How Israeli mortgages are structured and what borrowers should calculate
- Israeli mortgages use multiple tracks: Fixed (Kalatz), Prime-linked, CPI-linked (Madad), and variable; Bank of Israel requires at least 33% of the loan to be in a fixed track.
- LTV limits: first-home Israeli citizen or Oleh Chadash — max 75%; upgrading — max 70%; investor or second home — max 50%; non-resident — max 50%.
- Payment-to-Income (PTI) ratio: banks generally cap at 35–40%; recommended to keep below 33%.
- Variable portion of a mortgage must not exceed 67% of the loan.
- As of January 2026, Prime rate context is ~5.5% — adjust to your specific bank quote.
- File opening fee: 0.25% of loan (capped); appraisal (Shamai): ~₪3,000; legal/notary fees apply.
- Inflation (CPI/Madad) and Prime Rate changes directly increase variable-track monthly payments — stress-test your affordability at higher rates.
- Oleh Chadash borrowers are eligible for Zakaut mortgage benefits.
- The "Total Cash to Close" includes Mas Rechisha (purchase tax) plus lawyer fees — not just the down payment.
- Bottom line: An Israeli mortgage involves LTV caps, mandatory fixed-track minimums, and inflation-linked tracks — calculate total cash to close and stress-test variable payments before committing.
For a personalized mortgage eligibility check and track recommendation, share your property value and income details with our team.
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