Israel
Source: WhereNext Global Relocation Index 2026 · CC BY 4.0
Worth Considering — strongest in healthcare and career.
83% data coverage·10.0M population·Public-domain data
Per-field freshness (5 dimensions)
Israel at a glance
Quick answer
Israel ranks #42 of 95 countries on the WhereNext composite score (52/100), with strongest scores in healthcare and career and watch areas in affordability and lifestyle. Estimated 2026 single-person cost of living in Israel is around $3,550/month. Composite score uses 7 dimensions (cost, safety, healthcare, education, career, lifestyle, infrastructure) sourced from World Bank ICP, UNDP HDI, IEP Global Peace Index, OECD PISA, and EF EPI.
Last updated: May 2026 · Cost-of-living estimate is a 2026 single-person model based on the WhereNext cost index. Use the Cost of Living tool for city-level detail.
Key facts
- Rank #42 of 95 composite score 52/100 across the WhereNext 7-dimension framework.
- ~$3,550/mo estimated single-person cost of living, including rent, utilities, food, and transport.
- Strongest: Healthcare 98/100 normalized — top strength out of 7 dimensions.
- Watch area: Affordability 13/100 — lowest dimension; verify against your priorities.
- Coverage: 83% of dimensions population 10.0M · public-domain data sources (World Bank, UNDP, IEP, OECD, EF EPI).
Composite score
On par with peers
- Israel
- 52/100
- Middle East avg
- 51/100
- Global avg
- 46/100
Compared against 3 regional neighbors and 95 indexed countries globally.
Source: WhereNext 7-dimension composite (World Bank ICP, UNDP HDI, IEP GPI, OECD PISA, EF EPI, Eurostat) · updated
Healthcare costs — Israel vs US baseline
Five common line items. Grey bar = US median; primary-green = destination median; amber appears only when the destination is MORE expensive than the US (rare for healthcare).
Verified · WhereNext healthcare-cost dataset
Private ins./mo
GP visit
Specialist visit
ER visit
Dental cleaning
| Line item | Country | Local range | US median | Delta |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Private ins./mo | 🇮🇱 Israel | $105-$195 | $500 | −$350 |
| GP visit | 🇮🇱 Israel | $25-$55 | $225 | −$185 |
| Specialist visit | 🇮🇱 Israel | $45-$90 | $375 | −$307 |
| ER visit | 🇮🇱 Israel | $215-$450 | $1.9K | −$1.5K |
| Dental cleaning | 🇮🇱 Israel | $20-$35 | $150 | −$122 |
Honest expectations: when Israel is the wrong fit
Most country guides only sell the upside. These are the specific triggers that mean Israel is probably not for you — drawn from recurring expat complaints and verified policy realities.
Do not choose Israel if your gross income is mid-range and you assumed Tel Aviv is affordable.
CostTel Aviv 1BR central runs $1,800-2,800/mo; groceries 30-50% above EU average; Israeli marginal tax hits 50% above ILS 718K (~$200K).
Do not choose Israel if you need geographic flexibility for travel insurance + family logistics.
SafetyRegional security situation requires careful insurance choice (kidnap/ransom + war-zone exclusions) + active monitoring of Israel travel-advisory levels.
Do not choose Israel if you wanted a low-friction Aliyah-equivalent for non-Jewish applicants.
VisaAliyah (Jewish return) is the only non-employer-sponsored fast-track; non-Jewish work visas require ongoing employer sponsorship until 5+ year naturalisation.
Will you find your people in Israel?
Community density signals — quant + qualitative. Loneliness is a top-three relocation-failure factor; this section flags whether Israel has the expat scene to match your profile.
Expat density
Hub20.2% foreign-born
English proficiency
45/100 (EF EPI)
Coworking density
High
Top nomad hubs
Tel Aviv
Adult community vibe
Hub
Family expat community
Active
What recurring expats complain about
“Tel Aviv social warmth is fast and intense — circles open quickly but are also territorially tight; Israelis have strong distinctions between work-friend and personal-friend that confuse newcomers.”
Best neighborhoods for community
- · Tel Aviv: Florentin, Neve Tzedek, Old North
- · Jerusalem: Baka, German Colony (families)
Internet reality in Israel
Median speed is a misleading single metric. What remote workers actually need to know: do Zoom calls survive peak hours, what happens during outages, what’s the mobile backup like.
Peak-hour Zoom quality
Good
Power outage frequency
Rare
Mobile backup
Excellent
Coworking fallback
Dense
Recommended eSIM providers
Cellcom · Pelephone · Partner
What to actually expect
Tel Aviv + Jerusalem + Haifa have excellent fibre + 5G; rural areas reliable. Brief Iron-Dome / safe-room infrastructure assumes connectivity continues during regional flare-ups.
Safety reality in Israel
7 dimensions of safety, each scored separately so a single weak axis doesn’t drag the cross-dimensional view. Per Global Peace Index + WHO + national crime statistics.
GPI 2025verified Apr 2026HDR 2024 (HDI 2023 data)verified Apr 2026- Caution
Overall public safety
Ongoing conflict; excellent healthcare and disaster response; most LGBTQ+-friendly in Middle East.
- Serious
Political stability15/100
Material political instability — track-record of policy reversals or civil unrest. Verify residency rights are durable before committing.
- Strong
Natural disaster resilience80/100
Moderate exposure (earthquake, drought). Insurance coverage usually sufficient; check policy fine print.
- Moderate
Women's safety68/100
Generally safe but solo travel at night calls for normal urban precautions.
- Strong
LGBTQ+ safety72/100
Legal but social acceptance varies regionally. Larger cities significantly more open.
- Excellent
Emergency healthcare quality88/100
World-class emergency / trauma capability in major cities.
- Serious
Terrorism risk
Active conflict / sustained terrorism risk. Reconsider relocation pending de-escalation.
National averages only. Within-country variation is large — Mexico City vs Mérida differ massively. Cross- reference at the city / neighbourhood level before relocating.
Verify with current government advisories
Static-data signals don’t reflect this week’s situation. Cross-check against your home government’s current travel advisory before any irreversible commitment.
What life in Israel is actually like
Daily rhythm and cultural texture
Life in Israel runs on a rhythm unlike anywhere else. The week pivots around Shabbat — everything closes Friday afternoon and reopens Saturday night, reshaping your grocery shopping, social plans, and restaurant options. Tel Aviv's Rothschild Boulevard fills with dog walkers at dawn and bar-hoppers past midnight, embodying the secular, Mediterranean side. Jerusalem operates on different social physics entirely — more religious, more politically charged, more historically layered. The directness of Israeli culture (dugri) shocks newcomers: your landlord will tell you your furniture is ugly, your colleague will critique your idea mid-sentence, and a stranger will correct your Hebrew pronunciation. This isn't rudeness — it's how trust is built. Summers on the coast are hot but manageable with beach access; inland areas like Beer Sheva hit 40C+ regularly. Rocket sirens and Iron Dome interceptions are a reality that locals process with practiced calm and newcomers find deeply unsettling. The food scene — shakshuka at Dr. Shakshuka in Jaffa, hummus wars between Abu Hassan and Abu Maroun, Yemenite bread at Kerem HaTeimanim — is genuinely extraordinary.
Who thrives here — and who struggles
Startup founders and tech workers — the ecosystem is dense, well-funded, and uniquely aggressive. Jewish diaspora members exploring aliyah. Academics in archaeology, religious studies, or Middle Eastern politics. Security and defense professionals. Israel is a poor fit for anyone with low tolerance for bureaucracy, people who need emotional distance from geopolitical conflict, or professionals in industries where the small domestic market limits opportunity. Remote workers can thrive in Tel Aviv but the cost of living erodes the advantage of foreign salaries.
Reality check: the first 6 months
Your first encounter with Israeli bureaucracy — Misrad HaPnim (Interior Ministry) — will test your patience profoundly. Expect queues, lost paperwork, and contradictory instructions between clerks. Finding a Tel Aviv apartment involves 'va'ad bayit' (building committee fees), arnona (municipal tax) that varies wildly by neighborhood, and landlords who expect post-dated checks for 12 months upfront. Hebrew is essential for daily life beyond the Tel Aviv bubble — government websites, medical appointments, utility bills all default to Hebrew. The security situation is ambient: you'll learn which app shows rocket alerts, where your building's shelter is, and how to carry on dinner when a siren sounds. Grocery prices will stun you — basic items cost 30-50% more than Western Europe.
Israel at a glance
What works well here
- ✓World-leading startup and tech ecosystem
- ✓Exceptional universal healthcare
- ✓Rich historical and cultural significance
- ✓Mediterranean climate and beaches
Friction to expect
- !Very high cost of living, especially in Tel Aviv
- !Mandatory military service and ongoing security tensions
- !Bureaucratic processes can be slow and frustrating
Practical nuances
- LGBTQ+ safety
- Tel Aviv is one of the most LGBTQ+-friendly cities in the world, with vibrant Pride celebrations. Legal protections are strong, though marriage is only available through religious courts (no civil marriage exists for any orientation).
- Driving & licensing
- Drives on the right. Foreign licenses are valid for up to 1 year for new immigrants. Converting to an Israeli license typically requires a short driving test. Driving culture is aggressive.
- Healthcare system
- A universal, mandatory-enrollment system funded by a health tax. Four non-profit HMOs (Clalit, Maccabi, Meuhedet, Leumit) compete for members and provide comprehensive care.
- Walkability & transit
- Tel Aviv is highly walkable and bikeable. A new light rail and expanding bus network are improving transit. Intercity rail connects major cities but coverage gaps remain.
Healthcare-system facts · Source: WHO Global Health Observatory + national health-ministry publications · Last verified Apr 18, 2026 · Verify coverage and eligibility with the public-system administrator or a licensed health insurer before relying on it.
Tax overview
- Personal income tax
- 10% - 50%
- Corporate tax
- 23%
- Sales / VAT
- 17%
- Wealth & crypto
- No wealth tax. Crypto is taxed as property; capital gains of 25% apply. New immigrants receive a 10-year tax exemption on foreign-sourced income.
Tax rates and special regimes · Source: OECD Tax Database + national tax authority publications + treaty texts · Last verified Apr 18, 2026 · Verify against your own circumstances with a licensed cross-border tax advisor before filing.
See our tax calculator to model your specific situation.
Where expats settle in Israel
Decision Snapshot
The numbers that matter most for your relocation decision.
Scored 0–100 using institutional data: World Bank (cost, governance), WHO (healthcare), OECD PISA (education), Global Peace Index (safety), Open-Meteo (climate), and 22 more — not crowdsourced surveys. See the full methodology.
$3,550
Premium Cost
1.6 homicides per 100k
UHC index: 85
3 pathways
B/1 Work Visa
Avg 18°C / 65°F
GDP/capita PPP: $57,236
$19,872/yr
5.6 months of local costs · 2023
Key Caution
Affordability scores 13/100, which is 49 points below the global average. Research this area carefully before committing.
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The honest take
What's great
- Healthcare — scored 98/100(well above average)
- Career — scored 76/100(well above average)
- Safety — scored 73/100(well above average)
Watch out for
- Affordability — scored 13/100(49 below average)
Is this place viable for you?
Quick decision check — Israel
Strengths
- Healthcare98/100
- Career76/100
- Safety73/100
Likely blockers
Cost may stretch typical budgets
Run the free Retirement Budget calculator
How Israel Scores
Seven dimensions, weighted by what matters to relocators.
Best Cities in Israel
Flagship cities first, then researched, then modeled — sorted by cost.
Beer Sheva
Haifa
Jerusalem
Tel Aviv
All 4 Cities in Israel
Tradeoffs and Risks
Every country has tradeoffs. Here is what the data shows.
What works well
Areas to research
Regional comparison
Similar Countries
Countries with a similar data profile across all seven dimensions.
Relocation Checklist — Israel
Checklist is for guidance only. Requirements may vary based on nationality, visa type, and personal circumstances. Consult an immigration professional.
Make Israel real
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Israel advisor intro
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About Israel
Israel, officially the State of Israel, is a country in the Southern Levant region of West Asia. It is bordered by Lebanon to the north, Syria to the northeast, Jordan to the east, and Egypt to the southwest. Israel's western coast lies on the Mediterranean Sea, its southern tip reaches the Red Sea, and to the east is Earth's lowest point near the Dead Sea. Jerusalem is the government seat and proclaimed capital, while Tel Aviv is Israel's largest urban area and economic centre.
Deep Research
Detailed data for thorough due diligence. Expand any section below.
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Capital
Jerusalem (disputed; most embassies in Tel Aviv)
Population
10.0M
Region
Middle East
Languages
HebrewArabic
Currency
Israeli New Shekel (ILS)
Timezone
IST (UTC+2)
GDP per capita (PPP)
$57,236
Unemployment
3.5%
Healthcare System
Healthcare System
UHC Coverage Index
85
Physicians per 1,000
3.9
Life expectancy
83.2 years
Homicide rate
1.6 per 100k
Climate & Environment
Climate & Environment
Average temperature
18.3°C / 65°F
Annual rainfall
359 mm
Visa Pathways
Visa Pathways
B/1 Work Visa
Employer-sponsored work visa for foreign professionals, requiring a work permit from the Ministry of Interior.
Innovation Visa (HI-TECH)
For entrepreneurs and tech workers looking to work in Israel's renowned startup ecosystem.
A/1 Temporary Resident Visa
For individuals seeking temporary residency for employment, study, or religious purposes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Israel a good country to move to?
Israel scores 52/100 overall and ranks #42 out of 95 countries in our data-driven analysis. It excels in healthcare and career. Whether it's right for you depends on your priorities — use our free personalization quiz to see how it ranks for your specific profile.
What is the cost of living in Israel?
The estimated monthly cost of living in Israel is approximately $3,550 for a single person with a moderate lifestyle. This is calibrated against a US baseline of ~$3,000/month. GDP per capita (PPP) is $57,236. Cost data is sourced from World Bank, and national statistical agencies.
Is Israel safe to live in?
Israel is relatively safe, scoring 75/100 on our safety index. This score combines the Global Peace Index, political stability data from the World Bank, and homicide rate statistics. The homicide rate is 1.6 per 100,000 people.
How is healthcare in Israel?
Israel has strong healthcare system, scoring 88/100. The WHO Universal Health Coverage index is 85. There are 3.9 physicians per 1,000 people. Healthcare quality can vary significantly between cities and rural areas.
Do I need a visa to move to Israel?
Visa requirements for Israel depend on your citizenship and intended length of stay. Israel offers various visa categories including tourist, work, and residence permits. Common pathways include B/1 Work Visa, Innovation Visa (HI-TECH), A/1 Temporary Resident Visa. Always check with the official embassy or consulate for current requirements.
Israel Guides & Articles
Suggested citation
CC BY 4.0This dataset is free to redistribute, quote, and embed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. The composite form below preserves source lineage so AI assistants can cite both WhereNext and the underlying institutional publishers.
WhereNext composite — WhereNext Israel Relocation Profile 2026 (2026-04-21). Derived from: World Bank ICP (cost of living); WHO Global Health Observatory (healthcare quality); OECD PISA + UNESCO UIS (education); Yale EPI (environment); IEP Global Peace Index (safety); EF EPI (English proficiency); World Bank Doing Business + WGI (governance, infrastructure). Available at https://getwherenext.com/country/il?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. CC BY 4.0.
WhereNext. (2026). WhereNext Israel Relocation Profile 2026. Retrieved from https://getwherenext.com/country/il?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. CC BY 4.0.
WhereNext. "WhereNext Israel Relocation Profile 2026." WhereNext, 21 Apr 2026, https://getwherenext.com/country/il?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. Accessed via https://getwherenext.com/country/il?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. CC BY 4.0.
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}<a href="https://getwherenext.com/country/il?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation">WhereNext — WhereNext Israel Relocation Profile 2026</a>
Next step
Anchor Israel as your destination. Visa, cost, healthcare, and school tools inherit the same context so you don't re-enter it.
Essentials for moving to Israel
Two recurring questions in every relocation case: medical cover when local insurance hasn't kicked in yet, and how to pay or receive money across currencies without the typical 4% bank-card markup. Defaults we'd pick first.
Health insurance abroad
Travel medical insurance for nomads + relocators
Monthly subscription medical insurance that covers 180+ countries. No commitment; cancel anytime. The default pick if you're moving abroad without an employer plan.
Cross-border money + banking
Real exchange rates + multi-currency account
Hold 40+ currencies, send money at the mid-market rate, get local bank details in USD/EUR/GBP. The default pick for cross-border payments and saving on FX fees while you set up local banking.
Important Notice
WhereNext provides data-driven insights for informational purposes only. Scores and rankings are algorithmically generated from public institutional data and may not reflect your individual circumstances. This tool does not replace professional advice for immigration, legal, tax, or financial matters.