Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdul-Aziz landed in Indonesia with 459 metric tonnes of luggage.
The Saudi monarch was joined by an entourage of 620 staff and a further 800 delegates, including 25 princes and 10 ministers.
Among his demands for the nine-day trip were a VIP toilet built for him at a mosque in Jakarta and 506 tons of luggage including two escalators and a pair of Mercedes-Benz limousines.
The whole party needed 27 flights to get them to Jakarta and 10 more will be required to transport them to Bali, according to PT Jasa Angkasa Semesta (JAS), the freight firm which brought the goods.
The visit is the first by a Saudi monarch in almost half a century and will see the two nations sign an agreement to fight terrorism, according to the Saudi envoy to Indonesia.
At least 9,000 police and military were deployed for the 12-day visit, with roads closed to traffic and snipers positioned along the route of the king's convoy.
King Salman is currently on a tour of Asia aimed at extending Saudi Arabia's ties with the region. He has already visited Malaysia and, after a six-day stopover holiday in Bali, will move on to Brunei, Japan, China and the Maldives.