Selling Property In Israel As A Foreign Resident

Selling Property in Israel as a Foreign Resident

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You found a buyer from London, you agreed a price, and then your lawyer tells you the deal cannot actually finish until the Israel Tax Authority signs off. That is the part that catches every overseas seller. Nobody can register the flat in the buyer’s name until you produce a tax-clearance certificate (ishur misim shevach), and your proceeds stay locked until it issues.

While you wait, the buyer holds back roughly 7.5% to 15% of the price and sends it straight to the tax office as a deposit against what you owe. The good news is the linear calculation still protects you: the gain that built up before 1 January 2014 can be exempt, and only the slice from 2014 onward is taxed at 25% on the real, inflation-adjusted gain. The exemption you cannot easily use is the resident single-apartment one (the NIS 5,008,000 ceiling), since claiming it means proving with a paper from your home country that you own no other home there.

So the real job is getting that clearance fast and proving your true tax is lower than the withholding. Most diaspora sellers sign an apostilled power of attorney so a lawyer in Israel runs the closing while they stay home, and then watch the held-back money come back once the certificate is in hand.

Three things that work differently when you sell from abroad

Most of the sale is the same for everyone: lawyers draft the contract, a warning note goes on the title, payment runs through staged escrow. Three pieces are different for you, and they are the three that cost real money or cause real delays.

1. The single-apartment exemption is hard for you to use

A non-resident generally cannot claim the resident single-home exemption. Since Amendment 76 (2014) you qualify only by proving, with official confirmation from your country of residence, that you own no other residential apartment there. That confirmation is hard to obtain in most countries, so plan as if you will not get it. For the full mechanics of who pays and how the gain is figured, see our guide to capital gains tax when selling in Israel.

2. You still keep the linear calculation, and it is your main shield

The linear calculation does not care where you live. The gain is split by days of ownership. The slice that built up before 1 January 2014 is exempt, the slice from 1 January 2014 onward is taxed at 25% on the real gain. The longer you owned before 2014, the bigger the exempt share. The old 2014 to 2017 cap of two linear sales per family was lifted on 1 January 2018, so that limit no longer blocks you.

3. Money is held back at source before you ever see it

Your buyer does not hand you the full price. The buyer withholds part of it and remits that to the Tax Authority, commonly 7.5% or 15%, with about 15% typical where a foreign seller is involved, often kicking in once roughly 40% of the price has been paid. That money sits with the tax office until your clearance comes through. It is a deposit against your tax, not an extra tax. If your real bill is lower, the difference comes back.

From tax clearance to cash: the order things actually happen

The single fact that controls your whole timeline is this: the Land Registry (Tabu) will not record the buyer until you hand over a tax-clearance certificate. Everything below is built around getting that certificate.

  1. Sign the contract. Your lawyer (acting under your power of attorney) and the buyer’s lawyer agree terms. On signing, the buyer’s lawyer registers a warning note (he’arat azhara) on the title to protect the buyer.
  2. File the sale within 30 days. The sale declaration goes to the Tax Authority within 30 days of signing. This starts your mas shevach assessment.
  3. Buyer withholds at source. As staged payments hit (often around the 40% mark), the buyer remits the withholding to the tax office and pays the rest into escrow.
  4. Get your tax clearance (ishur misim shevach). The Tax Authority confirms your land appreciation tax is paid or exempt. With the linear calculation applied, your actual bill is frequently far below the amount withheld.
  5. Get the municipal clearance (ishur iriya). The city confirms arnona and any betterment levy are settled. If a planning action raised your property’s value, the betterment levy (heitel hashbacha) is 50% of that planning-driven rise and must be cleared too.
  6. Register the transfer. With both clearances, the warning note lifts and Tabu records the buyer.
  7. Release and repatriate. Escrow releases your proceeds, any over-withheld tax is refunded, and the money moves home once your Israeli bank clears its anti-money-laundering and source-of-funds checks.

A worked estimate: how much of your money is actually frozen

These are my own worked estimates from the fact-bank figures, not a quote on your file. Always confirm the real numbers with your lawyer and accountant.

Estimate 1, the withholding versus the real bill. Say you sell for NIS 3,000,000 and bought in 2005. At a 15% withholding the buyer parks NIS 450,000 with the tax office. But suppose your real taxable gain after the linear split and CPI indexing is NIS 600,000. At 25% the actual mas shevach is NIS 150,000. Basis: 25% of 600,000. So about NIS 300,000 of the withheld money (450,000 minus 150,000) is yours and comes back after clearance. The lesson: the cash held at source is usually larger than your true tax, so do not treat the withholding as your bill.

Estimate 2, the value of owning before 2014. On a NIS 1,000,000 nominal gain over 20 years of ownership ending 2026, the days before 1 January 2014 are roughly 8 of those 20 years, so about 40% of the gain is in the exempt pre-2014 slice. Basis: 8 years divided by 20 years. That exempts on the order of NIS 400,000 of gain, cutting the 25% tax by about NIS 100,000 versus a fully taxable gain. Buy a property the day before 2014 and you lose that shield entirely, which is why your purchase date matters more than your residency on this point.

Will I be taxed twice at home?

Usually no, because of treaty credit. Many countries have a double-tax treaty with Israel that lets you credit the Israeli capital gains tax against the tax your home country charges on the same gain. In rough terms, if Israel takes the tax first, your home authority often reduces its own bill by that amount, so you pay the higher of the two rates once, not both in full. This is treaty-specific and not personal advice, so confirm with an accountant who handles both countries. The buying side has the mirror version of this concern, covered in non-residents purchasing property in Israel.

Resident exemption versus the linear path for a non-resident

Feature Resident single-apartment exemption Linear calculation (your likely path)
Can a non-resident use it? Only with a hard-to-get foreign confirmation of no other home Yes, open to non-residents
Tax on the gain Can be fully exempt up to NIS 5,008,000 Pre-2014 slice exempt, post-2014 slice taxed at 25%
What it rewards Being a sole-apartment Israeli resident Long ownership before 2014
Frequency limit Once per 18 months No two-per-family cap since 2018

Do this before you list from abroad

  • Sign an authenticated and apostilled power of attorney so your Israeli lawyer can close without you flying in.
  • Pull your current Tabu extract (nesach tabu) and the original purchase contract plus expense receipts. Those receipts (purchase tax, past agent fees, legal fees, renovations) all reduce your taxable gain and are CPI-indexed.
  • Ask your lawyer to estimate the linear split now, so you know your real tax before the buyer’s withholding scares you.
  • Check for any betterment levy. Many ordinary resale flats have none, but if a new plan added building rights, the seller pays 50% of the uplift.
  • Tell your home-country accountant the sale is coming so the treaty credit is claimed in the right tax year.
  • Warn your Israeli bank early about the incoming proceeds so source-of-funds checks do not stall the wire home.

Confirm before you act

Three figures move and should be checked at signing: the exact non-resident withholding percentage and its trigger stage, the precise single-apartment ceiling for your tax year, and whether the proposed phase-out of the pre-2014 linear exemption has become law. A draft bill has floated raising the rate on the pre-2014 slice over time, but it is not confirmed as enacted. If you are mid-sale, your lawyer will know the live position. Selling logistics from North America are covered separately in selling and representing Israeli real estate from Canada and the USA.

Plain-word glossary

  • Mas shevach: Israel’s national tax on the gain between your purchase and sale price.
  • Ishur misim shevach: the tax-clearance certificate proving that tax is paid or exempt, required before Tabu will register the buyer.
  • Withholding at source: money the buyer holds back from your price and sends to the tax office as a deposit against your tax.
  • Linear calculation: the day-by-day split that exempts the pre-2014 part of your gain and taxes the rest at 25%.
  • Heitel hashbacha: a municipal betterment levy, 50% of the value rise a planning action created.
  • He’arat azhara: a warning note placed on the title to protect the buyer between signing and final registration.

Questions non-resident sellers ask us

Do I have to come to Israel to sell? No. An apostilled power of attorney lets your lawyer sign and close on your behalf.

Why is so much money held back? The buyer withholds at source (about 7.5% to 15%) as a tax deposit. Once your clearance issues, anything over your real bill is refunded.

Can I get the resident exemption if I rent abroad and own only this flat? Possibly, but you must produce official confirmation from your country that you own no other residential apartment there, which most sellers cannot get.

When can I send the money home? After tax and municipal clearances, registration, and your Israeli bank’s anti-money-laundering and source-of-funds checks.

Ready to map your exact numbers and timeline? Tell us about your property and we will walk you through the clearance-to-cash path.

Sources

The single next step: get your linear split estimated before you list, so you know your real tax and how much of the buyer’s withholding is coming back to you.

Selling from outside Israel adds steps, not roadblocks. The whole process is laid out in selling property in Israel.

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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