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Last reviewed: 18 May 2026 | Updated to reflect March–May 2026 judicial reforms.
Between March and May 2026, Israel’s Knesset passed a series of judicial-reform bills that have materially changed the landscape of commercial litigation in Israel. The reforms expand the civil jurisdiction of rabbinical and Sharia courts, alter the constitutional checks on government legal advisors, and introduce procedural amendments that touch the points at which civil courts may intervene in arbitration. For general counsel, commercial landlords, foreign investors and international companies with Israeli operations, these changes demand an immediate review of every dispute-resolution clause, forum-selection agreement and enforcement strategy currently in place.
The practical consequences are significant. Disputes that were previously confined to Israeli civil courts may now be initiated, or drawn, into religious-court forums where commercial norms, evidentiary rules and procedural expectations differ markedly. At the same time, changes to judicial oversight create a period of procedural uncertainty that industry observers expect will increase settlement pressure and lengthen timelines for administrative and constitutional challenges.
This guide provides a section-by-section analysis of each reform, its impact on dispute resolution in Israel, and the concrete contract-drafting, forum-selection and risk-management steps that businesses should implement within the next 30 to 90 days.
Key takeaways:
The 2026 judicial reform in Israel was enacted through a package of bills passed by the Knesset between March and May 2026. Together, these bills represent the most substantial restructuring of Israel’s judicial architecture in decades, and they directly affect how commercial disputes are initiated, heard and enforced. The Israel Policy Forum’s judicial-legislation tracker provides a useful chronological overview of each bill’s progress through committee and plenary stages.
The reforms fall into three broad categories relevant to commercial parties. First, legislation expanding the civil jurisdiction of rabbinical courts and Sharia courts, allowing these forums to adjudicate certain property, contract and financial matters that were previously the exclusive domain of the civil magistrate and district courts. Second, amendments to the appointment, authority and oversight of government legal advisors and the Attorney General’s office, which reduce certain checks on executive decision-making and alter the dynamics of administrative and regulatory litigation. Third, procedural amendments that touch the interaction between the civil courts and arbitration proceedings, particularly regarding the scope and timing of judicial intervention in arbitral processes.
The impact of 2026 laws on litigation is already visible: early indications suggest that several commercial proceedings with personal-status connections have been filed in, or transferred to, religious courts since the legislation took effect. Industry observers expect the volume to increase as practitioners and litigants test the boundaries of the new jurisdiction.
| Date | Reform | Practical Effect on Commercial Litigation |
|---|---|---|
| March 2026 | Expansion of rabbinical and Sharia courts’ civil jurisdiction | Commercial disputes with personal-status elements (family businesses, inheritance-linked assets, matrimonial property) risk being heard in religious forums; forum-selection clauses must be reviewed. |
| April 2026 | Amendments to oversight and appointment of government legal advisors | Reduced judicial checks on administrative decisions; potential procedural uncertainty and delays in regulatory and constitutional challenges; increased settlement pressure in government-adjacent disputes. |
| May 2026 | Procedural amendments affecting arbitration-intervention rules | Changes to the timing and scope of civil-court intervention in arbitration; arbitration clause redlines should address emergency relief and court-intervention thresholds. |
The expansion of rabbinical courts’ civil authority and Sharia courts’ parallel jurisdiction creates new forum risk for several categories of corporate litigation in Israel:
The March 2026 expansion of rabbinical courts’ civil authority is the single reform with the most direct and immediate impact on commercial dispute resolution in Israel. Before the reform, religious courts’ civil jurisdiction was narrowly confined, largely limited to matters of personal status (marriage, divorce, certain aspects of inheritance) and ancillary financial issues directly connected to those proceedings. The 2026 legislation broadens this scope, allowing religious courts to accept and adjudicate property, contract and financial claims where a jurisdictional link to a personal-status matter exists.
For businesses, the risk is not theoretical. Consider a family-owned company where two siblings who are shareholders dispute management control. If one sibling initiates an inheritance or family-law claim in the rabbinical court, the commercial dispute, corporate governance, valuation, buyout, could be drawn into that forum. Religious courts apply different procedural rules, different evidentiary standards, and different substantive norms than the civil courts. The concept of precedent operates differently, commercial-law expertise varies, and there is limited appellate review by the civil judiciary.
The practical consequences for commercial landlords and investors are equally significant. A tenant who is party to a matrimonial dispute could see a commercial lease entangled in religious-court proceedings. A joint-venture partner whose inheritance claim is filed in a Sharia court could subject the venture’s assets to a forum that the other partner never contemplated. The Israeli Ministry of Justice has published guidance on the scope of religious-court jurisdiction, but the precise boundaries of the expanded civil authority remain untested and will be shaped by early case law.
Industry observers expect that the first wave of contested jurisdictional challenges will be decided within 12 to 18 months, providing clearer guidance on where the new boundaries lie. In the interim, businesses should treat the jurisdictional expansion as a live risk and take the protective steps outlined below.
If your company or a key principal receives notice that a claim has been filed in a religious court with commercial implications, the following steps should be taken immediately:
A central question for businesses engaged in commercial litigation in Israel after the 2026 reforms is whether existing arbitration clauses and forum-selection agreements remain enforceable. The short answer is: yes, in most circumstances. Israel’s Arbitration Law continues to recognise and uphold the principle of contractual autonomy. Parties who have agreed to arbitrate their disputes, whether under domestic rules or international institutional rules (ICC, LCIA, SIAC), retain the right to hold counterparties to that agreement. Israeli courts have a well-established track record of referring parties to arbitration where a valid arbitration clause exists, and the 2026 reforms did not repeal or amend the core provisions of the Arbitration Law that support enforceability.
However, the practical landscape has shifted in important ways. The May 2026 procedural amendments affect the scope and timing of civil-court intervention in arbitral proceedings. Early indications suggest these changes may alter the threshold for obtaining interim relief from the courts during an arbitration, and may change how courts handle applications to set aside or confirm awards. Counsel drafting or reviewing arbitration clauses in Israel should pay close attention to three areas: emergency and interim relief provisions, the specification of the arbitration seat, and the inclusion of anti-suit language to address the risk that a counterparty may attempt to litigate in a religious court notwithstanding the arbitration agreement.
Forum selection in Israel remains governed by the general principle that parties may agree to submit disputes to a specific court or tribunal. Israeli courts have enforced exclusive forum-selection clauses in commercial contracts, provided the clause is clear, was freely agreed and does not offend public policy. The 2026 reforms do not directly invalidate forum-selection clauses, but the expansion of religious courts’ civil jurisdiction introduces a new risk: a party may argue that the religious court has jurisdiction notwithstanding a forum-selection clause, on the basis that the underlying claim involves a personal-status element. This argument has not yet been tested at the appellate level, but it represents a plausible litigation strategy that counsel should anticipate and guard against.
In light of the 2026 changes, the following three clause variants address the principal risks. These are illustrative templates, counsel should adapt them to the specific transaction and governing law.
Variant 1, Preferred arbitration clause with seat and emergency relief:
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be finally resolved by arbitration administered by [ICC/LCIA/Israeli Institute of Commercial Arbitration] in accordance with its rules in force at the date of the request for arbitration. The seat of arbitration shall be [Tel Aviv / London / Singapore]. The tribunal shall have the power to grant interim and emergency relief. Each party irrevocably waives any right to commence or maintain proceedings in any religious court in connection with this Agreement.”
Variant 2, Exclusive forum-selection clause with anti-suit fallback:
“The parties submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the District Court of [Tel Aviv-Jaffa / relevant district] for any dispute arising under this Agreement. Each party undertakes not to commence proceedings in any other forum, including any religious court. In the event that any proceeding is commenced in a religious court, the affected party shall be entitled to seek anti-suit injunctive relief from the District Court without prior notice.”
Variant 3, Emergency relief and anti-suit injunction language (supplementary clause):
“Notwithstanding the arbitration clause in Section [X], either party may apply to the courts of [jurisdiction] for emergency or interim injunctive relief, including anti-suit injunctions, without waiving the right to arbitrate. For the avoidance of doubt, this right extends to any attempt to initiate proceedings in a religious court in respect of matters covered by this Agreement.”
Multi-tier dispute-resolution clauses, requiring negotiation or mediation before arbitration, remain common in Israeli commercial contracts and are generally enforceable, provided the pre-arbitration steps are clearly defined, time-limited and mandatory. Israeli courts have held that vague or aspirational mediation clauses may not operate as a bar to commencing arbitration, but well-drafted escalation provisions with specific timeframes and notice requirements will typically be upheld. In the post-2026 environment, counsel should ensure that escalation ladders include explicit deadlines (for example, 30 days for negotiation, followed by 45 days for mediation, then arbitration) and specify that no party may initiate proceedings in any court, including a religious court, during the escalation period.
Israel is a signatory to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, and the enforcement of foreign arbitral awards through the Israeli district courts is a well-established process. The 2026 reforms did not amend the statutory framework governing enforcement of judgments in Israel under the Foreign Judgments Enforcement Law or the provisions implementing the New York Convention. In principle, foreign arbitral awards and foreign court judgments remain enforceable through the same routes that existed before the reforms.
In practice, however, the reforms introduce two sources of risk. First, the procedural changes affecting the civil courts, including altered timelines for judicial intervention and administrative uncertainty, may result in longer processing times for enforcement applications. Second, where a domestic dispute touches on matters that could fall under the expanded religious-court jurisdiction, a respondent may attempt to resist enforcement by arguing that the dispute should have been or should now be heard in a religious forum. While this argument is unlikely to succeed against a New York Convention award, it could delay proceedings and increase costs.
| Type of Decision | Typical Enforcement Route (Israel) | Key Practical Risk Post-2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign arbitral award (New York Convention state) | Application to Israeli district court under the Arbitration Law and New York Convention | Potential procedural delays; respondent may raise religious-court jurisdiction as a dilatory tactic |
| Foreign court judgment | Application under the Foreign Judgments Enforcement Law (conditions: reciprocity, finality, no conflict with public policy) | Longer processing times due to court workload and administrative restructuring; public-policy arguments may be tested more aggressively |
| Domestic Israeli court judgment | Execution through the Execution Office (Hotza’a LaPoal) | Standard enforcement; limited direct impact from reforms unless underlying judgment is challenged on jurisdictional grounds |
| Religious-court decision with commercial implications | Enforcement through the religious-court enforcement apparatus or, in some cases, the Execution Office | Uncertain enforceability of commercial elements; risk that civil courts may review or refuse to enforce commercial determinations made by religious courts |
The 2026 reforms require every business with active contracts governed by Israeli law, or with Israeli counterparties, to conduct an immediate review of its dispute-resolution architecture. The following checklist is designed for general counsel, deal teams and commercial landlords managing Israeli portfolios.
The strategic calculus for dispute resolution in Israel now differs meaningfully depending on whether a party is a domestic Israeli entity, a foreign investor, or a multinational with Israeli subsidiaries. Each category faces distinct risks and should calibrate its approach accordingly.
Domestic Israeli entities benefit from familiarity with the court system and existing relationships with local counsel, but face the highest direct exposure to the religious-court jurisdiction expansion. Family-held businesses should consider restructuring ownership through corporate vehicles (limited companies rather than partnerships) to reduce the personal-status nexus that triggers religious-court jurisdiction. Commercial landlords should review standard-form lease agreements and ensure that forum-selection clauses are robust.
Foreign investors should consider whether the arbitration seat should be moved outside Israel for new investments. An offshore seat (London, Singapore, Stockholm) provides a layer of insulation against domestic procedural uncertainty while preserving the ability to enforce awards in Israel under the New York Convention. For existing investments, review shareholder agreements, joint-venture contracts and financing documents to assess whether existing dispute-resolution provisions adequately address the new risks.
Multinationals with Israeli subsidiaries should conduct a group-wide contract audit focusing on inter-company agreements, employment disputes with senior executives (who may have personal-status connections), and supply-chain contracts with Israeli counterparties. Pre-dispute steps should include obtaining security for costs where possible, confirming consent-to-jurisdiction provisions, and establishing a clear choice-of-law clause that reduces the scope for argument about which legal framework applies.
Industry observers expect that the period of uncertainty will last 12 to 24 months as the courts develop case law on the boundaries of the expanded jurisdiction. During this window, the cost-effective strategy for most international parties is to favour arbitration with an explicit seat, robust emergency-relief provisions, and comprehensive anti-suit language.
| Date | Reform | Impact on Commercial Litigation in Israel |
|---|---|---|
| March 2026 | Expansion of rabbinical and Sharia courts’ civil jurisdiction enacted by the Knesset | Commercial disputes with personal-status elements now face a realistic risk of being initiated or heard in religious courts; all forum-selection and arbitration clauses should be reviewed. |
| April 2026 | Amendments to the status, appointment and oversight of government legal advisors | Reduced checks on executive and administrative decision-making; regulatory and constitutional litigation timelines may lengthen; increased settlement pressure in government-adjacent commercial disputes. |
| May 2026 | Procedural amendments affecting court intervention in arbitration proceedings | Changes to the threshold and timing for obtaining interim relief from civil courts during arbitration; arbitration clause drafting should specify emergency relief and anti-suit provisions. |
The 2026 judicial reforms represent the most significant shift in commercial litigation in Israel in a generation. Whether you are a general counsel updating global dispute-resolution playbooks, a commercial landlord reviewing standard-form leases, or a foreign investor assessing entry or expansion in the Israeli market, the time to act is now, not after the first adverse jurisdictional ruling.
Global Law Experts connects businesses with experienced Israeli litigation practitioners who can provide bespoke guidance on contract redlines, forum-selection strategy, arbitration seat analysis and emergency response protocols. Our network includes specialists in commercial, contract and real-estate disputes who are actively advising clients on the practical implications of the 2026 reforms.
To request a contract clause review, discuss your dispute-resolution strategy, or obtain emergency litigation readiness advice, contact the Global Law Experts Israel litigation team directly through our website.
This article provides general guidance on legal developments in Israel. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as a substitute for specific counsel tailored to your circumstances. Laws and court interpretations may change. Readers are encouraged to seek qualified legal advice before taking action based on the information in this guide.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Eyal Soref at Soref & Co. Law Office, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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