Buying an apartment in Israel as a foreign buyer involves navigating a well-defined legal process, understanding local taxes, and choosing the right location. This guide covers every step you need to take in 2026.

Step 1: Define Your Budget and Financing

Before searching for properties, establish your total budget. As a foreign buyer, Israeli banks will lend up to 50% of the property value (LTV), meaning you need at least 50% of the purchase price as a down payment. Mortgage rates in 2026 range from 4.2% to 5.6% depending on the track (fixed, prime-linked, or CPI-linked).

Budget Breakdown for a NIS 2,000,000 Apartment

  • Purchase price: NIS 2,000,000
  • Purchase tax (Mas Rechisha): NIS 160,000 (8%)
  • Attorney fees: NIS 20,000–25,000
  • Agent commission: NIS 30,000–35,000
  • Total initial cost: ~NIS 2,215,000

Step 2: Choose Your Location

Israel offers diverse property markets, each with distinct characteristics:

  • Jerusalem: Strong cultural and historical significance, stable values, popular with Anglo and French communities in neighborhoods like Baka, German Colony, and Rehavia.
  • Tel Aviv: Israel's financial center, highest prices but strongest rental demand. Neighborhoods like Neve Tzedek and Florentin are highly sought-after.
  • Netanya: French-speaking community hub, beachfront living, more affordable than Tel Aviv.
  • Beer Sheva: Israel's Cyber Capital, fastest-growing market with strong rental demand from tech workers.

Step 3: Engage a Licensed Real Estate Attorney

In Israel, a real estate attorney (Ω…Ψ­Ψ§Ω…Χ™) is not optional β€” they are essential. Your attorney will:

  • Verify title at the Tabu (Land Registry)
  • Review and negotiate the purchase contract
  • File the purchase tax declaration within 30 days
  • Handle the title transfer

Expect to pay NIS 8,000–15,000 for attorney services. Always use an attorney who specializes in real estate β€” not a generalist.

Step 4: Conduct Due Diligence

Before signing, verify:

  • Tabu (Land Registry): Confirm the seller has clear title with no mortgages, liens, or seizures registered
  • Building permit: Ensure all construction is fully permitted (no unauthorized additions)
  • HOA fees (Va'ad Bayit): Check monthly building maintenance costs
  • Property taxes (Arnona): Understand the annual municipal tax obligation

Step 5: Sign the Purchase Contract

The purchase contract (Chozeh Mechira) is a binding legal document. Key points to negotiate:

  • Payment schedule aligned with your mortgage drawdown
  • Penalties for late closing by either party
  • Inventory list of included fixtures and appliances
  • Delivery condition standards

Step 6: Pay Purchase Tax (Mas Rechisha)

As a foreign investor, you pay 8% on the first NIS 6,055,070 and 10% above. This must be declared within 30 days of signing and paid within 60 days. Your attorney handles this filing.

Step 7: Register Title at the Tabu

Once the purchase price and all taxes are paid, your attorney registers the title transfer at the Tabu (Land Registry). This is the final step confirming your legal ownership.

Key Takeaways

  • Foreign buyers need at least 50% down payment
  • Purchase tax is 8% from the first shekel β€” no exempt bracket
  • An attorney is mandatory, not optional
  • The entire process typically takes 2–4 months from offer to title transfer