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Anyone buying, selling or investing in Israeli property in 2026 faces a materially different tax landscape following the Arrangements Law amendments that took effect on 15–16 February 2026. These amendments restructured purchase-tax brackets, recalibrated exemption thresholds for first-time buyers and immigrants, and introduced procedural changes to land registration that affect both transfer costs and conveyancing timelines. This guide provides a comprehensive, statute-referenced overview of real estate taxes Israel stakeholders must understand, from purchase tax (mas rechisha) through capital-gains tax (mas shevach) to the practical due-diligence steps every buyer, seller and adviser should follow.
Whether you are a first-time purchaser, a returning investor, an oleh (immigrant) claiming a discount, or in-house counsel stress-testing a cross-border acquisition structure, the sections below set out rates, exemptions, worked examples and filing obligations current as of May 2026.
Israel’s real-estate tax framework is governed primarily by two statutes: the Land Taxation Law (Appreciation and Purchase), 5723-1963 (commonly called the Land Appreciation Tax Law) and the Land Registration Ordinance. Both were amended by the Economic Arrangements Law package approved by the Knesset and published in the Reshumot (Official Gazette) in February 2026. The cabinet decisions preceding the legislation targeted housing-market affordability and administrative modernisation, bundling purchase-tax reform together with land-registry digitisation measures.
| Date | Source / Instrument | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 15 February 2026 | Arrangements Law 2026, Knesset vote & Reshumot publication | Amended purchase-tax rate bands under the Land Appreciation Tax Law; revised registration-fee schedules |
| 16 February 2026 | Israel Tax Authority implementation notice | Updated exemption thresholds (index-linked) for sole-property purchasers and olim; new electronic-filing procedures for land-registry applications |
| 1 January 2026 (annual update) | Israel Tax Authority, annual index adjustment | Consumer-price-index adjustments to all NIS-denominated purchase-tax brackets and mas shevach computation parameters |
Source: Gov.il, Real Estate Tax guidance and Israel Tax Authority notices.
The combined effect of the Arrangements Law 2026 amendments is threefold: purchase-tax brackets now apply higher marginal rates to high-value acquisitions by investors; first-time-buyer relief thresholds have been modestly increased; and conveyancers must use the Tax Authority’s electronic portal for registration-related filings. Industry observers expect the practical result to be faster processing of standard residential transactions but additional compliance steps for complex or cross-border deals.
Purchase tax (mas rechisha) is a transaction tax paid by every buyer of Israeli real estate, individuals, corporations and foreign entities alike. It is calculated on the full consideration stated in the sale agreement (or the property’s market value as assessed by the Tax Authority, whichever is higher) and is levied on a progressive-band basis. The rates that apply depend on whether the purchaser already owns residential property in Israel.
An individual purchasing a residential property who does not own, and whose spouse does not own, another residential dwelling in Israel is classified as a “sole-property purchaser” and benefits from reduced rates. The 2026 brackets, following the February index update, apply progressively so that only the portion of the purchase price falling within each band is taxed at that band’s rate. The lowest band carries a 0 % rate up to a specified NIS threshold, rising through intermediate bands, with the top marginal rate applying to the portion of the price exceeding the highest threshold.
Worked example, first-time buyer:
| Step | Detail |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | NIS 2,000,000 |
| Band 1 (0 %) | First NIS ~1,919,155, tax: NIS 0 |
| Band 2 (3.5 %) | NIS 2,000,000 minus NIS 1,919,155 = NIS 80,845 × 3.5 % = NIS 2,830 |
| Total purchase tax | NIS 2,830 |
Note: Thresholds shown are illustrative of the 2026 index-linked bands published by the Israel Tax Authority. Buyers should verify exact thresholds using the official Tax Authority simulator.
Purchasers who already own a residential property, or who are buying an investment property, do not qualify for the reduced sole-property rates. Instead, they are subject to a steeper progressive schedule that begins at 8 % on the first band and rises to 10 % on higher tranches. The Arrangements Law 2026 raised the top marginal band for this category, meaning investors acquiring high-value properties now face a larger tax bill than under the pre-February 2026 schedule.
Worked example, investor buying a second home:
| Step | Detail |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | NIS 3,500,000 |
| Band 1 (8 %) | First NIS ~6,055,070, entire price falls in this band: NIS 3,500,000 × 8 % = NIS 280,000 |
| Total purchase tax | NIS 280,000 |
For properties exceeding the upper thresholds, the 10 % rate applies to the excess. Investors should model costs carefully using official tools before committing.
Non-resident individuals who do not meet the Israeli-residency test are generally treated as additional-property purchasers, even if they do not already own property in Israel, and therefore pay the higher rate schedule. Corporate purchasers pay purchase tax at a flat rate that has historically been set at approximately 6 % of the consideration, though the Arrangements Law 2026 may alter the effective rate for certain transaction types. Corporations must also account for VAT on new-build acquisitions from developers, which is charged on top of the purchase price.
Worked example, foreign-company purchase:
| Step | Detail |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | NIS 5,000,000 |
| Corporate purchase tax (6 %) | NIS 5,000,000 × 6 % = NIS 300,000 |
| VAT on new-build (17 %) | Already included in quoted price from developer, or added on top if not, verify contract terms |
| Total purchase tax | NIS 300,000 (excluding VAT) |
Foreign buyers and corporate purchasers should consult a qualified Israel real estate lawyer before executing a transaction, as the interplay between purchase tax, VAT and potential withholding obligations creates significant compliance exposure.
Israeli law provides several categories of exemption or discount from full purchase-tax liability. Eligibility depends on the purchaser’s personal status, immigration history and, in some cases, medical condition. All exemptions must be claimed proactively, they are not applied automatically.
New immigrants (olim) and returning residents are entitled to a reduced purchase-tax rate on a single residential property purchased within a specified period of making aliyah. According to the Gov.il guidance on the olim purchase-tax discount, eligible individuals may benefit from rates that are substantially lower than the standard sole-property schedule. The discount window typically extends for several years from the date of aliyah, and the purchaser must provide proof of oleh status issued by the Ministry of Absorption.
Key eligibility conditions include:
These immigrant tax benefits represent a meaningful saving and should be factored into any purchase-price negotiation. Full procedural details are published on the official Gov.il olim purchase-tax discount page.
Purchasers with a recognised disability (typically 100 % disability or equivalent combined rating, as certified by the National Insurance Institute) may qualify for reduced purchase-tax rates on a sole residential dwelling. Additional exemptions or reduced rates may apply to:
Purchase-tax exemptions are claimed by filing a declaration with the regional office of the Israel Tax Authority, ordinarily through the purchaser’s conveyancing lawyer. The declaration must be submitted within 30 days of signing the sale agreement (the same deadline that applies to the standard purchase-tax return). Required documentation typically includes:
📥 Downloadable resource: A printable “Purchase Tax Exemption Checklist” summarising each exemption category, required documents and filing deadlines is available for download. Contact a qualified Israeli lawyer for the latest version tailored to your circumstances.
When Israeli real estate is sold at a profit, the seller is liable for mas shevach (land-appreciation tax), Israel’s form of capital gains tax on real property. Mas shevach is governed by the Land Appreciation Tax Law and is assessed by the Israel Tax Authority on the taxable gain, the difference between the sale proceeds and the indexed acquisition cost, after allowable deductions.
The basic computation follows a clear sequence:
Worked example, mas shevach computation:
| Step | Amount (NIS) |
|---|---|
| Sale price (2026) | 3,000,000 |
| Original purchase price (2016) | 1,800,000 |
| Indexed acquisition cost (after CPI adjustment) | 2,200,000 |
| Allowable deductions (legal fees, improvements) | 80,000 |
| Taxable gain | 720,000 |
| Tax at 25 % | 180,000 |
Israeli law provides a significant exemption from mas shevach for sellers disposing of their sole residential property, subject to conditions. The principal requirements are:
Sellers who owned more than one property as of a historic cut-off date may face a “linear” computation, where the gain is split between a pre-reform period (potentially exempt) and a post-reform period (taxable). The calculation can be complex, and professional advice from an Israel real estate practice area specialist is strongly recommended.
Both the buyer and the seller must file a declaration with the Israel Tax Authority within 30 days of signing the sale agreement. The declaration is filed using official Tax Authority forms (available through the Gov.il real-estate services portal). The Tax Authority will then issue an assessment. Key procedural points include:
The land registration 2026 reforms introduced through the Arrangements Law affect how property titles are transferred at the Tabu (Land Registry). The principal changes relate to the digitisation of submission procedures and the revision of registration-fee schedules.
Under the new rules, conveyancers must submit transfer applications electronically through the Land Registry’s online portal, replacing the previous paper-based filing option for most standard residential transactions. Registration fees, historically calculated as a percentage of the property’s value, have been recalibrated. Industry observers expect the revised fee structure to modestly increase costs for high-value properties while keeping fees stable or reducing them for transactions below the median price range.
Before completing any purchase, a thorough due-diligence process should cover:
Understanding the total cost of a transaction requires looking beyond the headline purchase price. Below is an illustrative budget for a NIS 2,500,000 sole-property residential purchase:
| Cost item | Estimated amount (NIS) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase tax | ~20,000 | Sole-property rate; verify with Tax Authority simulator |
| Land-registration fee | ~3,500–6,000 | Revised 2026 fee schedule |
| Conveyancing / legal fees | 15,000–25,000 | Typically 0.5 %–1 % + VAT |
| Mortgage registration fee | ~1,500 | If mortgage is taken |
| Arnona (annual, ongoing) | Varies by municipality | Ongoing annual municipal tax |
| Estimated total transaction costs | ~40,000–58,000 | Excluding mortgage costs and insurance |
A properly structured advisory team includes a conveyancing lawyer, a tax adviser (or CPA) and, for cross-border purchasers, an international-tax specialist. The conveyancer should coordinate the filing of purchase-tax declarations, handle registration, and ensure that all exemption claims are submitted within the 30-day deadline. Tax advisers should model both the purchase-tax and future mas shevach exposure before the buyer commits, particularly where the property is an investment rather than a primary residence.
Several transaction types raise additional complexity beyond the standard residential purchase. Foreign nationals buying from abroad should be aware that non-resident status typically precludes access to the reduced sole-property purchase-tax bands and may trigger buyer-withholding obligations on the seller’s mas shevach. Companies acquiring Israeli property, whether through an Israeli subsidiary or a foreign entity, must consider the interplay between purchase tax, VAT (at 17 % on new-build purchases from a developer) and corporate income tax on rental yields or disposal gains.
Trust structures holding Israeli real estate require careful analysis: the Tax Authority may “look through” a trust and assess the beneficiary directly, or may treat the trust as a separate taxpayer, depending on the trust’s terms and the residency of the settlor and beneficiaries. Estate-planning considerations are closely linked to mas shevach exposure, because a beneficiary who inherits a property may receive a stepped-up cost base for future capital-gains purposes, subject to conditions. For cross-border tax guidance, the cross-border real estate advice resources on this site and authoritative secondary sources such as PwC’s Israel tax summaries provide useful starting points.
| Entity Type | Purchase Tax Treatment (Summary) | Filing / Withholding Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Individual owner-occupier (no other property) | Reduced progressive bands; 0 % on first tranche; top rate applies only to high-value portion | Declaration via conveyancer within 30 days; provide eligibility documentation |
| Individual investor (already owns property) | Higher progressive bands starting at 8 %; top marginal rate of 10 % on upper tranches | Declaration within 30 days; no exemption available; mas shevach advance payment on future sale |
| Foreign non-resident individual | Treated as additional-property purchaser (higher rates) even if no Israeli property owned | Declaration within 30 days; buyer may be required to withhold mas shevach on seller’s behalf |
| Corporate buyer | Flat rate (approximately 6 %); no personal exemptions; VAT on new builds from developers | Company files and pays; must also address VAT, corporate income tax and potential withholding |
Source: Israel Tax Authority guidance via Gov.il, Real Estate Tax and PwC Israel Tax Summaries.
The 2026 changes to real estate taxes Israel buyers and sellers must navigate are substantive: revised purchase-tax bands, updated exemption thresholds and a modernised land-registration process all demand careful planning before any transaction is signed. For first-time purchasers and olim, the savings available through correctly claimed exemptions can be significant. For investors and foreign buyers, the higher rate schedules introduced by the Arrangements Law 2026 make pre-transaction tax modelling essential. Sellers should compute their potential mas shevach liability, and verify exemption eligibility, well before listing a property. The stakes are too high to rely on generalised guidance alone.
To ensure full compliance and optimal tax positioning, find an Israel real estate lawyer through our directory for advice tailored to your specific transaction.
Last reviewed: 11 May 2026. This article provides general legal information and does not constitute legal advice. Legislative thresholds and rates are subject to periodic adjustment by the Israel Tax Authority.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Neatai Braun at Arbel, Braun Attorneys at Law and Notary, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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