How to Buy Property in Israel from Abroad: The Complete Guide (2026)
Everything you need to know about buying property in Israel from abroad β legal steps, taxes, mortgages, total costs, and the mistakes to avoid. Written by Pinny Rozen, licensed Israeli real estate broker, License #3161674, Israeli Ministry of Justice.
Buying property in Israel from abroad is entirely possible β and more people do it successfully every year. But the process is genuinely different from buying in your home country. The laws are different, the contract structure is different, the taxes are different, and there are important protections that exist in other countries but do not exist in Israel.
This guide explains everything clearly β including every Hebrew term you will encounter β so you know exactly what to expect at every step.
Can Foreigners Buy Property in Israel?
Yes. Israel places no restrictions on foreign nationals purchasing residential real estate. You do not need Israeli citizenship, residency, or a special permit. Buyers from the United States, United Kingdom, France, Canada, Australia, South Africa, and most other countries purchase property in Israel regularly.
The main practical differences between a foreign buyer and an Israeli resident are:
You pay a higher rate of Mas Rechisha (Israeli purchase tax β explained in detail in Step 7 below)
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You can borrow a maximum of 50% of the property value from an Israeli bank, compared to 75% for Israeli residents
You will need to document your source of funds more thoroughly for Israeli banking anti-money-laundering compliance
You cannot buy certain agricultural land or property in security-adjacent zones β but this rarely affects standard residential purchases
Everything else β apartments, houses, villas, commercial property β is open to you on exactly the same legal basis as any Israeli buyer.
Freehold vs Leasehold: What You Are Actually Buying
This is the most important concept for any foreign buyer to understand before starting a property search, because it is very different from most other countries.
Approximately 93% of land in Israel is owned by the state and managed by the Israel Land Authority (ILA) β known in Hebrew as Raminut Mekarkei Yisrael (Rami). This is a government body that controls state-owned land. Because of this, most property in Israel is sold not as true freehold ownership of the land itself, but as a long-term leasehold β typically for 49 or 98 years, with renewal rights that are almost always granted automatically.
If you are from the US or Canada, think of it this way: you own the building and your apartment fully, but the government owns the ground it sits on, and you have a very long-term lease on that ground. In practice, this distinction matters far less than it sounds β an ILA leasehold property can be bought, sold, inherited, rented, and mortgaged in exactly the same way as a fully freehold property. Israeli banks mortgage them the same way. The market treats them equally.
The remaining 7% of Israeli land is privately owned freehold β meaning the seller owns both the building and the land outright. This is slightly simpler legally. Your real estate lawyer will verify which type applies to any property you are considering and explain the implications.
The Step-by-Step Process: How to Buy Property in Israel from Abroad
Step 1 β Get Your Finances in Order Before You Search
Before you search a single listing, do three things:
First, establish your total budget including all transaction costs. Property buyers from abroad consistently underestimate the full cost of buying in Israel. Budget 8-13% on top of the purchase price for taxes and fees in most standard transactions, and up to 16% for higher-value properties. If you are buying a property for 1,000,000 USD, your total out-of-pocket will be closer to 1,100,000-1,130,000 USD.
Second, arrange your mortgage pre-approval before you start searching. If you are planning to use an Israeli bank mortgage (called a Mashkanta in Hebrew), get pre-approval before you start searching. Israeli banks have strict requirements for foreign applicants, and the process takes time. Starting the mortgage process after finding a property creates unnecessary pressure.
Third, prepare your source-of-funds documentation now. Israeli banks are legally required under anti-money-laundering regulations to verify where your money came from. They will ask for tax returns, pay stubs, business financial statements, or documentation of the sale of other assets. Prepare this file before you need it β scrambling for paperwork mid-transaction is a common cause of delays.
Step 2 β Choose Your Team
You need three professionals for an Israeli property purchase from abroad. Not two, not one.
A licensed Israeli real estate broker finds properties, represents your interests in price negotiations, and navigates the local market on your behalf. Under Israeli law (Real Estate Brokers Law, 1996), it is illegal to act as a property broker in Israel without a valid license issued by the Ministry of Justice. An unlicensed person who acts as a broker has no legal standing and cannot be held accountable. Always verify any broker's license before working with them at the official Ministry of Justice broker registry. The broker's commission is typically 2% of the purchase price plus 18% VAT, paid by the buyer.
An Israeli real estate lawyer is not optional β it is essential. Here is why: unlike the United States and most other countries, Israel has no title insurance system. In the US, if a title problem is discovered after you buy a property β a hidden lien, a disputed ownership claim, an unpaid debt β your title insurance company covers it. In Israel, there is no such product. Your attorney's due diligence before you sign is your only protection. If your lawyer misses something, you bear the consequences. This is why choosing an experienced lawyer with international experience is so important. Legal fees are typically 1-1.5% of the purchase price plus 18% VAT.
A licensed engineer for physical inspection is the third member of your team, and the one most commonly skipped by foreign buyers β to their regret. The lawyer checks the legal title. The engineer checks the physical property: structural integrity, water damage and mold, electrical and plumbing systems, and whether the property complies with building codes. In Israel, it is not uncommon for sellers to have added a room, expanded a balcony, or built a storage unit without the required building permits. These unauthorized additions become your legal liability the moment you purchase the property. An engineer identifies them before you commit.
An Israeli mortgage broker (if you are financing the purchase) can save you significant money and months of time. Israeli mortgage structures are complex β a typical mortgage consists of multiple tracks combined together: a fixed-rate portion (called Katz), a variable-rate portion, and a CPI-linked portion (where the loan principal rises with Israeli inflation). A mortgage broker who specializes in foreign buyers will help you find the right bank and structure the loan optimally.
Step 3 β Search and Select a Property
With your team in place and your finances understood, you begin searching. Your broker will show you properties matching your criteria and budget, including off-market opportunities that never appear on public listing sites.
When you find a property you want to pursue seriously, two simultaneous due diligence processes begin:
Legal due diligence β conducted by your lawyer:
Your lawyer requests a Nesach Tabu (Χ Χ‘Χ ΧΧΧΧ) β an official extract from the Israeli Land Registry. Think of this as the equivalent of a US title search or UK Office Copies. This official government document shows the complete legal picture of the property: who is the registered owner, whether there are any mortgages (called Mashkanta) registered against it, whether there are any liens or attachments (Ikul β a legal freeze on the property that prevents it from being sold, often placed by a creditor or court), whether there are any legal disputes, and the property's exact registered dimensions and building rights. You can request a Tabu extract yourself at the official Israeli government portal, but interpreting it requires legal expertise.
Your lawyer also checks for Chrigot Biniya (ΧΧ¨ΧΧΧΧͺ ΧΧ ΧΧΧ) β unauthorized construction. These are additions or modifications to the property that were built without the required building permits from the local municipality. Common examples: a balcony that was enclosed to create an extra room, a storage unit that was built in the parking lot, an extra bathroom added to an apartment. These are extremely common in Israel. If your lawyer does not identify them and you buy the property, the local municipality can order you β the new owner β to demolish them at your expense.
Physical inspection β conducted by your engineer:
The engineer inspects the physical condition of the property: structural walls and foundations, roof condition (especially important in top-floor apartments), water damage and mold (a significant issue in Israel's coastal cities), electrical system capacity and compliance with current codes, plumbing condition, and heating/cooling systems. This inspection typically costs 1,500-5,000 ILS depending on the property size.
Critical point about appliances: In Israel, kitchen appliances, air conditioning units, water heaters, and sometimes even light fixtures are NOT automatically included in a property sale. Unlike many other countries where appliances transfer with the property, in Israel everything is negotiable and must be explicitly listed in the contract. Before you make an offer, walk through the property and ask your broker to clarify exactly what stays and what the seller is taking. Get it in writing in the contract.
Step 4 β Negotiation
In Israel, all terms of a property sale are negotiable until they are formalized in a signed, binding contract. The key negotiable elements are the purchase price, the closing timeline, responsibility for any necessary repairs or improvements before closing, and the contents of the property (which appliances, fixtures, and furniture stay).
Your broker leads the price negotiations. Your lawyer reviews all proposed terms before anything is committed to writing.
Step 5 β Zichron Devarim (Letter of Intent)
Many Israeli property transactions involve a preliminary document called a Zichron Devarim (ΧΧΧΧ¨ΧΧ ΧΧΧ¨ΧΧ) β literally βmemorandum of thingsβ in Hebrew. This is a short document, usually 1-2 pages, that captures the main agreed terms: the purchase price, proposed payment schedule, and the basic conditions.
Foreign buyers often treat this as a casual, non-binding memo β the equivalent of an offer letter in the US. This is a serious mistake.
Warning β Zichron Devarim can be legally binding: Israeli courts have consistently ruled that a Zichron Devarim, even though it is not the full purchase contract, can create legally enforceable obligations. If you sign one and then decide not to proceed, you may be liable for financial compensation to the seller. Never sign a Zichron Devarim without your lawyer reviewing it first β even if the seller's agent says it is just a formality.
Critical difference from the US, UK, Canada, and Australia: Israel has NO cooling-off period. In many countries, buyers have a period of a few days after signing a purchase contract to reconsider and withdraw without penalty. In Israel, there is no such protection. From the moment both parties sign the Heskem Rechisha, you are fully legally bound. There is no grace period to change your mind. This is why it is absolutely non-negotiable to have your lawyer review every word of the contract before you sign it.
If you cannot be physically present in Israel to sign, you will need to provide your Israeli lawyer with a Power of Attorney (Iyuf Koach β ΧΧΧ€ΧΧ ΧΧΧ). This is a legal document that authorizes your lawyer to sign legal documents on your behalf. The Power of Attorney must be signed in front of a notary public in your home country and then authenticated with an Apostille β an international certification that makes the document valid in Israel. Once this is done, your lawyer can sign the contract on your behalf without you needing to travel to Israel.
No escrow system in Israel: In the United States, purchase funds are typically held by a neutral escrow company until all conditions are met. Israel does not have this system. Payments under the purchase contract transfer directly to the seller according to the agreed schedule β there is no neutral third party holding the money. Your only protection is the contract terms and your lawyer's oversight. Confirm with your lawyer exactly how payments will be managed and what protections exist at each payment stage.
Within 30 days of signing the purchase agreement, your lawyer must submit Form 7000 (Tofes 7000) to the Israel Tax Authority declaring the transaction. The actual payment of Mas Rechisha is due within 60 days of signing. Your lawyer handles both the filing and the payment on your behalf.
For foreign buyers (non-residents) in 2026, the rates are:
8% on the portion of the purchase price up to 6,055,070 ILS
10% on any portion of the purchase price above 6,055,070 ILS
Example: If you buy a property for 3,000,000 ILS, you pay 8% on the full amount = 240,000 ILS in purchase tax.
Deadline warning: If you miss the 60-day payment deadline, the Israel Tax Authority charges interest and financial penalties on the outstanding amount. This is one deadline your lawyer tracks carefully β confirm it explicitly on the day you sign the purchase agreement.
Step 8 β Open an Israeli Bank Account and Transfer Funds
To transfer your purchase funds to Israel, pay your Mas Rechisha, and manage ongoing property costs like Arnona (municipal tax) and utility bills, you will need an Israeli bank account.
Opening a bank account in Israel as a non-resident is more involved than in most countries. Most Israeli banks require at least one in-person branch visit for identity verification of non-resident account holders. Bring your passport, proof of address in your home country, and your source-of-funds documentation. You will also need an Israeli tax identification number β your lawyer obtains this for you as part of the transaction process. Plan to start the bank account process early, as it can take several weeks from application to an active account.
When you transfer funds from abroad to Israel, Israeli banks are legally required to conduct anti-money-laundering checks on incoming transfers above certain thresholds. Be prepared to provide documentation showing where the money came from β tax returns, bank statements, or documentation of an asset sale.
On the question of currency: if you are transferring US dollars or British pounds to pay for a property priced in Israeli shekels, consider using a specialist currency exchange service rather than your retail bank. On a $500,000 transfer, a 1% difference in exchange rate equals $5,000. Specialist services typically offer significantly better rates than retail banks for large transfers.
Step 9 β Closing and Registration (Tabu)
Closing is the moment you receive the keys and take physical possession of the property. This happens according to the timeline in your purchase agreement β typically 4-6 months after signing.
After closing, your lawyer files the documentation to transfer the property registration into your name at the Tabu β the official Israeli Land Registry (Lishkat Raisham HaMekarkain). This is the administrative process that makes you the officially registered owner of record.
Important timeline note: The registration process can take 6-12 months after closing. During this period, you are the legal owner and have all the rights of ownership β you can live in the property, rent it out, and in most cases mortgage it β but the land registry record has not yet been updated to show your name. Your lawyer will give you a written confirmation once registration is complete.
Important: Do not make the final payment without your lawyer explicitly confirming that the registration path is clear and all contractual conditions have been satisfied.
The Total Cost of Buying Property in Israel from Abroad
Here is the full realistic cost breakdown for a foreign buyer in 2026. These are real numbers β not estimates designed to look low:
Cost Item
Amount
Mas Rechisha (purchase tax)
8-10% of purchase price
Real estate lawyer
1-1.5% + 18% VAT
Real estate broker commission
2% + 18% VAT
Engineer inspection
1,500-5,000 ILS
Mortgage arrangement fee
0.5-1% (if financing)
Tabu registration fee
~500-2,000 ILS
Currency exchange costs
Varies by provider (0.3-2%)
Total for most transactions
8-13% of purchase price
Total for higher-value properties
up to 16% of purchase price
On a 3,000,000 ILS property (approximately $820,000 at current rates), the largest single cost is Mas Rechisha β a foreign buyer pays 240,000 ILS in purchase tax alone. This is non-negotiable and unavoidable, but it is completely predictable β you know the exact number before you make an offer.
Loan-to-Value (LTV) limit: As a non-resident foreign buyer, Israeli banks will lend you a maximum of 50% of the property value. This means you must bring at least 50% of the purchase price as a cash down payment from your own funds. This is significantly stricter than Israeli residents, who can borrow up to 75% for a first property. If you are buying a 2,000,000 ILS apartment, you need at least 1,000,000 ILS in cash before the bank will lend you the other 1,000,000 ILS.
Interest rates in 2026: For foreign buyers, effective interest rates typically range from 4.5% to 6.5% depending on the loan structure, the bank, and your financial profile.
Mortgage currency options: Israeli mortgages can be denominated in Israeli Shekels (NIS), US Dollars (USD), or Euros (EUR). This matters if your income is in a foreign currency β a shekel-denominated mortgage creates currency exposure if the shekel strengthens against your home currency.
Israeli mortgage structure β what makes it different: Unlike a simple fixed or variable rate mortgage in the US or UK, Israeli mortgages are typically split into multiple tracks combined together. A common structure includes a fixed-rate track (Katz β Χ§ΧΧ΄Χ¦ in Hebrew, meaning fixed unlinked), a variable-rate track that adjusts every 5 years, and a CPI-linked track where the loan principal rises with Israeli inflation but the interest rate is lower. This complexity is why using an Israeli mortgage broker who works with foreign buyers is strongly recommended.
Documentation required by Israeli banks:
Valid passport and identification documents
Proof of income β last 2 years of tax returns (for employees) or certified business financial statements (for self-employed)
Bank statements from the last 6-12 months
Documentation proving the source of your down payment funds
Credit history documentation from your home country
Many Israeli banks require at least one in-person meeting at a branch in Israel to finalize a mortgage application for a non-resident. Plan for this when scheduling your property search timeline.
Source: Bank of Israel mortgage regulations; market rate data June 2026.
If you are planning Aliyah (immigrating to Israel), your mortgage terms improve dramatically β see the next section.
If you are eligible for Aliyah and you make Aliyah before or during your property purchase, you unlock three significant financial benefits:
Higher mortgage LTV: Your maximum loan-to-value ratio rises from 50% (foreign buyer rate) to 75% (Israeli resident rate). On a 2,000,000 ILS property, this means your required down payment drops from 1,000,000 ILS to 500,000 ILS β a difference of 500,000 ILS in required cash.
Mas Rechisha (purchase tax) exemption: New Olim receive a significant purchase tax exemption on their first property purchase in Israel. The exact exemption threshold is updated annually by the Israel Tax Authority. For many price points, this eliminates or drastically reduces the purchase tax β one of the largest transaction costs for foreign buyers.
Ministry of Housing subsidized loan: New Olim may qualify for a low-interest government loan from the Ministry of Aliyah and Integration of up to 200,000 ILS toward a property purchase. This is in addition to a regular bank mortgage.
For buyers who are eligible for Aliyah but have not yet made the move, it is worth calculating whether making Aliyah before purchasing changes the financial picture enough to be worthwhile β even if you do not plan to live in Israel full-time immediately.
Arnona (ΧΧ¨Χ ΧΧ Χ) β This is the Israeli municipal property tax, equivalent to council tax in the UK or property tax in the US. It is charged by the local municipality (your city or town council, not the national government) and is based on the size of the property and the municipal tax rate in your area. Rates vary significantly between cities β Tel Aviv and Jerusalem have higher rates than smaller cities. Arnona is typically billed twice a year. The municipality sends the bill to the property address, so make sure your property manager or a trusted contact receives it if you are not living in Israel.
Vaad Bayit (ΧΧ’Χ ΧΧΧͺ) β Literally βhouse committee,β this is the building management system found in virtually every Israeli apartment building. Every apartment owner in the building contributes a monthly fee to the Vaad Bayit. These fees cover: cleaning and maintenance of shared hallways and stairwells, building insurance, elevator maintenance and repair, lighting in common areas, landscaping of the building grounds, pest control, and a reserve fund for major repairs. The monthly Vaad Bayit fee typically ranges from 200 ILS to 600 ILS per month for a standard apartment, and can be significantly higher in luxury buildings with a doorman, gym, or pool. Ask for the current Vaad Bayit fee before making an offer on any apartment.
Utilities β Electricity (Israel Electric Corporation), water (local municipality), gas (bottled gas or city gas depending on the building), internet, and cable or streaming services.
Property management β If you are not living in the property, you need a property manager in Israel. Property managers handle: finding and vetting tenants, collecting rent, coordinating repairs and maintenance, paying Arnona and Vaad Bayit on your behalf, and liaising with the building management. Israeli property managers typically charge 8-12% of monthly rental income.
Property insurance (Bituach Dira β ΧΧΧΧΧ ΧΧΧ¨Χ) β Building and contents insurance. Legally required if you have a mortgage; strongly recommended regardless. Policies cover structural damage, water damage, and contents.
The Most Common Mistakes Buyers from Abroad Make
In over 20 years of working with international buyers in the Israeli property market, these are the mistakes I see most often:
1. Signing a Zichron Devarim without a lawyer This preliminary memo feels like a casual note. Israeli courts treat it as a legally binding document. Have your lawyer review every document before you sign anything β no exceptions.
2. Not calculating your Mas Rechisha before making an offer Know your exact purchase tax liability before you negotiate the price. Use the Mas Rechisha Calculator to get your exact number. A buyer who discovers the true total cost after committing is in a weak negotiating position.
3. Assuming a signed contract means you own the property The purchase contract is a binding obligation β not proof of ownership. You are the legal owner only after closing and after the Tabu registration is filed. Do not finalize the last payment without your lawyer's explicit confirmation that all conditions are met.
4. Skipping the engineer inspection There is no title insurance in Israel to protect you after the fact. Your pre-purchase inspection β both legal and physical β is your only protection. Unauthorized construction discovered after purchase becomes your legal problem. The inspection fee of 1,500-5,000 ILS is the best money you will spend in the entire transaction.
5. Assuming appliances are included In Israel, appliances do not transfer with the property unless explicitly stated in the contract. Walk the property, list every appliance and fixture you expect to stay, and make sure every item is in the written contract.
6. Not understanding that there is no cooling-off period Buyers from countries with cooling-off periods (US, UK, Australia, Canada) are sometimes surprised by this. Once you sign the Heskem Rechisha, you are fully bound. No grace period, no right to withdraw without penalty.
7. Underestimating the source-of-funds documentation requirement Israeli banks are among the strictest in the world on anti-money-laundering compliance for large incoming transfers. Prepare a complete source-of-funds file before you need it: tax returns, pay stubs or business financials, bank statements, and documentation of any asset sales that contributed to your down payment.
8. Working with an unlicensed broker It is illegal in Israel to act as a property broker without a license, but it happens. An unlicensed broker has no legal accountability to you. Always verify the license at the official Ministry of Justice registry before engaging anyone.
9. Delaying the bank account opening You need an Israeli bank account to receive mortgage funds, pay Mas Rechisha, and manage ongoing costs. Most banks require an in-person visit for non-residents. If you wait until you need the account, you will delay the transaction. Start the application process as early as possible.
10. Not having property management in place before closing If you are not going to live in the property immediately, you need a property manager ready from day one. Budget for Vaad Bayit, Arnona, insurance, and management fees from the start β not as afterthoughts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can any foreigner buy property in Israel? Yes. Israel places no restrictions on foreign nationals purchasing residential property β apartment, garden apartment, penthouse, duplex, cottage, private house, or villa. There are no quotas and no nationality restrictions. The only requirements are legal: use a licensed broker and lawyer, pay your taxes, and register the property.
Do I need to travel to Israel to buy? Not necessarily. With a valid Power of Attorney β signed in front of a notary in your home country and authenticated with an Apostille β your Israeli lawyer can sign all documents on your behalf. However, for mortgage applications many banks require at least one in-person visit, and for opening an Israeli bank account most banks require a branch visit. First-time buyers are also strongly encouraged to visit the country and view properties in person before committing.
How long does the process take? From property identification to closing typically takes 4-6 months. Post-closing registration in the Tabu can take an additional 6-12 months, though this does not affect your practical ownership.
What is the Tabu? The Tabu is Israel's official Land Registry β the government database of all property ownership in Israel. Before you buy, your lawyer pulls a Nesach Tabu (Tabu extract) β an official document showing the current registered owner, any mortgages against the property, any liens or legal restrictions, and the property's official registered dimensions. You can view Tabu extracts at the official Israeli government portal.
What is Mas Rechisha? Mas Rechisha is Israel's property purchase tax β paid by the buyer. For foreign buyers in 2026: 8% on the first 6,055,070 ILS and 10% above. It must be filed within 30 days of signing and paid within 60 days.
Is there title insurance in Israel? No. Israel has no title insurance system. Your attorney's legal due diligence before you sign is your only protection against hidden title problems. This is why selecting an experienced real estate lawyer is not optional.
Is there a cooling-off period after signing? No. The purchase agreement creates immediately enforceable legal obligations from the moment of signing. There is no grace period. Never sign without your lawyer reviewing the complete contract first.
Are appliances included in Israeli property sales? Not automatically. Appliances, AC units, water heaters, and even some light fixtures are not included unless explicitly listed in the purchase contract. Always verify and document what stays.
What is the Vaad Bayit? The Vaad Bayit is the building management committee of an Israeli apartment building. Every apartment owner pays a monthly fee (typically 200-600 ILS) that covers shared building expenses: cleaning, insurance, elevator maintenance, and repairs to common areas.
What is Arnona? Arnona is Israel's municipal property tax β the equivalent of council tax in the UK or property tax in the US. It is charged by the local municipality and varies by city and property size.
Can I get a mortgage in Israel as a foreign buyer? Yes. Maximum LTV is 50% for non-residents β you need at least 50% as a cash down payment. Rates in 2026 range from approximately 4.5% to 6.5%. Mortgages can be in NIS, USD, or EUR. See the Israel Mortgage Calculator to estimate your numbers.
Can I rent out my property from abroad? Yes. Many foreign buyers purchase specifically for rental income. Rental income from Israeli property is taxable in Israel. The most common and simplest tax track for non-resident landlords is a 10% flat tax on gross rental income β no expense deductions, but simple to file. You must register as a taxpayer with the Israel Tax Authority.
Is buying property in Israel a good investment? Israeli residential property has appreciated significantly over the past 20+ years, driven by consistent population growth, limited land supply in desirable areas, and strong demand from both local buyers and the diaspora. Net rental yields in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem typically run 3-5%, with higher yields possible in smaller peripheral cities. That said, every investment carries risk β market conditions can change, and property is illiquid. Always consult a qualified investment advisor before making investment decisions.
Ready to Buy Property in Israel from Abroad?
Buying property in Israel from abroad is a process with many moving parts β but it is a well-established, well-travelled path. Thousands of buyers from the US, UK, France, Canada, Australia, and beyond complete successful purchases in Israel every year.
The key is building the right team before you start: a licensed broker who represents your interests, an experienced lawyer who knows Israeli property law and has worked with international clients, and a licensed engineer for physical inspection. Get these three right and the process becomes manageable.
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I am Pinny Rozen, licensed Israeli real estate broker, License 3161674, Israeli Ministry of Justice. I have been guiding buyers from the US, UK, France, Canada, and beyond through the Israeli property market for over 20 years. First consultation is always free.
Nahala Israel Β· findbayit.com Β· Licensed Broker 3161674