The betterment levy (heitel hashbacha) is 50 percent of the rise in your land value caused by an approved planning action. An appraiser for the local planning and building committee (vaada mekomit) values your property before and after the plan, and you pay half the difference. It is not the capital gains tax (mas shevach). Mas shevach is 25 percent on your real gain between purchase and sale price, paid to the national Israel Tax Authority. The levy is a municipal charge tied to one event: a plan that lifted what your land is worth. On a resale you, the seller, pay it, even if you never built the extra rights. You have 45 days from the assessment notice to challenge it, and the dispute over the amount goes to a decisive appraiser (shamai makria).
If you are reading a closing statement that suddenly shows a six-figure municipal charge you did not expect, this page is for you. The first question to answer is not “how much” but “what plan triggered this,” because that single fact decides whether the levy is fair, disputable, or wrong.
What actually sets off the charge: a plan that lifts your land value
The betterment levy is triggered by an approved planning action, not by your sale and not by the price a buyer pays you. The trigger is one of these: a rezoning, a new town plan, a relief or non-conforming-use permit, or added building rights granted to your parcel. The moment a committee approves something that makes your land worth more, a betterment exists on paper. Your sale is simply the day the bill comes due.
This is the part that surprises sellers. The added value may have been created years before you decided to sell. You might never have used the extra rights. None of that removes the levy. The owner at the time of the triggering event owes it, and on a sale that owner is you.
The legal basis is the Third Schedule (Tospat Shlishit) to the Planning and Building Law, in force since 1981. The charge is collected by the local planning and building committee, not by the tax authority. That difference matters when you fight it, because the appeal path is its own world, separate from anything to do with mas shevach.
Three moments the levy can crystallise
- On a sale. You sell, and the committee demands the levy before it issues the clearance certificate you need to register the transfer (ishur le-tabu).
- On a building permit. You pull a permit that uses the new rights, and payment is due then.
- On approval of relief or non-conforming use. The value jump is realised and the levy attaches.
Payment can usually be deferred until one of these realisation points. But at closing the levy must be settled to get the local committee clearance, without which the Tabu (Land Registry) will not record your buyer. So in practice a seller pays at closing.
The 50 percent split, with a before and after table
The math is simple once you have the two appraisals. The committee’s appraiser (shamai) values the property as it was before the plan, then as it is after the plan. The difference is the betterment. The levy is half of it.
Here is the textbook case. Agricultural land worth NIS 1,000,000 is rezoned for residential use and becomes worth NIS 3,000,000. The betterment is NIS 2,000,000. The levy is NIS 1,000,000.
| Step | Figure |
|---|---|
| Value before the plan | NIS 1,000,000 |
| Value after the plan | NIS 3,000,000 |
| Betterment (the rise) | NIS 2,000,000 |
| Betterment levy at 50 percent | NIS 1,000,000 |
My worked estimate: what the levy costs you per shekel of uplift. Because the rate is a flat 50 percent of the rise, every NIS 100,000 the plan added to your value costs you NIS 50,000 in levy. So if an appraiser puts your uplift at NIS 600,000, budget NIS 300,000. Basis: 50 percent rate applied to the appraised rise, per the Third Schedule. (This is my own arithmetic, not a quoted figure.)
My worked estimate: the levy as a share of a typical apartment sale price. Take a NIS 3,000,000 apartment sale where a new plan added NIS 500,000 of value. The levy is NIS 250,000, which is about 8.3 percent of the sale price. That single line can dwarf your agent commission (about 2 percent plus 18 percent VAT, so roughly 2.36 percent, or about NIS 71,000 here). Basis: 50 percent of a NIS 500,000 uplift, divided by a NIS 3,000,000 price; commission norm from the fact bank. (My own worked example.)
The lesson from that comparison: if your deal carries a real betterment, the levy is often the single largest cost of selling, larger than the agent and the lawyer combined. It deserves the most attention, and the appraisal behind it deserves a second look.
How this differs from mas shevach (do not confuse the two)
Sellers often blur these because both land on the closing statement and both can apply to one sale. They are different taxes with different collectors, different triggers, and different appeal paths.
| Betterment levy (heitel hashbacha) | Capital gains tax (mas shevach) | |
|---|---|---|
| What it taxes | The rise in value created by a planning action | Your real gain between purchase price and sale price |
| Rate | 50 percent of the planning-driven rise | 25 percent on the real (inflation-adjusted) gain |
| Who collects | The local planning and building committee | The national Israel Tax Authority |
| What triggers it | An approved plan, permit, or relief | The sale itself |
| Appeal goes to | Decisive appraiser, then District Appeals Committee | Tax Authority objection, then real estate tax appeals |
One useful link between them: a betterment levy you pay can be deducted against the gain when mas shevach is calculated, which softens the double hit. For the full capital gains picture, see capital gains tax when selling in Israel. For how every selling charge fits together on one closing statement, see the guide to taxes when selling property in Israel.
When you might owe nothing, or a reduced rate
Most ordinary resale apartments carry no betterment levy at all, because no new plan added value to them. If nothing was rezoned, no extra rights were granted, and no relief was approved during your ownership, there is no betterment to tax. So before you panic at a notice, confirm a real planning action exists.
Some situations reduce or remove the levy. Treat the ones marked below as items to verify with your lawyer, because their status is in flux.
- No triggering plan. No rezoning or added rights means no levy. The common case.
- Self-use enlargement (verify). Enlarging a home you live in is reported exempt up to 140 sqm under section 19(c)(1) of the Third Schedule, with an occupancy condition often cited as about 4 years. Confirm the exact occupancy rule with counsel.
- Pinui-binui (verify). Reported at a reduced rate of about 25 percent rather than the full 50 percent.
- TAMA 38 (verify). Reported as fully exempt, but the program is being phased out and replaced, so the status is changing. Confirm before relying on it.
The dispute path: how to fight the assessment
You have two different fights, and they go to two different places. Pick the right one.
- You think the amount is wrong. The dispute over how much goes to a decisive appraiser (shamai makria), an independent appraiser appointed by the Real Estate Appraisers Council at the Ministry of Justice. You bring your own appraiser’s before-and-after valuation to challenge the committee’s numbers. This is where most money is won or lost, because the whole levy rests on two appraisals that can reasonably differ.
- You think no levy is due at all. The dispute over whether the levy applies goes to the District Appeals Committee for Planning, Building, Compensation and Betterment Levies. This is the route when you argue there was no triggering plan, or that an exemption applies.
The standard deadline to act is 45 days from the assessment notice. Miss it and you can lose the right to challenge, so the clock matters more than the merits at first. Engage your own real estate appraiser early, because their independent valuation is the evidence the decisive appraiser weighs.
Appeal procedures and thresholds have been changing. For the wider policy fight over how these levies are assessed and disputed, see our report on how Jerusalem’s betterment levy fight could redraw the rules for development tax.
Your move-by-move checklist before you accept the charge
- Identify the exact plan, permit, or relief that triggered the levy. No trigger, no levy.
- Get a copy of the committee appraiser’s before-and-after valuation. Read both figures, not just the total.
- Hire your own appraiser to produce a competing before-and-after valuation.
- Diary the 45-day deadline from the assessment notice the day it arrives.
- Decide your fight: wrong amount goes to the decisive appraiser; no-levy-due goes to the District Appeals Committee.
- Ask your lawyer whether a self-use, pinui-binui, or TAMA 38 exemption applies to your facts.
- Confirm the levy is settled (or deferred and secured) so the committee issues the clearance the Tabu needs.
- Keep the receipt: the levy you pay is deductible against mas shevach.
Confirm before you act
Before you sign or pay, confirm three things in writing with your lawyer and appraiser: which approved plan triggered the levy and its date, the exact before-and-after figures the committee’s appraiser used, and whether any exemption (self-use 140 sqm, pinui-binui, TAMA 38) applies to your case. The exemption rules and appeal thresholds are being reformed, so verify the current status rather than relying on a general summary.
Questions sellers ask about heitel hashbacha
I never built the extra rights. Do I still pay?
Yes. The levy attaches to the value the plan created, not to whether you used it. On a sale, the seller pays even if the added rights were never built.
Can I make the buyer pay it?
The owner at the triggering event owes the levy, and on a sale that is the seller. You can negotiate who economically bears it in the contract, but the committee looks to the seller for the clearance.
Is the levy negotiable?
The 50 percent rate is fixed by law. What is contestable is the appraisal: the before-and-after values that set the size of the betterment. That is exactly what the decisive appraiser exists to re-examine.
Does paying the levy reduce my mas shevach?
Yes. A betterment levy you paid can be deducted as a cost when your real gain is calculated for mas shevach, which lowers that 25 percent tax.
How long do I have to challenge it?
The standard window is 45 days from the assessment notice. Treat it as a hard deadline and engage an appraiser immediately.
Reader sources
- Trustton, betterment levy explained and worked example: https://trustton.com/en/betterment-levy-what-is-it-how-is-it-calculated-and-what-are-the-implications-for-property-owners/
- Barlaw, changes to betterment levy appeal procedures: https://barlaw.co.il/practice_areas/real-estate/client_updates/planning-and-building-law-changes-to-betterment-levy-appeal-procedures/
- Jerusalem real estate, complete guide to heitel hashbacha: https://jerusalem-real-estate.co/real-estate-in-jerusalem/betterment-tax-in-jerusalem-the-complete-guide-to-hetel-hashbacha/
- City of Jerusalem, betterment taxes: https://www.jerusalem.muni.il/en/residents/planningandbuilding/bettermenttaxes/
Your single next step: pull the triggering plan and the committee’s before-and-after appraisal, then have your own appraiser check the numbers before the 45-day clock runs out. If you want a read on whether your sale carries a betterment levy and how to handle it, tell us about your property and we will map the charges before you sign.
The betterment levy is only one of the costs that decide your final number. See where it sits in the full guide to selling property in Israel.