What the leverage-to-liquidity shift means for Israeli property investors

  • Israeli investors who maxed out leverage in 2021 and 2022 have seen monthly payments rise far above their original models.
  • Bank of Israel mortgage rules cap loan-to-value for investment apartments well below those for a primary residence.
  • Net rental yields in central Israel are typically slim once arnona, vaad, maintenance, vacancy and tax are deducted.
  • Liquidity, not leverage, is what keeps a portfolio alive through rate shocks and tenant gaps.
  • Lower-leverage deals with conservative rent assumptions outperform high-leverage deals over a full cycle.
  • Bottom line: in the current Israeli market, reserves and cash flow are the new edge.

For a decade, Israeli investors treated leverage as the main lever. Cheap rates, rising prices and easy refinances rewarded the most aggressive buyers. That regime ended. The investors still standing are the ones who chose liquidity early.

Why has maximum leverage stopped working in Israeli real estate?

Three things changed at once. The Bank of Israel raised the policy rate sharply from 2022. Variable-rate components on existing mortgages reset higher. And rent growth, while real, did not match the increase in monthly mortgage costs in most cities.

The result is that many investors who modeled their deals at 2021 rates are now carrying negative cash flow each month, often without the reserves to wait out the cycle.

What does liquidity-first investing actually look like in Israel?

Larger down-payments, smaller portfolios

Putting 35 to 50 percent down on fewer apartments produces lower headline returns and far fewer sleepless nights.

Realistic rent assumptions

Use a rent at least 5 to 10 percent below current asking prices in your underwriting, with a vacancy assumption of at least one month per year.

Explicit reserves

Hold six to twelve months of full payments per apartment in liquid shekels, not promises.

Fixed-rate share

Increase the fixed-rate portion of the mortgage to reduce sensitivity to the next rate cycle.

Exit liquidity

Prefer assets that can sell within 90 days at a realistic price, not assets that depend on a perfect buyer.

How to underwrite an Israeli rental in a liquidity-first frame

Start with net yield, not gross

Subtract arnona, vaad, insurance, maintenance and vacancy before comparing yields across cities.

Stress test the mortgage

Model your payment at 1.5 to 2 percentage points above the current rate. If the deal does not survive, the deal does not survive.

Run the worst tenant scenario

Two months of vacancy plus one month of legal recovery is a normal year, not a disaster.

Confirm tax treatment

Israeli law offers a residential rental tax track with a monthly exemption ceiling and alternative tracks above it. Confirm your numbers with a tax advisor.

When does lower leverage genuinely beat higher leverage in Israel?

Lower leverage wins in three common scenarios. When rates rise unexpectedly. When rent growth stalls in a specific city. And when an investor is forced to sell into a soft market. In all three, a higher equity stake and bigger reserves are what keep the asset, and often turn the situation into an opportunity to buy from someone else who over-leveraged.

Building an Israeli portfolio that survives the next cycle

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.

What every Israeli investor should take from this post

  • Leverage rewards in calm markets and punishes in volatile ones.
  • Liquidity is the only edge that works in every cycle.
  • Underwrite below the market, not at the top.
  • Hold real reserves, not paper ones.
  • The next great deal will come from someone who ignored these rules.
Written by Chaim Semerenko and the Semerenko Group team
Founder and CEO, Semerenko Group

Semerenko Group makes Israeli real estate clear for English-speaking buyers, renters, olim, and investors, and connects serious clients with the right licensed professionals.

Published by Semerenko Group under the professional supervision of licensed Israeli real-estate broker Pinhas Menachem Reiss (License #324150). We provide information, technology, and introductions. Not legal, tax, or financial advice.

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