Liberman targets foreign residents in real estate tax reforms

Minister of Finance Avigdor Liberman Photo: Yossi Zamir
Minister of Finance Avigdor Liberman Photo: Yossi Zamir

The aim of Finance Minister Avigdor Liberman's reforms is to cool demand in the housing market and increase supply.

Israel's Minister of Finance Avigdor Liberman has submitted for approval to the Inter-ministerial Committee on Legislative matters, a draft amendment to the Real Estate Taxation Law. The aim of the reforms is to cool demand in the housing market and increase supply.

Liberman's reform targets foreign residents who will be required to pay appreciation tax when selling an apartment - a 25% tax on the difference between the buying price and selling price. Foreign residents will also lose the tax exemption on the rental income on apartments that they lease. The thinking behind the move is that if there is less incentive to buy an apartment in Israel, as an investment, then more homes will be freed up for local buyers. According to the Israel Tax Authority, foreign residents own 83,000 homes in Israel, of which about 40,000 are in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.

Another proposed change is to shorten the overlap period in which homebuyers are allowed to own two homes, from 24 months to 12 months. At present a homebuyer who buys a second home, can wait up until 24 months before selling their first home, and still be considered the owner of one home, when it comes to paying the various taxes. Between 2016 and July 2021, this period was 18 months but was extended to 24 months last year. Now Liberman is seeking to shorten it to 12 months.

Liberman is also seeking to update the purchase tax brackets for buying a property, so that homebuyers of cheaper apartments will pay less and buyers of more expensive apartments will pay more tax.

Under Liberman's reform, homebuyers will be exempt of purchase tax on apartments up to NIS 1.93 million, instead of the current NIS 1.8 million. Purchase tax will be 3.5% for apartments costing between NIS 1.93 million and NIS 2.33 million (currently NIS 1.8 million and NIS 2.14 million). Purchase tax will rise to 5% from NIS 2.33 million to NIS 3.1 million (currently NIS 2.14 million to NIS 5.15 million) and to 8% from NIS 3.1 million to NIS 5.3 million. Purchase tax will rose to 10% from NIS 5.3 million, instead of from NIS 18.4 million at present.

Published by Globes, Israel business news - en.globes.co.il - on April 3, 2022.

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd., 2022.

Minister of Finance Avigdor Liberman Photo: Yossi Zamir
Minister of Finance Avigdor Liberman Photo: Yossi Zamir
Accountant General Yali Rothenberg credit: Rafi Kutz Israel's fiscal deficit continued to narrow in March

Israel's fiscal deficit narrowed in the twelve months to the end of March 2025, for the sixth consecutive month, Ministry of Finance accountant general Yali Rothenberg reported today.

Arkia credit: Arkia Arkia cuts Tel Aviv - New York April fares

Arkia has cut fares at the last minute, a time when prices usually soar even higher, according to the pricing method used in the industry.

Bank of Israel Governor Prof. Amir Yaron credit: Dani Shem Tov Knesset Spokesperson BoI Governor: US tariffs could push up inflation in Israel

Prof. Amir Yaron tells "Globes" that there is a risk that the new tariffs will cause inflation to rise in the US, with a knock-on effect for Israel.

US President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu April 7, 2025  credit: Avi Ohayon, Government Press Office Netanyahu fails to persuade Trump to remove tariff on Israel

Asked by reporters whether Israel would be exempted from his tariffs policy, US President Donald Trump replied, "Maybe not. Don’t forget we help Israel a lot."

FBI to investigate Nakash Group Israel CEO

The complaint against Avi Hormaro was filed with the FBI offices in Miami, Florida, where many of the group's companies are incorporated, "Globes" has learned.

Bank of Israel credit: Shutterstock Israel's forex reserves fell in March

Israel’s foreign exchange reserves at the end of March 2025 fell to $218.821 billion, a decrease of $1.433 billion from their level at the end of February, the Bank of Israel reports.

Bank of Israel Governor Prof. Amir Yaron credit: GPO BoI keeps rate unchanged, cuts growth forecast

The Bank of Israel is concerned about inflation, the escalation of the war in Gaza, which has raised Israel's risk premium, and the turmoil on global markets set off by the trade war.

Eilat Ramon Airport Credit: Sivan Farag Eilat Municipal Spokesperson Russian airline to kick-start int'l flights from Eilat's Ramon airport

Russian airline Red Wings is to launch direct flights between Eilat's Ramon airport and Moscow and Sochi in Russia starting June 12.

High-tech credit: Shutterstock 8,300 tech employees left Israel after start of war

Amid increased relocation, Israel's tech workforce has contracted for the first time in over a decade, the Israel Innovation Authority reports.

Donald Trump  credit: Shutterstock Israel can't escape impact of tariffs

Even if Israel obtains relief from the tariff imposed on it by US President Trump, it will feel the global effects of the trade war, analysts say.

Shekel versus US dollar  credit: Tali Bogdanovsky US market slide shakes shekel

The shekel weakened significantly against both the US dollar and the euro at the opening of foreign exchange trading today.

Arik Faingold credit: Nati Levi Israeli autonomous frontend co AutonomyAI raises $4m

Led by Arik Faingold, the founder of cybersecurity unicorn Pentera, AutonomyAI offers a platform that learns and understands the full organizational context and generates code that can be deployed directly to the production environment.

British Airways aircraft  credit: Shutterstock/Jarek Kilian Tel Aviv - London fares to fall as British Airways resumes flights

From June there will be 20-32 weekly flights operated on the popular Tel Aviv - London route by foreign airlines - British Airways, Wizz Air and easyJet.

Partner Partner forms int'l business diivision

The division will be headed by former Bezeq International VP Global Business Nissan Arieh.

Caesarstone kitchen credit: Caesarstone Caesarstone bucks Nasdaq as tariffs boost potential

The Israeli quartz countertop manufacturer company has fallen on hard times due to Chinese rivalry but tariffs could boost its revenue.

ZIM ship credit: ZIM Trump's tariffs torpedo ZIM's share price

ZIM's share price fell 16.4% on Wall Street on Thursday and a further 7.2% on Friday, closing with a market cap of $1.5 billion, wiping out all its gains in 2025.

Twitter Facebook Linkedin RSS Newsletters גלובס Israel Business Conference 2018