Why a Rate Cut Matters for Your Monthly Budget

When the Bank of Israel lowers its interest rate, Israeli banks tend to adjust their mortgage products over time. That can lower your monthly payment on a variable-rate loan — or make a fixed rate slightly more competitive.

Even a small change adds up. On a NIS 1.5 million mortgage over 25 years, a half-percent drop in the annual rate can save hundreds of shekels per month. Across the life of the loan, that can be tens of thousands of shekels.

But — and this is important — the bank’s rate is not the same as your personal rate. Your rate depends on your income, your savings, the loan-to-value ratio (how much you borrow versus how much the apartment costs), and the mix of fixed and variable components you choose.

Fixed, Variable, and Prime-Linked: Plain Language Explanations

Israeli mortgages are usually split into several tracks. Most buyers use a combination of tracks rather than a single type.

  • Fixed (Kvua): Your interest rate does not change. Your payment is predictable. Usually slightly higher at the start.
  • Variable (Mishtane): Your rate changes at set intervals, usually every few years. Can be lower to start, but your payment can rise later.
  • Prime-linked (Praim): Directly connected to the Bank of Israel prime rate. When the central bank cuts, your rate usually drops. When the central bank raises, your rate rises. This is the track most affected by the recent cut.
  • CPI-linked (Tzamud): Linked to inflation. Your loan balance can grow in real terms if inflation rises. Currently less common in new mortgages.

A mortgage adviser (yoetz mashkanta) helps you pick the right mix. Buyers are legally entitled to get advice from a licensed adviser before signing.

How Rates Change Your Negotiating Position

When rates fall, more buyers can afford more apartments. That normally pushes demand up. But right now, there are roughly 85,000 new homes sitting unsold across Israel. That is a high number. Sellers — including developers — may be under more pressure than usual to agree to better terms.

What does that mean in practice?

  • A buyer who is pre-approved and ready to move fast may get a better price or better contract terms than a hesitant buyer.
  • A buyer in a market with lots of similar apartments has more room to walk away and come back with a lower offer.
  • A buyer in a location with very few apartments for sale has less leverage, even in a lower-rate environment.

Never assume a rate cut means every seller will drop their price. Market pressure varies by city, neighborhood, and apartment type. Check what comparable apartments are selling for — not just asking for — before you make an offer.

New Builds and Rate Sensitivity

New apartments from developers (called yad rishona or first-hand) often come with deferred payment structures. You might pay a deposit now and the rest on completion — which could be one, two, or three years away. That means the mortgage you take out might be at a different rate than today’s.

Some developers offer tied financing arrangements with specific banks. These can look attractive, but compare them with what your own bank offers. You are not required to use the developer’s bank.

With about 85,000 new homes still unsold, developers in some areas are offering incentives: longer payment windows, lower deposits, included parking, or storage rooms. These are worth asking about. Just do not assume they indicate serious distress — verify the developer’s track record and the project’s permit status first.