The Rate Cut and What It Means for Buyers
The Bank of Israel lowered its benchmark interest rate to 3.75 percent on May 25, 2026. That is the rate that banks use as a base when they set mortgage prices.
A lower rate generally means cheaper borrowing. If you have a variable-rate mortgage — called a ריבית משתנה (variable interest) in Israeli banking — your monthly payment may drop a little. If you are taking out a new mortgage, you might qualify for a slightly lower rate than you would have a few months ago.
But cheaper borrowing is not the same as affordable housing. Prices are still very high by historical standards, even after the small year-over-year dip. The rate cut helps at the margins. It does not solve the core gap between Israeli salaries and Israeli home prices.
The next rate decision is scheduled for July 6, 2026. Another cut is possible if inflation stays low and the economy stays under pressure from the ongoing security situation.
85,000 Unsold New Homes — What That Number Means
As of March 2026, about 85,000 new homes were sitting unsold across Israel. That is a big number.
When developers have too many unsold units, they face pressure. They still owe money on construction loans. They still pay maintenance and financing costs on empty apartments. Over time, that pressure tends to show up in softer terms — things like longer payment plans, deferred purchase conditions, or price flexibility on specific units.
This is sometimes called מחיר אפקטיבי — effective price — in Israeli real estate. The listed price on a developer’s brochure might stay the same, but the actual deal a serious buyer can negotiate may be different. That is especially true in projects that have been sitting unsold for many months.
None of this means every developer is desperate or that every project has flexibility. It means the market as a whole has more supply than it can easily absorb right now, and buyers are in a better position to ask questions and push on terms than they were two or three years ago.
Financing Flexibility vs. Real Affordability
One of the clearest signals in the current data is this: mortgage borrowing is high, but prices are not rising strongly. That gap is worth understanding.
When sales are being driven mainly by easy financing — low rates, deferred payments, developer credit — it is a sign that the market is not moving because homes became cheaper. It is moving because the monthly payment became slightly more manageable.
That distinction matters for a few reasons:
- If rates go back up, the monthly payment goes up too. Buyers who stretched at current rates may feel that pressure later.
- Resale value depends on what future buyers can afford to pay, not on what you paid. If affordability is still tight across the market, future buyers may face the same squeeze.
- Developer financing deals — such as paying 20 percent now and the rest on delivery — can look attractive but carry their own risks, including developer delays or financial problems.
None of this means you should not buy. It means you should go in with clear numbers, not just a comfortable monthly payment.
The Shekel and What It Means for Foreign Buyers
There is a separate story for buyers coming from abroad. Since the last Bank of Israel rate decision, the shekel has strengthened significantly — up 8.3 percent against the US dollar and 7.2 percent against the euro.
For a buyer paying in dollars or euros, that means Israeli property has effectively gotten more expensive in foreign-currency terms, even if the shekel price stayed the same. A property listed at NIS 3 million costs meaningfully more in dollars today than it did a few months ago.
Foreign buyers — including many olim (new immigrants) and overseas investors — need to factor exchange-rate timing into their planning. This is one reason why working with a mortgage advisor who understands both Israeli and foreign-currency financing is important.