Real Estate By the Numbers

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Feb 01, 2021 | Aliyah | Housing | National
Real Estate By the Numbers

Buying a home in Israel is very different than in the United States. The language is different, the payment structure is usually different, the legal process is different, and the numbers are different. Let’s focus on some of the numbers:

Floors

In the US, if you look at an apartment on the third floor, you’re standing on the third floor. Pretty obvious, right? Not so simple. Here in Israel the third floor apartment is on the fourth floor. The first floor is called “0” or “karka” (ground), the second floor is called “1”, and so on.

Meters

Yes, our elementary school teachers were right when they told us that the world is moving to the metric system – the world has, except for the US. Here’s the quick calculation: 1 square meter (sm) = 10.76 square feet (sf), therefore a 100 sm apartment is 1,076 square feet. (A square meter should not be confused with a linear meter which equals 3.28 feet; e.g., a 2 meter tall person is a little over 6’6”.)

Dunam

It sounds like a Hebrew word, but dunam is actually a unit of land area that was used during the era of the Ottoman Empire. In Israel, a dunam equals 1,000 square meters, equaling 10,764 sf, or just about a quarter of an acre. Dunam is an important word for people who are buying land or a single family home to redevelop.

Room count

I was an investment sales broker in the US for many years, and a 3-room apartment in New York had one bedroom and a 4-room apartment had two bedrooms. In Israel, a 3-room apartment has two bedrooms and a 4-room apartment has 3 bedrooms. The kitchen, mirpeset (porch), basement and attic don’t count in the room count, although they offer tremendous development upside.

Arnona

Municipal taxes (think of it like real estate taxes in the US) must be paid on every property. Unlike in the US, the tenant – not the landlord – pays the arnona (unless the apartment rental is short term). This is done for one simple reason: the tenant’s status affects the tax rate. For example, reductions are given to retirees, soldiers, the disabled, single parent families, and in some cases, for residents with very low salaries. The arnona rate in the country ranges from 34 shekels to over 100 shekels per meter, depending on the municipality. In Jerusalem, the average arnona rate in or near the center of town is 92 shekels per meter. So a 100-meter apartment’s annual arnona bill would be 9,200 NIS.

Courtesy of Gedaliah Borvick 

The above was posted by a community member. This information may not be current.


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