What Happened to Prices in Gush Dan — Official Data
The Gush Dan real estate market underwent a significant shift in 2024-2025. While the northern district and Jerusalem recorded price increases of 3-5%, the central district led price declines at approximately -3.9% year-on-year. Kiryat Ono stood out even within this context, with a local drop of 4.06% — among the sharpest for mid-sized cities. The average 4-room apartment fell from NIS 3.18M in 2023 to approximately NIS 3.05M in 2024.
But the picture is more nuanced. Prices didn't fall uniformly — newer neighborhoods with ongoing construction held up better, while the second-hand market absorbed the brunt. CBS housing data also comes with a 6-month publication lag, meaning some of the declines visible today reflect deals closed in mid-2024.
| Indicator | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Central district YoY change | -3.9% | CBS |
| Kiryat Ono price drop (2024) | -4.06% | Bizportal/CBS |
| Estimated drop from peak | up to -8% | Analysts |
| Transactions, January 2026 | 6,933 | Ministry of Finance |
| Unsold new apartments (national) | 82,921 | September 2025 |
| Bank of Israel rate | 4% | January 2026 |
- Central district saw the steepest YoY price declines in Israel — approximately -3.9%
- Kiryat Ono experienced even deeper local drops within the central district
- CBS data lags by ~6 months — some of today's picture reflects deals from late 2024
Local Market Snapshot — Apartment Prices in Kiryat Ono and Ganei Tikva, 2026
To understand what apartments are actually worth in Bik'at Ono today, local data matters more than national averages. Below is a current snapshot for early 2026, noting that figures reflect transactions closed in 2024-2025 and may carry some lag.
| Apartment Type | Kiryat Ono (avg) | Ganei Tikva (avg) |
|---|---|---|
| 3 rooms | NIS 2.2–3.1M | NIS 1.7–2.5M |
| 4 rooms | NIS 2.7–4.1M | NIS 2.6–3.5M |
| 5 rooms | NIS 2.9–5.0M | NIS 3.0–4.5M |
| Avg price/sqm | NIS 30,000–34,000 | NIS 20,000–36,000 |
Within Kiryat Ono itself, there are meaningful gaps between neighborhoods. In the older Kiron area, a 4-room apartment can be found around NIS 1.9–2.2M. In newer areas like Ono BaPark, the same footprint runs NIS 2.5–3.0M. Premium towers like OMAMI (31 floors, gym, designed lobby) are priced at NIS 32,000/sqm and above. The gap isn't just about price — it reflects different lifestyle expectations and buyer profiles.
- Kiron — established older neighborhood with lower entry prices relative to the city average
- New premium projects like OMAMI offer modern infrastructure but less negotiating room on price
- Ganei Tikva offers lower entry points than Kiryat Ono with a similar family-oriented community
Falling Rates + Falling Prices — What It Means for Buyers
In January 2026, the Bank of Israel cut its benchmark rate by 0.25% to 4% — the second consecutive reduction. The bank's research division projects the rate will reach 3.5% by Q4 2026, meaning two more cuts are expected this year. The prime rate currently stands at 5.75%.
In practical terms: a 0.25% cut saves approximately NIS 150/month on a NIS 1M prime-rate mortgage. With two additional cuts, that's around NIS 1,800–2,000 in annual savings. On its own, modest. But combined with lower purchase prices and reduced initial leverage — buying power meaningfully improves.
The question buyers ask most: 'Is it worth waiting a bit longer?' The professional answer is: it depends. If you're buying to live in the property and have a genuine need, waiting for the bottom rarely pays off — by the time the bottom is clear, the opportunity has passed. S&P Maalot projects a gradual price recovery beginning in the second half of 2026. The variable worth watching more than rates: the rental market. New-tenant rents in Gush Dan rose 6% in January 2026 — that's the real cost of waiting for buyers who are currently renting.
- Interest rate at 4%, expected to reach 3.5% by year-end — cheaper mortgages still ahead
- Waiting for the exact market bottom is a high-risk strategy — most analysts see a directional shift in H2 2026
- New-tenant rent up 6% — renters waiting to buy are paying more every month
New Developer Apartments in Kiryat Ono — Opportunity or Trap?
Approximately 1,450 unsold new apartments were sitting on the market in Kiryat Ono in 2025 — one of the largest mid-city inventories in Israel. When developers accumulate inventory, they typically respond with two tools: hidden discounts and favorable financing terms.
In the current market, Kiryat Ono developers are offering terms like: 10% down at signing, balance only upon occupancy; developer bridge loans of NIS 1M; and inclusions (storage, parking, high floors) rolled into the base price. These aren't one-time promotions — they're the new normal.
The caveat: an undelivered new apartment comes with execution risk. Delivery delays, contractor insolvency, plan changes — these are real risks that need to factor into the decision. Before signing for an off-plan unit, verify the contractor's track record, the bank guarantee arrangement, and the building permit status.
| Feature | New (Developer) | Second-Hand |
|---|---|---|
| Current price | Higher | Has dropped more |
| Negotiating room | Moderate (via terms) | High (direct) |
| Immediate occupancy | No (1.5–3 years) | Yes |
| Condition | New, 7-year warranty | Depends on age |
| Complexity | Higher (developer) | Direct |
- 1,450 unsold units in Kiryat Ono = real negotiating leverage for buyers
- Creative financing (10% at signing, balance at delivery) allows entry with lower initial equity
- Always verify bank guarantee coverage on off-plan purchases — it's your primary financial protection
For Sellers: How to Price Correctly When the Market Isn't in Your Favor
If you're selling an apartment in Kiryat Ono, Ganei Tikva, Yehud, or Or Yehuda right now, it's worth being honest with yourself. A buyer's market means buyers have options, aren't rushed, and know their leverage. The most common mistake: pricing based on what the neighbor got last year.
Correct pricing is based on recently closed transactions — not listing prices of neighbors who haven't sold yet. Check nadlan.gov.il for actual closed deals on your specific street, not city-wide averages.
A few practical principles that help sell in the current market: first, list only when you're fully ready — serious buyers come in the first weeks, and a property that sits on the market too long raises questions. Second, a realistic price leads to faster negotiation than a high price with a long, grinding process. Third, minor cosmetic improvements — paint, cleaning, lighting — make a significant difference in photos and walkthroughs.
- Price based on closed deals, not listed prices of nearby properties
- A property with more than 60 days on market invites skepticism — price right from the start
- Get a professional valuation before listing — it saves time and prevents disappointment
What to Expect from Bik'at Ono's Market in the Rest of 2026
No forecast is perfect, and none will be offered here as certainty. But there are a few indicators worth tracking: the Bank of Israel's rate path (two more cuts expected in 2026); the pace at which the 1,450-unit new-apartment inventory gets absorbed; and urban renewal activity — with 17 approved plans in Kiryat Ono that stand to transform entire streets.
Per S&P Maalot's base scenario, price declines are expected to ease and halt in the medium term, with a gradual recovery beginning in H2 2026. The expected economic growth of 5.2% GDP in 2026 further supports demand. But these are projections, not guarantees.
In practical terms, anyone searching for an apartment in Bik'at Ono in 2026 benefits from a rare combination: lower prices, rates heading down, and motivated sellers. That alignment doesn't last indefinitely. If you have a genuine need — it's time to act thoughtfully.
- 17 approved urban renewal plans in Kiryat Ono — expected to add value to adjacent areas
- Rate expected at 3.5% by end of 2026 — cheaper mortgage terms still ahead
- Price recovery projected to begin H2 2026 per S&P Maalot — the window may be closing
