War and Evacuation: Your Lease Rights

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The siren situation has changed your week. Maybe the Home Front Command has told your area to leave, maybe the road to your building is shut, maybe you have a miluim order in your hand and no idea who pays the rent while you are away. The lease you signed says nothing useful, and the landlord is asking when the next payment is coming. The question underneath all of it is simple and urgent: can you get out, can you pause, and what happens to the deposit and the guarantees you handed over. Here is exactly what your lease and Israeli law let you do about each of those, with the missile-damage insurance claim kept to a sidebar because a sister guide already walks that through in full.

The three doors, and which one is actually open

When a security situation hits your tenancy you are really choosing between three different rights, and they are not equally available. Knowing which door is open saves you from demanding the wrong thing.

  • Pause the rent (the open door). Section 15(a) of the Rental and Loan Law 5731-1971 exempts a tenant from rent for the period they are prevented from using the property for the lease purpose, where the cause is connected to the property or to its access routes. An evacuation order or a closed access road fits that wording. This is the right most renters can actually use.
  • Reduce the rent (the half-open door). Section 9(a) gives a proportional reduction, rather than a full stop, when your use is only partly impaired. If you can still use some of the flat, this is the realistic outcome.
  • Cancel the lease (the mostly shut door). Cancelling for war relies on frustration (sikul) under section 18 of the Contracts (Remedies) Law 5731-1970. In Israel this almost always fails, because courts treat war as a foreseeable local reality, not an unforeseeable event. A clean exit is realistic only when the building is declared unsafe or repair will take a very long time. An evacuation order on an intact building does not, by itself, void the lease.

So the honest headline is: aim to suspend or reduce, not to walk away. Build your case around access being blocked, keep paying nothing only for the days you truly cannot use the unit, and put everything in writing.

Pausing rent in an evacuated zone

Answer first: if an official order or a blocked road prevents you from using the flat, rent for that period is suspended under section 15(a), and you do not owe it.

The strength of this right is the access clause. Most people assume rent only stops if the apartment is physically damaged. The statute is wider. It covers being prevented from using the property for its purpose because of circumstances connected to the property or to its access routes. A Home Front Command evacuation order, or a road closed by the security forces, is exactly an access-route circumstance. You do not need a hole in the wall. You need to show that, for those specific days, living there was not lawfully or practically possible.

What you do owe is honesty about the dates. The suspension runs for the prevented period and no longer. The day the order lifts and the road reopens, rent resumes. Document the order, the dates, and any official notice, because the burden is on you to show the prevention was real.

This is a pause, not a cancellation. The lease stays alive, your right to return stays alive, and so does the landlord’s right to the unpaid months once you can use the flat again. If you want to leave permanently rather than pause, that is the early-exit question, and the rules and penalties for ending a fixed-term lease early are set out in the early exit clause guide.

How much rent you can hold back when the flat is unusable

Answer first: full prevention means a full stop for those days; partial use means roughly half. The model comes from how Israeli courts handled forced closures, where fully shuttered use earned a full exemption, retained use earned none, and partial use was commonly split near 50/50.

To make that concrete, here is what it works out to in shekels, scaled from the national average rent.

Rent you should not owe, by how long the flat is unusable

These figures are illustrative, worked from the national average rent of 5,027 NIS a month (Central Bureau of Statistics, Q1 2026) rather than from any court award. A month is treated as 4.33 weeks, so one week of rent is 5,027 divided by 4.33, about 1,161 NIS. The formula is: rent suspended equals monthly rent multiplied by (weeks unusable divided by 4.33) multiplied by a deprivation factor of 1.0 when you are fully out with no access, or 0.5 when you keep partial use. Your own number scales with your actual rent.

Time the unit is unusable Fully out, no access (factor 1.0) Partial use kept (factor 0.5)
2 weeks ~2,320 NIS ~1,160 NIS
4 weeks ~4,640 NIS ~2,320 NIS
6 weeks ~6,960 NIS ~3,480 NIS
8 weeks ~9,280 NIS ~4,640 NIS
12 weeks ~13,920 NIS ~6,960 NIS
Worked example, 6 weeks: 5,027 times (6 divided by 4.33) times 1.0 equals about 6,960 NIS fully out; the same six weeks at partial use is about 3,480 NIS. Treat these as the entitlement you can argue for under the section 15(a) suspension and the partial-use split, which a judge can still adjust on your facts.

Two cautions keep this honest. First, the 50 percent figure for partial use is a court-practice norm drawn from forced-closure cases, not a fixed statutory percentage, so a judge could land higher or lower on your facts. Second, suspension is proportional to deprivation: if you spent two of those six weeks back in the flat, only the four genuinely prevented weeks suspend. Use the table as a negotiating anchor and a sanity check, not as a bill you present.

Writing a war clause into the lease before you need it

Answer first: Israeli leases give you no force-majeure protection by default, so the protection has to be drafted in. If you are signing now, negotiate the clause; if you already signed without one, you fall back on section 15(a).

A useful clause names two things plainly: the trigger and the consequence. For the trigger, tie it to something official and verifiable, such as a Home Front Command evacuation order for the locality, a declared security situation, or an official closure of the access road. For the consequence, state that rent is suspended for the duration of the prevented period in line with section 15(a), and add an optional right to terminate without penalty if the prevention runs continuously beyond a set number of days (for example 30 or 60). Anchor the partial-use case to the roughly 50/50 split so you are not arguing it from scratch later.

Plain wording to propose: rent shall be suspended for any period during which an official evacuation order, a declared security situation, or a closure of the access route prevents the tenant from using the apartment for residence; where use is only partly prevented, rent shall be reduced in proportion to the loss of use; and if the prevention continues for more than [30/60] consecutive days, either party may end the lease on written notice without penalty. Get a lawyer to fit it to your contract. Where this clause sits among everything else you should check before signing is laid out in the lease contract checklist.

Miluim: protection, not a free exit

Answer first: being called to reserve duty does not, on its own, let you break a residential lease. It is not a statutory exit ground. What it does give you is breathing room on deadlines.

The protection comes from the Deferral of Deadlines Law (Temporary Order, Iron Swords), passed in October 2023. For eligible people, including reserve soldiers, it defers contractual and payment deadlines, with the total deferral capped at 85 days. In plain terms, a deadline that would have fallen during your service can be pushed back, which buys you time to arrange payment or sort the tenancy rather than defaulting while you are in uniform. It does not erase the rent; it moves the clock.

There is a separate, related protection that helps you keep paying: a reservist generally cannot be fired for being called up, with job protection during service and for a period after it ends when the service ran beyond two consecutive days. That protects your income, not your tenancy, but income is what keeps the lease healthy. If you genuinely need to end the lease because of a relocation tied to service, that is again the early exit clause route, negotiated with the landlord, not an automatic right.

Your deposit and guarantees while you are displaced

Answer first: a landlord may take from your security only what you actually, provably owe. A lawful rent suspension is not a debt, so it is not something the guarantee can be called for.

This is the point that protects your money in a crisis. The security you handed over (a cash deposit, a bank guarantee, or a security check) exists to cover real breaches: unpaid rent that is genuinely due, unpaid charges, or damage you caused. If your rent is lawfully suspended under section 15(a) because you were evacuated, that suspended rent is not due, so it is not a debt, so the landlord has no lawful basis to cash a security check or call a bank guarantee over it. A landlord who does so anyway is acting outside the law, and the burden flips to them to show a real debt.

The protective cap still applies in wartime exactly as in peacetime. Under the Fair Rent Law the total cash-equivalent security is capped at the lower of three months’ rent or one third of the total lease rent, and it must be returned within 60 days of the lease ending. On the national average rent, a twelve-month lease caps the security at about 15,081 NIS (three months of 5,027), since for any lease of nine months or longer the three-months figure is the binding cap. The deposit cap, what it covers, and how to get it back are owned by the rental security deposit guide; the on-demand mechanics and fees of the bank instrument are covered in the bank guarantee guide; and if a landlord still refuses to return what is yours, the recovery route is the deposit not returned guide. For a reservist, the 85-day deferral above also buffers any payment deadline that would otherwise trigger a guarantee call.

Missile damage, insurance and mas rechush (the sidebar)

Answer first: if a rocket damages the flat, do not call your home insurer for the war part. Standard home and contents insurance in Israel excludes war and hostile-action damage entirely. That loss routes to the state, through the property tax compensation fund (mas rechush) run by the Tax Authority.

The split between you and the landlord is clean: as a renter you claim your own contents (tchula); the owner claims the building. Both claims go to the state fund, not to a private policy. One sharp limit matters for landlords and for tenants negotiating responsibility: lost rent on a private residential lease is treated as indirect damage and is generally not compensable, so a landlord cannot expect the fund to replace the rent an evacuated tenant lawfully suspended.

Who actually pays a war loss, by source

This figure maps where each shekel of a war loss actually lands, drawn from the public coverage rules below.

Source of recovery What it pays for war or missile damage Practical limit
Private home and contents insurance Nothing for war or hostile action 0 percent (full exclusion)
State fund (mas rechush): building The owner’s structure repair No stated ceiling on direct building damage
State fund (mas rechush): contents (tchula) The renter’s belongings Capped, commonly cited around 150,000 to 200,000 NIS (mid about 175,000)
State fund: early advance / fast track Quick partial contents payment Advance about 20,000 to 50,000 NIS; fast track reported up to about 30,000 NIS without a surveyor
State fund: lost rent on a private lease Not compensable (treated as indirect damage) 0 NIS unless the rental is a reported business

Private war coverage is a flat zero because the exclusion is total, so the entire recovery is the state share. For a tenant, that effective recovery is contents only, capped near 175,000 NIS as a midpoint of the cited 150,000 to 200,000 range; for a landlord it is the building repair with no stated ceiling, but zero for the rent the displaced tenant did not pay. The caps and the surveyor figures are ranges drawn from public guides, so treat them as orientation and confirm the live numbers when you file. The full claim walkthrough, the deadlines, and how to file with the fund are not repeated here on purpose; they live in the dedicated guide on what to do if a rented flat is damaged by war or a missile, and your own belongings cover is the subject of renter insurance.

Hard terms in one line each

  • Section 15(a) suspension: the rule that exempts you from rent while you are prevented from using the flat, including because access is blocked.
  • Section 9(a) reduction: a proportional rent cut when your use is only partly impaired, rather than a full stop.
  • Frustration (sikul, section 18): the cancel-the-contract route for an unforeseeable event, which courts rarely accept for war in Israel.
  • Force-majeure clause: a contract term you negotiate in advance that suspends or ends obligations when a named emergency strikes.
  • Mas rechush: the state property tax compensation fund that pays for war and hostile-action damage instead of private insurance.
  • Tchula: contents, the movable belongings a renter (not the building owner) claims from the state fund.
  • Deferral of Deadlines Law: the Iron Swords temporary law that pushes back contractual and payment deadlines, up to 85 days, for eligible people including reservists.

Before you stop paying, check these

  • Is there an official evacuation order or a documented road closure for your exact locality, with dates you can show?
  • Are you claiming a suspension only for the days you genuinely could not use the flat, not a blanket no-pay period?
  • Have you told the landlord in writing that you are invoking section 15(a), with the dates and the reason, before the payment is missed?
  • If you kept partial use, have you offered the roughly 50 percent figure rather than paying nothing?
  • Are you a reservist who could use the 85-day deadline deferral to avoid a default while serving?
  • If the flat is damaged, have you separated the war part (state fund) from anything else, instead of relying on private insurance for the war loss?
  • Do you have a paper trail strong enough that the landlord cannot claim a debt and call your guarantee?

Quick answers

Can I cancel my lease because of the war?

Usually no. A frustration claim under section 18 almost always fails for war in Israel, because courts treat security events as foreseeable. A clean exit is realistic mainly when the building is condemned or repair will take a very long time. Aim to suspend or reduce rent instead, or negotiate an exit under the early-exit rules.

The army called me up. Can I break the lease?

Not on that basis alone. Miluim is not a statutory exit ground. But the Iron Swords Deferral of Deadlines Law can push back your payment deadlines by up to 85 days, which keeps you from defaulting while you serve.

I was evacuated. Do I still owe rent?

For the days an official order or a closed road genuinely prevented you from using the flat, no. Section 15(a) suspends the rent for that prevented period. Rent resumes when you can use the unit again. Document the order and the dates.

I can still use part of the flat. What do I pay?

Expect a proportional reduction rather than a full stop, often near half, based on how Israeli courts handled partial-use closures. On the national average rent, six weeks of partial use is about 3,480 NIS held back. Offer the split rather than paying nothing.

Can the landlord take my deposit or cash my guarantee while I am gone?

Only for a real, proven debt: unpaid rent that is actually due, unpaid charges, or damage you caused. Rent that is lawfully suspended is not a debt, so it cannot justify calling the guarantee. The security is also capped and must be returned within 60 days of the lease ending.

A rocket damaged the flat. Will my home insurance pay?

Not for the war part. Standard policies exclude war and hostile action entirely. That damage is compensated by the state property tax compensation fund (mas rechush): you claim your contents, the owner claims the building. See the dedicated war-damage claim guide for the filing steps.

Sources

Where this sits, and your one next step

War and security risk are the force-majeure corner of your tenancy. The rest of the contract, clause by clause, is the lease contract checklist; ending a lease early for any reason is the early exit clause; your money is the rental security deposit and the bank guarantee; safety from the next siren is the mamad safe room guide; and your own belongings are the renter insurance guide. Browse current homes on the for-rent hub, and if any Hebrew term here is unfamiliar, the rental glossary defines it.

Your single next step: if you are being evacuated, send the landlord one written message today stating that you are invoking section 15(a) for the dates you cannot use the flat, attach the order or closure notice, and keep paying nothing only for those days. That one paper trail protects both your rent and your guarantee.

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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