Property Division in Divorce — What Israeli Law Says
The first thing to understand: Israeli law does not require you to sell the apartment. Selling is one of several options, and not necessarily the best one in every situation. The choice depends on both parties' financial status, whether there are children, and whether there's agreement or conflict.
If you married after January 1, 1974, the Property Relations Law applies. It establishes a resource-balancing arrangement — meaning every asset acquired during the marriage belongs equally to both spouses, even if registered under one name only. A prenuptial agreement, if signed and approved by a court, can override these default rules.
For couples married before 1974 or common-law partners, the Sharing Presumption applies — a judicial doctrine that treats the family home as jointly owned when couples lived together as an economic unit, regardless of whose name is on the deed.
- Property Relations Law applies to marriages after 1974 — equal division of assets acquired during marriage
- Sharing Presumption applies to pre-1974 marriages and common-law couples
- A court-approved prenuptial agreement can change the division rules
- Property owned before marriage may be excluded from division
Four Options for the Shared Apartment — Pros, Cons, and Costs
When divorce is on the table, there are four main paths for dealing with the shared apartment. The first and most common is a joint sale — both parties agree to sell on the open market and split the proceeds equally after paying off the mortgage and transaction costs. This requires cooperation: agreeing on a minimum price, choosing a broker, coordinating showings, and co-signing the contract.
The second option is a spousal buyout — one spouse purchases the other's share. This works well when one parent wants to stay in the apartment for the children's stability. It requires a professional property appraisal and typically a new or restructured mortgage.
The third option is a court-appointed receiver. When there's no agreement and one party refuses to sell, the court can appoint a receiver to sell on behalf of both parties. The receiver's fee is approximately 4% of the property value plus VAT — a significant cost. The process typically takes 3–6 months, but the apartment may sell below market value because buyers know it's a forced sale.
The fourth option, rare in practice, is physical division — splitting a property into two separate units. Israeli law actually prefers this as a default, but it's only feasible for properties like semi-detached houses.
| Option | Timeline | Additional Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Joint sale | 2–6 months | Brokerage fee 1–2% | Cooperating couples |
| Spousal buyout | 1–3 months | Appraiser, lawyer, mortgage | Parent staying with children |
| Court receiver | 3–6 months | ~4% + VAT of property value | When there's no agreement |
| Physical division | Varies | Renovation and registration | Semi-detached homes only |
- Joint sale is the most common and transparent approach but requires cooperation
- Spousal buyout preserves stability for children, requires appraisal and new mortgage
- Court receiver is a last resort — may result in below-market sale price
- Physical division is rare, suitable only for properties that can be split
Real Estate Taxation in Divorce — Exemptions, Deferrals, and the One-Third Strategy
Taxation is one area where Israelis lose money in divorce — not because benefits don't exist, but because they don't know about them. Section 4a of the Real Estate Taxation Law establishes that transferring property rights between spouses as part of a divorce judgment is not considered a sale for tax purposes. This means no capital gains tax and no purchase tax on the transfer itself.
However — and this is critical — the exemption is a deferral, not a cancellation. When the spouse who received the property eventually sells it, they'll pay capital gains tax on the entire appreciation from the original purchase date, not from the divorce date. In some cases, it's actually better to report the transfer as a regular sale to create a new purchase date and reduce future tax liability. This requires consultation with a tax attorney.
The one-third apartment strategy is particularly relevant for families with adult children. If each spouse transfers one-third of the apartment to an adult child as part of the divorce agreement, each person ends up owning only one-third of a property. When they buy a new apartment, they qualify for sole residence purchase tax rates — because owning up to one-third of another property doesn't count as an additional residence.
2026 purchase tax rates for a sole residence: full exemption up to ₪1,978,745, then 3.5% up to ₪2,347,040, then 5% up to ₪6,055,070. In Kiryat Ono, where a 4-room apartment averages ₪3.0–3.4 million, purchase tax as a sole residence runs approximately ₪40,000–₪55,000 — compared to ₪240,000–₪270,000 for an additional property. The difference is enormous.
- Section 4a: divorce transfers are exempt from capital gains and purchase tax — but it's only a deferral
- One-third strategy: transferring a third to an adult child enables sole-residence tax rates on the next purchase
- Sometimes it's better NOT to use Section 4a — consult a tax attorney
- The gap between sole-residence and additional-property tax can be hundreds of thousands of shekels
Mortgage After Divorce — What Banks Actually Require
One of the biggest challenges after divorce is securing a mortgage on a single income. Banks don't deliberately discriminate against divorced individuals, but the system is built for couples — two salaries, two co-signers, less risk. On your own, you need to work harder for approval.
The basic formula: banks allow monthly repayments of up to 35%–40% of net income, including all existing obligations — loans, credit cards, and alimony payments. Practical example: ₪20,000 net monthly income means a maximum repayment of ₪7,000–₪8,000. On a 25-year loan at approximately 4% interest, that translates to a mortgage of roughly ₪1.4–₪1.6 million. With equity of ₪600,000 from the shared apartment sale, you could reach a ₪2.0–₪2.2 million apartment — enough for a 3-room unit in several Kiryat Ono neighborhoods.
A practical tip: apply to multiple banks simultaneously. Banks differ significantly in their approach to divorced applicants. Some are stricter, others more flexible. If you pay alimony, bring the court order so the bank can see it's a defined, fixed obligation. If you receive alimony, some banks will count it as income — but not all.
An important benefit: a divorced parent raising children is entitled to an additional income tax credit point, regardless of the number of children. Each credit point is worth ₪242 per month in 2026. This increases your net income and indirectly improves the repayment capacity that banks calculate.
- Banks approve repayments of up to 35%–40% of net income including all obligations
- Apply to several banks simultaneously — approaches to divorced applicants vary significantly
- Alimony payments reduce borrowing capacity; alimony receipts may count as income at some banks
- Additional tax credit for divorced parents with children — worth ₪242 per month
Buying an Apartment After Divorce — Prices and Planning in Bik'at Ono
Once the legal and tax picture is clear, it's time for the practical step — finding a new home. In Bik'at Ono at the start of 2026, the market looks like this: 3-room apartments range from ₪2.2–3.1 million (average ₪2.4–2.8M), 4-room apartments from ₪2.7–4.1 million (average ₪3.0–3.4M), and price per square meter runs ₪30,000–34,000 depending on neighborhood and building age.
What to remember when buying after divorce: your budget is likely smaller than what you had as a couple, but tax benefits can soften the gap. If you sold the shared apartment and received half the proceeds — say ₪1.5 million from a ₪3 million sale — your equity allows purchasing in the ₪2.0–2.5 million range with a reasonable mortgage.
In neighborhoods like Kiraon, Rimon, or central Kiryat Ono, 3-room apartments start from around ₪2.2 million. In Or Yehuda and Yehud-Monosson, also part of Bik'at Ono, prices are lower and may suit tighter budgets. The most important rule: don't rush. Post-divorce emotional pressure to close one chapter and open another is natural, but real estate decisions made under pressure are expensive mistakes.
- 3-room apartments in Kiryat Ono start from approximately ₪2.2 million
- Or Yehuda and Yehud offer more affordable options within Bik'at Ono
- Don't rush — real estate decisions made under emotional pressure cost dearly
- Get a professional property assessment before any decision
Children at the Center — Housing Rights and Impact on the Sale
When there are minor children, the court places their welfare at the center. In practice, this means that before you can sell the apartment, the court needs to verify that the children have a defined, adequate place to live. This is called a housing provision — a right that protects children's residential stability even as the family unit dissolves.
In many cases, the custodial parent continues living in the apartment with the children until alternative housing is arranged. The court can delay the apartment sale if there's no alternative housing solution, and can also direct that part of the sale proceeds be used to finance housing for the custodial parent.
Children over age 6 have the right to be heard in court regarding their place of residence, though the final decision rests with the judge. In practice, courts try not to uproot children from their school and community — which directly affects where the custodial parent looks for a new apartment. In Kiryat Ono, where neighborhoods differ significantly, proximity to a specific school can be a decisive factor.
- Housing provision protects children's residential stability
- Courts can delay apartment sales if children have no alternative housing
- Children over 6 have the right to be heard about their living arrangements
- Proximity to children's school often determines where to search for a new apartment
