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Every property transaction in Israel triggers the same threshold question: will purchase tax Israel rules classify you as a sole-residence buyer paying as little as 0 per cent, or as a foreign investor facing an effective rate above 8 per cent? The answer depends on residency status, the number of properties already owned, immigration history and how the 2026 Arrangements Law and Arnona municipal-tax reforms have reshaped bracket thresholds and exemption procedures. This Israel real estate tax guide covers the full decision framework, from Mas Rechisha (purchase tax) brackets and Olim discounts through mas‑shevach (capital gains) exposure and the practical steps required to file, pay and, where available, reclaim overpaid tax.
Quick TL;DR for three buyer profiles:
Readers can model their own exposure using the official Israel Tax Authority Purchase Tax Simulator on gov.il.
Purchase tax in Israel, known formally as Mas Rechisha, is a transaction tax levied on every acquisition of rights in real estate (zechuyot be-mekarkein). It applies whether the asset is a residential apartment, commercial building, vacant land or an indirect interest acquired through a real-estate-holding company. The legal basis sits within the Land Taxation (Appreciation and Acquisition) Law, 5723-1963, as amended. Tax liability crystallises on the date the purchase contract is signed (or, where relevant, the date an option is exercised), and the purchaser is solely responsible for payment.
Unlike value-added tax, which may apply in parallel on new-build purchases from a developer, purchase tax is calculated on the full declared consideration (or the market value if that is higher, as determined by the Israel Tax Authority). The rates are progressive for residential sole-dwelling buyers and flat or semi-flat for other categories.
Bracket thresholds are adjusted annually by the Israel Tax Authority to reflect changes in the consumer price index. The table below presents the structure as applicable during the 2024–2026 tax period. Because exact NIS thresholds are re-indexed each January, buyers should verify the current figures on the gov.il purchase tax simulator before closing.
| Bracket slice (NIS value range) | Rate, sole dwelling | Rate, additional / investor property |
|---|---|---|
| Up to first threshold (approximately NIS 1.9 M) | 0 % | 8 % |
| First threshold to second threshold (approximately NIS 1.9 M – NIS 2.8 M) | 3.5 % | 8 % |
| Second threshold to third threshold (approximately NIS 2.8 M – NIS 3.9 M) | 5 % | 8 % |
| Third threshold to fourth threshold (approximately NIS 3.9 M – NIS 6.5 M) | 8 % | 10 % |
| Above fourth threshold (over approximately NIS 6.5 M) | 10 % | 10 % |
Note: The approximate NIS figures above are indicative and reflect the broad order of magnitude as published for recent tax years. Always confirm indexed thresholds on the gov.il simulator or with Israeli tax counsel before relying on specific numbers.
Commercial properties (offices, retail, industrial) and undeveloped land are generally subject to a flat purchase tax rate of 6 per cent on the full consideration. Agricultural land and certain development-zone acquisitions may attract different rates or exemptions under specific ordinances. Corporate purchasers acquiring shares in a real-estate-holding company (igud mekarkein) face a separate analysis that imputes purchase tax on the proportionate value of underlying real property.
Short example, purchase tax 2026 Israel (sole dwelling at NIS 2.5 M): On the first bracket (approximately NIS 1.9 M), no tax is payable. On the next approximately NIS 600,000 (NIS 1.9 M to NIS 2.5 M), tax at 3.5 per cent applies, roughly NIS 21,000. Total purchase tax: approximately NIS 21,000, yielding an effective rate of about 0.84 per cent.
Israeli tax law draws a sharp distinction between a purchaser acquiring a sole dwelling (their only residential property in Israel) and every other buyer. The dividing line is not citizenship but tax residency, defined primarily by the “centre of life” test under the Income Tax Ordinance. Foreign nationals who are not Israeli tax residents, even if they hold citizenship, are treated as purchasers of an additional property and taxed at the higher rate schedule.
A buyer who can demonstrate that they are an Israeli tax resident and that the property will be their sole dwelling qualifies for the progressive schedule beginning at 0 per cent. Residency is typically established through identity-document verification, but the Tax Authority retains discretion to challenge the classification. A buyer who owns another residential property must sell it within a prescribed window (generally 18 months of the new purchase, or 12 months if the replacement dwelling is a pre-completion new build) to retain sole-dwelling eligibility.
Foreigners buying property in Israel face a materially higher tax burden. Because the 0 per cent band is unavailable, the effective purchase tax on an apartment priced at NIS 5,000,000 illustrates the gap clearly:
The difference, roughly NIS 270,000–280,000 on a single transaction, underscores why residency classification and exemption eligibility are the most consequential pre-purchase decisions.
| Buyer type | Purchase tax rate highlights | Filing / reporting obligations & deadlines |
|---|---|---|
| Israeli resident, sole dwelling | Progressive: 0 % up to first threshold; 3.5 %, 5 %, 8 %, 10 % on higher bands | File and pay within 60 days of signing the contract; include ID and proof of residency; may claim first-home or replacement-home exemption. |
| Non-resident / foreign buyer or additional property | No 0 % band; typically 8 % up to approximately NIS 6.5 M, 10 % above | File and pay within 60 days; purchaser is solely liable; additional documentation (foreign tax-residency declarations); higher audit risk; withholding provisions may apply to purchase proceeds. |
| Corporate / commercial buyer | Flat rate (approximately 6 % for commercial property) | Corporate filings apply; VAT and corporate-tax interaction must be assessed separately; consult tax counsel regarding deductibility and igud mekarkein analysis. |
Israel offers new immigrants (olim chadashim) and returning residents (toshavim chozrim) a significant purchase tax exemption as part of its broader immigrant-absorption policy. The key parameters are:
The Ministry of Aliyah and Integration maintains a dedicated guidance page on this discount. Industry observers expect that the 2026 Arrangements Law may adjust the upper NIS ceiling, so buyers should confirm current thresholds before committing to a transaction.
A resident who already owns one dwelling can still qualify for the sole-dwelling (lower) purchase tax rates if they sell the existing property within a prescribed timeframe:
Important distinction: Purchase tax exemptions and mas‑shevach (capital gains tax) exemptions are separate regimes with different eligibility tests. Qualifying for reduced purchase tax on acquisition does not automatically exempt the buyer from capital gains on a future sale, and vice versa.
Israel’s capital gains tax on real estate, mas‑shevach, is levied on the seller, not the buyer, and applies to the appreciation in value between the acquisition date and the sale date. It operates under the same Land Taxation Law that governs purchase tax. Understanding how the two taxes interact is essential for anyone buying property in Israel with an eventual exit in mind.
The headline rate for mas‑shevach is 25 per cent on the real (inflation-adjusted) gain, although the effective rate can differ based on when the property was acquired and whether linear-calculation rules apportion the gain between pre- and post-2014 periods. Key exemption routes include:
Example, sale after five years: A resident who bought a sole dwelling for NIS 3,000,000 and sells five years later for NIS 4,200,000 has a nominal gain of NIS 1,200,000. After inflation indexing, the real gain might be approximately NIS 900,000. If the sole-dwelling exemption applies, no mas‑shevach is payable. If the exemption is unavailable (e.g., the seller owns a second property), tax at 25 per cent on NIS 900,000 would yield approximately NIS 225,000.
Arnona is Israel’s municipal property tax, levied annually by local authorities on the occupant (or, where vacant, the owner) of every residential and commercial property. Unlike purchase tax, which is a one-time transaction cost, Arnona is a recurring obligation that directly affects investment-return modelling.
The occupier of the property on the billing date is generally liable for Arnona. For rental properties, the tenant typically pays, but landlords bear the obligation for vacant periods. Arnona rates vary widely between municipalities, properties in central Tel Aviv or Jerusalem attract substantially higher rates than those in peripheral areas, and are set annually by the local authority, subject to central-government caps and approval mechanisms under the Arrangements Law.
The 2026 Arnona reform cycle, implemented through Arrangements Law amendments, introduced changes that industry observers expect will materially affect investor cashflow modelling in several ways:
Buyers evaluating Israel property tax 2026 exposure should factor annual Arnona costs, which can range from several thousand NIS for a small apartment to tens of thousands for large or commercial properties, into their total-cost-of-ownership calculations.
The following step-by-step checklist covers the purchase tax workflow from offer to post-closing compliance:
Best practice is for the purchase agreement to include representations about the buyer’s residency status, a statement of the intended purchase tax classification, an indemnity clause covering reclassification risk, and a mechanism for adjusting the purchase price or escrow release if the Tax Authority challenges the declared exemption.
Olim should obtain their teudat oleh and a confirmation letter from the Ministry of Aliyah and Integration before signing. The purchase tax declaration form includes a specific section for claiming the immigrant discount, incomplete documentation is the single most common reason for rejection at the filing stage.
| Date | Event | Practical effect for buyers |
|---|---|---|
| November 14, 2024 | Ministry of Aliyah updates Olim purchase tax discount guidance on gov.il | Olim who purchased within relevant windows should confirm eligibility under the updated procedural rules. |
| January 2025 | Legislative amendments to real estate taxation (temporary orders) enacted | Temporary higher brackets and adjusted thresholds introduced; buyers must check whether these orders have been extended, modified or allowed to expire in 2026. |
| May 2026 (ongoing) | Arnona reforms and Arrangements Law procedural changes take effect | Municipal tax calculation methodology revised; short-term rental reclassification risk; impacts investor cashflow modelling and landlord compliance obligations. |
The following examples illustrate how purchase tax is calculated in practice. Both use the approximate bracket thresholds as described in this guide; readers should confirm current indexed thresholds before relying on these figures for transaction planning.
| Bracket | Portion taxed (NIS) | Rate | Tax (NIS) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 – approximately 1,900,000 | 1,900,000 | 0 % | 0 |
| 1,900,000 – 2,200,000 | 300,000 | 3.5 % | 10,500 |
| Total purchase tax | ≈ NIS 10,500 | ||
| Effective rate | ≈ 0.48 % | ||
| Bracket | Portion taxed (NIS) | Rate | Tax (NIS) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 – approximately 6,500,000 | 6,500,000 | 8 % | 520,000 |
| 6,500,000 – 7,000,000 | 500,000 | 10 % | 50,000 |
| Total purchase tax | ≈ NIS 570,000 | ||
| Effective rate | ≈ 8.14 % | ||
The contrast between a 0.48 per cent effective rate and an 8.14 per cent effective rate on transactions of comparable magnitude explains why purchase tax Israel planning, and in particular residency classification and exemption eligibility, commands such attention in pre-purchase due diligence.
Readers can run their own scenarios on the official gov.il purchase tax simulator.
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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