What the older-versus-new choice in Israel really costs your family
- Older apartments in established neighborhoods often beat distant new projects on commute, schools and daily services.
- Buildings built before the late 1990s usually lack a code-compliant mamad and may need elevator, parking or accessibility work.
- Tama 38 and pinui-binui projects can change the value of older buildings, but timelines are long and outcomes vary.
- New projects can offer modern layouts and a clean mamad, but commute and service gaps in newer suburbs are real.
- Renovation risk is the single biggest hidden cost when comparing older vs new.
- Bottom line: families should price daily-life value, protected space and renovation reality together, not just the headline price per meter.
A growing number of Israeli families are quietly choosing a slightly older apartment in a strong neighborhood over a sparkling new project an hour away. They are not wrong, but they are not automatically right either. The honest comparison is more than price per meter.
What older urban apartments give Israeli families that new projects often do not
Established neighborhoods in Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan, Givatayim, Jerusalem, Petach Tikva, Ra’anana, Rishon LeZion and Be’er Sheva have decades of accumulated infrastructure. That means walking-distance schools, kupot cholim, supermarkets, parks, public transport and active street life. Daily routines compress.
The trade-off is the building. Many of these apartments were built before today’s earthquake and protected-space standards. That introduces specific risks that a family must price before buying.
What new suburban projects give that older apartments usually do not
New projects offer current-code mamad rooms, modern wiring, better insulation, dedicated parking and often shared building amenities. Layouts are usually more efficient. Maintenance costs in the first years tend to be lower.
The cost is location. Many new projects are in growing neighborhoods where schools, services and transit are still maturing. Commute is often the binding constraint.
How to compare an older Tel Aviv apartment to a new Modi’in or Lod project honestly
The commute test
Use a workday morning, not weekend traffic, and add a school drop-off. Most families underestimate this by 20 to 40 minutes.
The school test
Visit the assigned school, not just the catchment map. Talk to families already there. Confirm registration, not aspiration.
The protected-space test
Ask whether the building has a code-compliant mamad, a shared shelter, or only a stairwell solution. This affects safety, value and resale.
The renovation test
Get a real cost estimate from a contractor, not a friend. Add 15 to 25 percent for surprises in older buildings.
The community test
Walk the street on a Friday afternoon. The community either exists or it does not.
Side-by-side comparison framework
| Factor | Older urban apartment | New suburban project |
|---|---|---|
| Commute | Usually shorter, public transit available | Often longer, car-dependent |
| Schools and services | Established, walking distance | Newer, sometimes still scaling |
| Mamad and standards | Often missing or partial | Code-compliant from day one |
| Renovation | Often required | Usually unnecessary at first |
| Tama 38 or pinui-binui upside | Possible but uncertain | Not relevant |
| Resale liquidity | Generally strong in core areas | Depends on neighborhood maturity |
What is renovation risk in older Israeli apartments?
Older Israeli buildings often have aging plumbing, electrical loads designed for a different era, no central HVAC, and waterproofing issues on balconies and roofs. A clean cosmetic renovation will not fix any of those. A real renovation includes infrastructure work and approvals, and that is where budgets blow up.
The honest rule is: if you cannot afford the renovation as well as the purchase, the apartment is more expensive than it looks.
How Tama 38 and pinui-binui change the older-apartment calculation
National plans for strengthening or rebuilding older structures can add value to a specific building, but the timelines are long and approvals are not guaranteed. Buying an older apartment purely on hoped-for Tama 38 or pinui-binui upside is closer to speculation than to family housing planning.
If you would be comfortable owning the apartment even if no project ever happens, the upside is a bonus. If you would not, do not buy it.
How to turn this comparison into your family’s actual decision
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.