Attached Property vs. Shared Property — The Legal Distinction That Changes Everything
In Israeli apartment buildings (בתים משותפים), everything that is not the apartment itself belongs to one of two categories: shared property (רכוש משותף) or attached property (רכוש צמוד). This isn't a technical footnote — it determines ownership, transferability, and resale value.
Shared property includes everything all residents jointly own: stairwells, the roof, external walls, the lobby, the shelter (miklat), and shared infrastructure. Each owner holds a proportional stake based on their apartment's floor area, but no one has exclusive rights to any specific part.
Attached property (הצמדה) is a portion of shared property that has been legally 'attached' exclusively to one specific apartment. Parking spaces, storage rooms, roof sections, and private gardens can all be attached. Once attached, they become a legal part of the apartment — they are sold with it, mortgaged with it, and inherited with it.
Creating a new attachment in an existing building requires the consent of all apartment owners in the building under Section 62(a) of the Land Law. In new projects, the developer attaches parking and storage to apartments during the planning phase, defines this in the sale contract, and registers it in the building's cadastral plan (תשריט).
| Type | Ownership | Sold Separately | Subject to Arnona | Transferred with Apartment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shared property | All residents | No | No (generally) | No |
| Attached parking | Apartment owner | To building residents only | No | Yes |
| Attached storage | Apartment owner | To building residents only | Yes (generally) | Yes |
Important: actual use does not equal registered right. There are many cases where residents have used a parking spot for decades, only to discover when checking the tabu that it is legally attached to a different apartment — or to no apartment at all, making it shared property.
- Attachment (הצמדה) means exclusive ownership. Physical use ≠ registered right
- Attached parking and storage transfer automatically with the apartment in any transaction
- A new attachment in an existing building requires unanimous consent from all owners — often difficult or impossible
What Parking and Storage Cost in New Bik'at Ono Projects
In every new project in Kiryat Ono, Ganei Tikva, Or Yehuda, and Yehud Monosson, parking and storage are priced separately in the sale contract. What type of parking you receive matters significantly to both present and future value.
In new Bik'at Ono projects, underground parking typically costs ₪80,000–150,000, and a storage room runs approximately ₪30,000–80,000 depending on size and floor location. A combined parking and storage package typically falls in the ₪150,000–280,000 range above the base apartment price.
| Component | Larger/Central | Mid-range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Underground parking | ₪120,000–150,000 | ₪80,000–120,000 | Covered, dedicated |
| Surface parking | ₪50,000–80,000 | ₪30,000–50,000 | Worth ~70% of underground |
| Storage room (8–12 sqm) | ₪50,000–80,000 | ₪30,000–50,000 | Depends on floor and access |
| Full package | ₪170,000–280,000 | ₪110,000–170,000 | Always verify what's included |
In older buildings — in Kiryat Ono Havatika, Kirayon, Rimon, and other established neighborhoods — parking and storage often either don't exist, or exist as shared property without a registered attachment. When buying second-hand with claimed parking or storage, always verify in the registry.
What you can negotiate with a developer: tandem parking (two cars in line, called חניה טורקית) typically costs 20–30% less than a direct individual spot. A lower-floor storage room that is not registered as attached can be a cost-effective alternative — it avoids arnona, unlike a formally attached storage unit.
- New Bik'at Ono project: underground parking ₪80K–150K; storage ₪30K–80K
- Surface parking is worth ~70% of underground parking; tandem parking ~70% of individual
- In older buildings — always check the registry, never rely on verbal assurances
How to Verify Parking and Storage in the Land Registry
Before signing a sale agreement for an apartment in a shared building, obtain two documents: a Land Registry extract (נסח טאבו) and the building's cadastral plan (תשריט בית משותף). Both are available through Israel's Land Registry website (home.tabu.co.il) for a small fee.
In the tabu extract: look for the section on 'attachments' (הצמדות). It will list all areas attached to that specific apartment unit, with each attachment's size (in sqm) and a unique identifier. If the parking spot doesn't appear in this list — it is not legally yours, regardless of decades of use.
In the cadastral plan: this is a visual map of the building showing exactly where each attachment is located. Each attachment has a unique color and letter/number code. Verify that the attachment number in the tabu matches the marking in the plan, and that the physical location makes sense.
Three critical checks: First, are the parking and storage attached to the apartment you're buying — not to a different unit in the building? This error exists in the wild. Second, is there a lien, seizure, or caveat (הערת אזהרה) on the attachment itself? Attachments can sometimes be encumbered separately. Third, in new projects where the building's shared building registration has not yet been completed — verify that parking and storage are specified in the sale contract with full details, with a commitment to register them once registration is complete.
Urban renewal note: In pinui-binui (demolition and rebuild) projects, attachments are reassigned in the new building. Tenants typically receive parking and storage as part of their compensation package. Verify these are explicitly stated in your relocation agreement.
- Get both the tabu extract AND the cadastral plan — both are needed for a full check
- Verify that the attachment ID in the tabu matches the marking in the cadastral plan
- In new pre-registration projects: ensure parking and storage are specified in the contract with full details
Selling Without Parking — What It Actually Costs You
A common question from Kiryat Ono homeowners: 'My apartment is in an older building with no parking — how will this affect the sale?' The answer is not comfortable, but it's manageable with advance preparation.
In a market where most comparable apartments have parking, a unit without parking narrows your buyer pool and forces a lower price. In Gush Dan, the data shows a roughly 10% discount in cities like Ramat Gan and Givatayim (about ₪200,000 on a ₪2M apartment), and up to 20% in Tel Aviv. In Kiryat Ono, depending on the neighborhood, the typical impact is 5–15%.
What you can do: In some cases it's possible to check whether shared parking in the building can be converted to exclusive-use or purchased with neighbor consent. Another option is arranging a long-term parking-use agreement with a neighbor who has two spots — attach this to the transaction. This is not equivalent to registered parking, but it helps some buyers.
| City | Parking Premium | Storage Premium | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tel Aviv | 15–20% of value | 2–5% | Very dense market |
| Ramat Gan, Givatayim | ~10% | 1–3% | Neighborhood-dependent |
| Kiryat Ono | 5–15% | 1–4% | Building and neighborhood-dependent |
| Ganei Tikva, Or Yehuda | 5–10% | 1–3% | Less pressured market |
Absent parking is a pricing issue you should discover before listing — not during negotiation. Factor it into your price from day one. Get a property valuation from a licensed appraiser if you're uncertain how much it affects your specific unit.
- No parking in Kiryat Ono typically means a 5–15% pricing discount in a competitive market
- Discover the parking situation before setting your price — not during buyer negotiation
- A neighbor parking-use agreement is a partial solution — not a substitute for registered parking
Negotiating Parking and Storage with a Developer: What to Ask and How
Unlike second-hand real estate, buying from a developer gives you a window to shape your parking and storage deal. Developers typically present a base apartment price and a separate price for parking and storage — and there is room to negotiate, especially in early sales phases.
What you can ask for: a discount on parking price (pre-launch phases offer more flexibility); a better parking spot location (not a corner, not the tightest space in the lot); a larger or better-located storage room; or even a free storage unit if you're making other concessions. Ask specifically about any lower-floor storage bank that may not be in the standard marketing materials — it often exists.
Questions to ask the developer: What is the specific parking number assigned to my apartment? Is there a separate storage floor (קומת מחסנים) not registered as attached (meaning no arnona)? Can I purchase tandem parking at a reduced rate? When will the attachments be registered in the tabu and what guarantees exist until then?
What must be in the contract: every attachment — parking and storage — must be explicitly named in the sale agreement with a unique number, floor, approximate size, and location. 'Parking included' without detail is not sufficient. Your attorney (not the developer's attorney) must verify that the contract appendices include a marked plan showing your specific attachments.
Contact us before signing a developer contract. A 30-minute review of the attachment clauses and floor plan can prevent significant future headaches. We've seen cases where buyers discovered — only at the tabu registration stage — that their 'included parking' was in a location far inferior to what was shown in the sales office.
- Every attachment must be specified in the contract with number, floor, size, and location — not 'parking included'
- Ask about a separate storage floor — it often exists but isn't marketed
- Your attorney (not the developer's) must review attachment appendices before signing
