A landing rental crosses the cost of a whole month of normal living in roughly a week, which is exactly why arriving Anglo families still take one before they buy: it turns a twelve-month bet on a neighborhood picked from photos into a paid trial run. Committing to a year-long lease sight unseen is a large bet on a place you do not yet understand. The school run, the walk to shul, the noise at night, the actual commute at 8am: none of it is knowable from abroad. A landing rental lets you arrive, live somewhere for a few weeks, and learn the answers before your name is on a long-term contract. Below is whether that bridge is worth its price, and exactly how much that price is in shekels.

What a landing rental is, and why families use one first

A landing rental is a fully furnished, ready-to-occupy apartment you rent for a short window, usually one to three months, while you find a permanent home. Everything is set up: beds, kitchen, towels, high-speed internet, and all the bills are already running in the owner’s name. You walk in with suitcases and start living the same day.

The reason to do this first is information. After a few weeks on the ground you have real data that no listing can give you: how long the commute actually takes, whether the children settle at the local school, how far the nearest grocery and clinic are, and whether the street is calm or loud. Experienced olim describe the first-year apartment as a learning tool, not a compromise. An imperfect apartment in the right area beats a perfect-looking apartment in the wrong area, because moving once more is far cheaper than signing a long lease somewhere you end up disliking, or worse, buying there.

The trade-off is money. A landing rental is comfortable, flexible and instant, and it costs a great deal more per month than an ordinary unfurnished long lease. The rest of this page shows that gap in shekels so you can decide how long to stay in one before you switch.

The break-even: how fast a landing rental gets expensive

Lead with the headline: a landing rental crosses the cost of a whole month of normal living in about a week. Here is the arithmetic, with every input shown so you can check it.

The two sides. A long lease, for an average family, runs about NIS 5,027/month in rent (the national average, CBS Q1 2026) plus roughly NIS 800 to 1,600/month for utilities and building fees (the shared cost of running an Israeli apartment). Take the middle, about NIS 1,200, and a long-lease month all-in is near NIS 6,227. A landing rental in Israel runs about NIS 620/night at the national short-stay average. But short rates are usually advertised to tourists without tax, and once you are an Israeli resident or a new immigrant the 18% VAT applies, so your true rate is 620 x 1.18 = NIS 731.60/night.

Figure 1: nightly landing rate vs a long-lease month, and the break-even.

Measure Landing rental Long lease (all-in)
Per night (resident, VAT in) NIS 731.60 about NIS 205 (6,227 / 30.4)
One week (7 nights) NIS 5,121 about NIS 1,434
Full month (about 30.4 nights) about NIS 22,241 NIS 6,227

How we got these numbers: the nightly figure takes the national short-stay average of NIS 620/night (Sands of Wealth Israel Airbnb tracker, 2 Apr 2026) and adds the 18% resident VAT in force since 1 Jan 2025. The long-lease month uses NIS 5,027 rent (CBS Q1 2026) plus a NIS 1,200 midpoint for utilities and vaad (typical range NIS 800 to 1,600), with the per-night version dividing that all-in monthly cost by 30.4 days. Treat them as a worked example: your own totals shift with the city and the apartment.

Read the table from the bottom up. About 8 to 9 nights in a landing rental (6,227 / 731.60 = 8.5) cost the same as a whole month of normal long-lease living. A single week already passes the national average monthly rent of NIS 5,027. Over a full month the landing rental costs roughly 3.6 times the long-lease all-in. None of that means a landing rental is a mistake. It means it is a short-stay tool: every extra week you stay in one is, very roughly, a month of long-lease rent spent on flexibility.

What the nightly rate actually buys you

The high number above is not pure markup. A landing rental bundles things an Israeli long lease almost never includes, and that bundle is most of the difference.

Furnished mid-term operators typically fold in: all the furniture, high-speed Wi-Fi and internet, every utility (electricity, water, gas), often scheduled cleaning, and in-unit laundry. One real Tel Aviv listing makes the pattern concrete: a furnished apartment quoted at about EUR 4,930/month, 30-day minimum, with utilities and internet stated as included in the rent, a washer and dryer in the unit, and no deposit for stays under 180 days, but with a clear note that Israeli citizens must add 18% VAT, which also applies to bookings without verified tourist status. That VAT line is the same one that turned NIS 620 into NIS 731.60 above. Plan on paying it.

Now the contrast that explains the gap. A standard Israeli long lease bundles almost nothing. Local practice treats the lease as covering the walls and little else: often no appliances, sometimes not even light fixtures, and certainly no furniture. On a long lease you separately open and pay for electricity, water, gas, internet, the building committee (vaad bayit) and the municipal tax (arnona). A landing rental hides all of that inside one nightly price. You are paying a premium to skip the setup, not just for the bed.

Bundled all-in vs paying each bill yourself

Because the bundle is the whole pitch, it is worth pricing the bundle directly against the do-it-yourself long lease.

Figure 2: a fully bundled landing month vs a long-lease month where you pay each line.

Cost line Landing rental (bundled) Long lease (separate)
Rent All folded into the nightly rate. About NIS 22,241/month total (731.60 x 30.4), nothing else to open. NIS 5,027
Arnona (owner pays it on a short let; on a year lease you pay) about NIS 650
Utilities (electricity, water, gas, internet) about NIS 800
Vaad bayit about NIS 400
Long-lease all-in about NIS 6,877/month

The landing-rental column carries over from Figure 1. On the long-lease side, rent is NIS 5,027 (CBS Q1 2026) and the arnona line works a 100 sqm 4-room flat at Netanya’s Zone 1 type-C tariff of NIS 77.96/sqm/year (NIS 7,796/year, or about NIS 650/month); utilities and vaad use the same midpoints as above. Arnona and vaad swing widely between cities and buildings, so read your own bill rather than this line.

The bundled landing month costs about NIS 15,360 more than running a long lease yourself, roughly 3.2 times the cost. What you buy for that gap is real but narrow: zero accounts to open, no setup deposits, no waiting for an internet technician, and total flexibility to leave. For the first few weeks in a new country, that can be worth it. As a way to live for six months, it is not.

Why your bills look so simple on a landing rental

This is the part most arriving families get wrong, so here is the answer first: on a landing rental you almost never set up arnona, water, electricity or vaad in your name, because legally none of them are yours.

Israeli municipal tax follows a clear rule. The occupier (the holder, or machzik) pays arnona only when the lease runs 12 months or more. A landing rental is shorter than that, so the property owner stays the registered arnona holder and keeps paying the city directly. The same logic flows to the other bills: the owner keeps the electricity and water accounts open and folds the cost into your rate. Owners of short-stay units pay arnona themselves precisely because guests never register on the bill.

The practical effect is that a landing rental has the opposite admin profile from a long lease. On a year lease you must open utility accounts, register for arnona in your name, and start paying the building committee. On a landing rental there is usually nothing to set up and nothing to close when you leave. That simplicity is genuinely part of what the higher rate buys. The other side of the same coin appears below: because nothing is in your name, none of the renter protections or oleh benefits that attach to a real lease apply to you yet.

Use the stay to test the area before you commit

The whole point of the landing window is to test where you want to live: walk the commute, visit schools at pickup, shop at the local makolet, hear the street at night. Treat the one to three months as a live trial run.

Scoring a neighborhood properly (the checklist, the weights, the trade-offs between commute, community, schools and budget) is a job in itself. Work through the dedicated guide to choosing a neighborhood to rent in Israel and run its scoring while you are physically in the area. That is the highest-value thing a landing rental gives you, and it only works if you do the scoring before you sign the year.

Is a short let even allowed in the building?

Short answer: usually yes, but not always, and not your problem to fix. Short-term letting is lawful in residential buildings in Israel. However, a building’s own bylaws (the takanon ha-bayit ha-meshutaf, adopted at a general meeting of owners) can specifically ban short-stay use. Where they do, the building committee can go to court for an injunction to stop it, and Israeli courts have issued such orders.

There is also a municipal layer. Tel Aviv requires a business license from the licensing department for short-stay operation, with processing of roughly four to eight weeks and a possible site inspection; Jerusalem has similar permit rules and has historically been stricter on commercial use of residential buildings. Operating without the license can draw fines or a court-ordered shutdown.

As the guest in a landing rental, you do not apply for any of this. But you should confirm the owner has the right to let short-term before you wire a deposit, because a shutdown mid-stay is a real, if uncommon, risk. The clean version of the question to the owner: “Does the building takanon permit short-term letting, and do you hold any business license the municipality requires?”

A related but separate situation: if you are an existing long-term tenant thinking of re-letting your own apartment short-term, that is a different activity with its own rules on consent, tax and liability. See the guide to subletting and short-letting your own rental for that.

What you give up on a landing rental

A landing rental is a bridge with no railings. Three protections and benefits that a real lease carries simply do not apply.

  • No Fair Rental Law cover (if the stay is under 3 months). The law’s tenant protections, the deposit cap, the repair deadlines, the 60-day deposit-return rule, apply to residential leases of at least three months. A true short landing stay can fall outside them entirely, so those safeguards are not yours. See what the law actually grants on the Fair Rental Law protections page.
  • No security of tenure. The building bylaws can ban the let, the committee can seek a court order, and a licensing gap can force a shutdown. You can be asked to leave with little of the notice a normal lease would require.
  • No oleh arnona discount, no rental-assistance clock. The new-immigrant arnona benefit (up to 90% off, on up to 100 sqm, for one 12-month window inside your first two years) requires a lease of 12 months or more in your own name, with the bill in your name. A landing rental qualifies for none of it. The same logic delays housing-assistance eligibility tied to a longer tenancy. Every week on a landing rental is a week you are not yet collecting those benefits.

That last point is the real argument for keeping the landing window short: the longer you stay flexible, the longer you pay the premium rate and the longer you wait to start the oleh discount that only a year lease unlocks.

The decision: how long to stay before you switch

Use this as a simple judgment, not a rule. Set a hard end date for the landing rental before you arrive, then sign a long lease before it expires.

  • Plan one to three months, no more. Past about three months the premium (roughly NIS 22,200 vs NIS 6,900 a month all-in) stops buying enough flexibility to justify itself.
  • Spend week one on logistics, weeks two to six on the area test. Open your Israeli bank account, order a checkbook, and start scoring neighborhoods on the ground.
  • Line up the year lease while still in the landing rental. Use the apartment viewing checklist on candidate long-lease flats, and have the documents ready (see documents needed to rent).
  • Confirm the landing rental’s legality before paying. Ask the owner about the building takanon and any municipal license, and prefer no-deposit short stays so your cash is not tied up.
  • Switch as soon as you have a clear winner. The day you know your area, a year lease there is cheaper, unlocks the oleh arnona discount, and gives you legal protection. Move.

Before you book a landing rental, run this short pre-action check: Do I have a fixed move-out date for it? Have I confirmed the rate includes 18% VAT for residents? Have I asked the owner whether the building allows short-term letting? Is the deposit zero or small for a stay under six months? Have I budgeted the premium honestly against a long lease? If any answer is no, fix it before you commit.

A few terms worth knowing

  • Landing rental: a furnished, all-bills-included apartment rented for a short window (often one to three months) while you find a permanent home.
  • Machzik (holder): the person legally treated as the occupier for arnona. On a short let it stays the owner, not you.
  • Takanon ha-bayit ha-meshutaf: the building’s bylaws, agreed by the owners, which can permit or ban short-term letting.
  • ADR: average daily rate, the typical price per night for a short-stay apartment.

Questions arriving families ask about landing rentals

How long should a landing rental last?

One to three months is the usual window. Long enough to test the area and line up a year lease, short enough that the premium does not pile up. Set the end date before you arrive.

Do I pay arnona on a landing rental?

No. Because the stay is under 12 months, the owner stays the registered arnona holder and the cost is built into your nightly rate. You only register for arnona once you sign a lease of 12 months or more. The full rule is on the arnona page.

Why is the quoted nightly price lower than what I am charged?

Short-stay rates are commonly advertised to tourists without VAT. As an Israeli resident or new immigrant you add 18%, so a NIS 620 rate becomes NIS 731.60. Confirm whether a quote includes VAT before you book.

Does a landing rental count toward the oleh arnona discount?

No. That discount needs a lease of 12 months or more in your name, with the bill in your name. A landing rental gives you none of it, which is a reason to switch to a year lease promptly.

Am I protected by the Fair Rental Law in a landing rental?

If the stay is under three months, generally no. The deposit cap, repair deadlines and 60-day return rule apply to leases of at least three months. Read what they cover on the Fair Rental Law page.

What if I am already renting and want to re-let my place short-term?

That is subletting, a separate topic with its own consent, tax and liability rules. See subletting and short-letting rules.

Furnished or unfurnished for the long lease after this?

Different decision, different page. Compare the trade-offs on furnished vs unfurnished rentals.

Where these facts come from

Your next step: set a firm one to three month end date for the landing rental, then start scoring neighborhoods on the ground in week one so you can sign a year lease, and start the oleh arnona discount, before the bridge runs out. For the wider arriving-from-abroad picture, return to renting from abroad or browse the full guide to renting 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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