Landing Point · ID Indonesia
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| SEA-US | Active |
RTT measurements to this landing point from 2026-03-02 through 2026-06-03 — live ICMP round-trip time via RIPE Atlas probes. Recomputed daily. ✓ No anomalies detected in the monitored period.
| Probe | Location | Samples | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| #6492 | RIPE Atlas | 92 | 148.3 ms |
| #1014473 own probe | Minsk BY | 7 | 278.6 ms |
| #1014589 own probe | Almaty KZ | 7 | 306.4 ms |
| #1014597 own probe | Tbilisi GE | 7 | 288.5 ms |
| #1014969 own probe | Jerusalem IL | 6 | 281.0 ms |
| #1015523 own probe | Moscow RU | 2 | 206.4 ms |
| #1015313 own probe | Sevastopol UA | 1 | 224.5 ms |
Kauditan is a district in North Minahasa Regency, North Sulawesi Province, in the eastern reaches of Indonesia. Its position on the northern coast of Sulawesi places it along a corridor linking the Indonesian archipelago with the Pacific Ocean, making it a logical landfall point for transpacific cable systems. One submarine cable lands at Kauditan, connecting Indonesia to a set of Pacific and North American destinations.
That cable is the SEA-US system, a major transpacific route stretching 14,500 kilometres with a ready-for-service date of 2017. Through SEA-US, Kauditan is connected to Guam, Micronesia, Palau, the Philippines, and the United States, establishing a direct link between North Sulawesi and the broader transpacific cable network. This positions Kauditan as an eastern Indonesian gateway into the Pacific corridor.
SEA-US is a transpacific submarine cable system measuring 14,500 kilometres in length, with a ready-for-service date of 2017. In addition to Kauditan, Indonesia, the cable connects to landing points in Guam, Micronesia, Palau, the Philippines, and the United States. The system bridges Southeast Asia and the Pacific Island territories with the continental United States, and Kauditan serves as the Indonesian terminus of this route.
Indonesia hosts 70 submarine cables across 139 landing points, and Kauditan, with one cable, ranks within the top 62 percent of Indonesian landing points by cable count. Compared to major hubs such as Batam with 20 cables, Jakarta and Tanjung Pakis each with 9, and the nearby North Sulawesi city of Manado with 8, Kauditan is a more specialised landing point rather than a high-density hub. Its significance lies specifically in hosting the SEA-US system, which anchors North Sulawesi to the transpacific cable graph in a way that few other eastern Indonesian landing points replicate.
Kauditan functions as a single-cable terminus, hosting the SEA-US system exclusively. This role gives the district a direct transpacific connection, linking North Sulawesi eastward through Palau, Micronesia, and Guam to the Philippines and the United States. The cable's 14,500-kilometre span means that Kauditan is the Indonesian anchor of one of the longer submarine cable routes in the regional network, extending well beyond the intra-Asian connections that characterise many of Indonesia's other landing points.
While Kauditan does not carry the multi-cable density of Jakarta or Batam, its single cable performs a geographically distinct function — providing a North Sulawesi landfall for a system that crosses the Pacific. Within Indonesia's broader submarine cable graph, this makes Kauditan a notable eastern outlier, connecting the country's northeastern extremity directly to Pacific and North American endpoints rather than routing exclusively through the Java Sea corridor.
View actual submarine cable routing from Kauditan, Indonesia — with backbone nodes, distance calculations, and latency estimates
Open Calculator →