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How Foreign Nationals Buy Property in Israel

Israel has no legal restriction on foreign nationals purchasing real estate. Any person, regardless of citizenship or residency status, can buy property here. That clarity is useful. What comes after it requires considerably more attention.

Who Buys Israeli Property from Abroad

Diaspora Jews — primarily from the US, France, UK, and Argentina — buying for personal use, family legacy, or eventual return. This is the largest segment. Many have emotional ties to Israel that precede any financial calculation.

Foreign investors — buyers from Europe, North America, and increasingly Asia treating Israeli real estate as a portfolio asset. Tel Aviv’s seafront, Herzliya Pituach, and the Netanya coastline are the most common targets.

Israelis living abroad — citizens who retain Israeli ties but manage their purchase remotely, often from New York, London, or Toronto.

Step 1: Choose the Right Market

The luxury segment — properties above 10 million shekels — behaves differently than the broader market. Inventory is thinner, transactions are more discreet, and a significant portion of available properties never appear on public portals.

For foreign buyers in this segment, the cities with the clearest demand and established infrastructure are:

  • Tel Aviv — seafront, Neve Tzedek, Tzahala, Park Bavli.
  • Herzliya Pituach — villas, gated compounds, and seafront apartments. The address most comparable to international luxury enclaves.
  • Ra’anana — family-oriented, English-speaking community, significant Anglo diaspora presence.
  • Netanya — coastal living, French-speaking community, growing international demand.

Step 2: The Legal Framework

Israeli property transactions are governed by the Land Law (1969) and managed through the Israel Land Authority and the Land Registry (Taba). Every buyer, local or foreign, must verify title through the Taba before completing any transaction.

Key legal requirements for foreign buyers:

  • A licensed Israeli attorney must manage the transaction.
  • Power of Attorney can be granted to manage the process remotely.
  • The purchase agreement must be in Hebrew. An accurate translation is strongly recommended.

Step 3: Taxes and Costs

Purchase Tax: Foreign nationals pay a higher bracket — 8% for the first  5.5 million NIS of the purchase price, rising to 10% above that threshold. This is a material cost at the 10M+ level.

Broker commission: Typically 1–2% of purchase price.

Attorney fees: Typically 0.5–1.5% of purchase price.

Annual taxes: Israeli property owners pay Arnona (municipal property tax) annually.

Step 4: Financing

Foreigners can obtain Israeli mortgages (mashkanta), but the Bank of Israel caps the loan-to-value ratio for non-residents at 50% of the property value. For buyers financing in foreign currency, the exchange rate risk is significant.

Step 5: The Practical Reality

The official process takes 3–6 months from signed agreement to registered title. Delays come from municipal approvals on non-standard properties, inheritance situations, discrepancies between registered and actual built area, and currency transfer timing.

The buyers who complete Israeli transactions most smoothly tend to share one characteristic: they engaged a dedicated broker early.

*NY Realty Israel is an Israeli boutique luxury real estate brand, part of Nefussy Holdings Group, ranked in Israel’s top 8 real estate marketing firms by BDI out of hundreds of companies. NY Realty Israel specializes in high-end properties (10M+) across Tel Aviv, Herzliya Pituach, and Ra’anana, and serves international Jewish clients through a global network spanning Miami, New York, and Cyprus. nyg.co.il*

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