Why this one question matters more in 2026

  • Israel has a record pile of unsold new apartments, so developers carry units longer than before.
  • A building near occupancy with many unsold units points to weak sales and a stretched developer.
  • That pressure can turn into price cuts, free upgrades, or better move-in timing for you.
  • Unsold units also become your competition later when you try to rent out or resell.
  • The count is free to ask for and easy to check, yet most buyers never request it.

What “unsold units near occupancy” really means

“Occupancy” is the stage when a building is finished and ready for people to move in. In Hebrew this is often linked to “Tofes 4,” the permit that lets people live there. Near this stage, a developer hopes most units are already sold. When many are not, that gap is a clear warning sign worth understanding.

Early in a build, empty units are normal. People buy off plan and wait. But a building that is weeks from move-in should be mostly sold. If half the units are still open, sales have stalled. The developer now faces a finished asset that is not bringing in cash.

How a high unsold count creates leverage for you

A developer with unsold units near occupancy has costs that do not wait. The bank loan still charges interest. Property and management costs run on. Each empty month hurts. That pressure is exactly what gives a prepared buyer room to ask for more.

Developers borrowed heavily to build. Bank credit to developers reached NIS 69 billion at the end of 2025, up 40% in one year. Lenders watch projects where building outpaces sales, which is now 44% of bank-financed projects. A developer under this kind of watch often prefers a real sale over holding an empty unit.

  • Price flexibility: they may cut the price or absorb costs to close a deal now.
  • Upgrades: they may add kitchen, flooring, or fixture upgrades instead of cutting the headline price.
  • Move-in timing: they may offer faster handover or a short grace period on payments.

Why don’t developers just lower the listed price?

Many do not want the official price to fall on paper. A lower listed price can upset earlier buyers and can break promises made to the bank that funded the project. So the discount often hides in other forms instead of showing on the price tag.

In May 2026, reports described hidden discounts of up to about NIS 700,000, near 13% off, given through consumer-club schemes. These quiet deals keep the official price high while the real cost drops. That is why asking direct questions matters. The best offer may never appear in the listing.

The resale risk hiding inside the same building

Unsold units are not only a chance. They are also future competition. If you buy and later want to sell or rent, you may compete against the developer, who still holds empty units in your own building. The developer can undercut you on price, since they often have deeper pockets and tax reasons to clear stock.

This matters for returns. Gross rental yields in Tel Aviv sit around 2.6% to 3.1%, and net yields fall to roughly 1.6% to 1.9% after costs. With many empty units nearby, rents and resale prices in that project can stay soft for years. Counting the unsold units helps you judge that risk before you commit.

Comparing a near-sold building with a slow seller

Signal Mostly sold near occupancy Many units unsold near occupancy
Sales momentum Strong, steady demand Weak or stalled demand
Your price leverage Limited, list price likely holds Higher, room to negotiate
Upgrade or incentive room Small Larger, developer wants to close
Future resale competition Low, few rival units High, developer may undercut you
Developer pressure Low High, costs run on empty units

Talk to someone before you sign

If you would like help evaluating your options or have questions about your property search in Israel, reach out to the Semerenko Group team here for a personal, expert consultation.