it prevails:
    1. The one he played for on A level.
    2. The national team of birth.
  2. If they never played for any national team on any level, it prevails the state of birth. For footballers born in dissolved states prevails the actual state of birth (e.g.: Yugoslavia -> Serbia, Montenegro, Croatia, etc.).
  • National flag before the name: players who have represented their State at senior international level, winning at least one cap.
  • In bold: players that played at least one Liga 1 game in the current season (2025–26), and the clubs they have played for.
  • In this article, maybe there are players who are not listed, despite meeting the previously mentioned criteria.

Naturalised players

Afghanistan Afghanistan

Angola Angola

Argentina Argentina

Armenia Armenia

Australia Australia

Bahrain Bahrain

Belarus Belarus

Belgium Belgium

Bolivia Bolivia

Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina

Brazil Brazil

Bulgaria Bulgaria

Burkina Faso Burkina Faso

Burundi Burundi

Cambodia Cambodia

Cameroon Cameroon

Canada Canada

Cape Verde Cape Verde

Central African Republic Central African Republic

Chad Chad

Chile Chile

China China

Colombia Colombia

Congo Republic of the Congo

Croatia Croatia

Curaçao Curaçao

Cyprus Cyprus

Czech Republic Czech Republic

DR Congo Democratic Republic of the Congo

East Timor Timor-Leste

England England

Equatorial Guinea Equatorial Guinea

Estonia Estonia

Finland Finland

France France

Gabon Gabon

Germany Germany

Ghana Ghana

Greece Greece

Guam Guam

Guinea Guinea

Guinea Bissau Guinea-Bissau

Haiti Haiti

Hong Kong Hong Kong

Iran Iran

Iraq Iraq

Italy Italy

Ivory Coast Ivory Coast

Jamaica Jamaica

Japan Japan

Jordan Jordan

Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan

Latvia Latvia

Lebanon Lebanon

Liberia Liberia

Luxembourg Luxembourg

Malaysia Malaysia

Mali Mali

Martinique Martinique

Mexico Mexico

Moldova Moldova

Montenegro Montenegro

Morocco Morocco

Myanmar Myanmar

Namibia Namibia

Nepal Nepal

Netherlands Netherlands

New Zealand New Zealand

Nicaragua Nicaragua

Niger Niger

Nigeria Nigeria

North Macedonia North Macedonia

Palestine Palestine

Panama Panama

Paraguay Paraguay

Philippines Philippines

Poland Poland

Portugal Portugal

Republic of Ireland Republic of Ireland

Russia Russia

Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Kitts and Nevis

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia

Scotland Scotland

Senegal Senegal

Serbia Serbia

Sierra Leone Sierra Leone

Singapore Singapore

Slovakia Slovakia

Slovenia Slovenia

South Africa South Africa

South Korea South Korea

South Sudan South Sudan

Spain Spain

Switzerland Switzerland

Syria Syria

Tajikistan Tajikistan

Thailand Thailand

Togo Togo

Trinidad and Tobago Trinidad and Tobago

Tunisia Tunisia

Turkmenistan Turkmenistan

Ukraine Ukraine

United States United States

Uruguay Uruguay

Uzbekistan Uzbekistan

Venezuela Venezuela

Wales Wales

Notes

  1. ^
    Born in Angola
  2. ^
    Born in Argentina
  3. ^
    Born in Bosnia and Herzegovina (then part of Yugoslavia)
  4. ^
    Born in Brazil
  5. ^
    Born in Belgium
  6. ^
    Born in Botswana
  7. ^
    Born in Bulgaria
  8. ^
    Born in Cameroon
  9. ^
    Born in Chile
  10. ^
    Born in Colombia
  11. ^
  12. ^
    Born in DR Congo
  13. ^
    Born in Denmark
  14. ^
    Born in England
  15. ^
    Born in France
  16. ^
    Born in Germany
  17. ^
  18. ^
    Born in Hong Kong
  19. ^
    Born in Iran
  20. ^
    Born in Italy
  21. ^
    Born in the Ivory Coast
  22. ^
    Born in Jamaica
  23. ^
    Born in Japan
  24. ^
    Born in Kenya
  25. ^
    Born in the Netherlands
  26. ^
    Born in Nigeria
  27. ^
    Born in North Korea
  28. ^
    Born in Norway
  29. ^
    Born in New Zealand
  30. ^
    Born in Portugal
  31. ^
  32. ^
    Born in Senegal
  33. ^
    Born in Serbia (then part of Yugoslavia)
  34. ^
    Born in Sierra Leone
  35. ^
    Born in South Korea
  36. ^
    Born in Spain
  37. ^
    Born in Sudan
  38. ^
    Born in Switzerland
  39. ^
    Born in Uganda
  40. ^
  41. ^
    Born in Uzbekistan (then part of the Soviet Union)
  42. ^
    Born in Venezuela
  43. ^
  44. ^
  45. ^
  46. ^
  47. ^
  48. ^
  49. ^
  50. ^
  51. ^
    Capped for the Chile national under-18 football team
  52. ^
    Capped for the Chile national under-19 football team
  53. ^
  54. ^
  55. ^
  56. ^
  57. ^
  58. ^
  59. ^
  60. ^
  61. ^
  62. ^
  63. ^
  64. ^

References

  1. ^ "ISL, Premier League Rasa Indonesia - Kompas.com". KOMPAS.com (in Indonesian). Kompas Cyber Media. 10 July 2008.
  2. ^ "PSSI Ubah ISL Jadi Liga 1". Bola.net (in Indonesian). 20 January 2017. Archived from the original on 22 January 2017. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  3. ^ Robbani, Muhammad (7 July 2025). "Rebranding, Liga 1 Ganti Nama Jadi Super League". Detik.com (in Indonesian).