House prices in israel
How Tel Aviv’s 'safest investment' collapsed: Falling apartment prices wipe out millions - analysis
Israel’s housing market is freezing: Tel Aviv apartment prices are down 8.4% due to high interest rates and emigration. Investors are now losing millions and fleeing to the stock market.
Israel's housing market is sliding into recession
Israeli housing price rises gain momentum
What to do when there is no safe room at home
Sprawling new Jerusalem neighborhood approved
Neighborhood of 1,830 homes in high rises on 63 acres of land featuring affordable units for young families to be built in capital.
Gearing up for a downturn
The effects of Operation Protective Edge on the ‘Zero VAT’ plan.
Yad 2: Don't expect house prices in South to fall
The 8-day Pillar of Defense in 2012 seemed to have no long-term effect on housing prices in places hard-hit by rockets.
Haifa’s neighbor
Spacious, modern apartments can be found in Kiryat Bialik for much lower prices than in the big city.
From the Ground Up: Not so secret agents
A good agent will identify a need and solve it or make sure that it is solved by the right person.
For Jerusalem’s future, foreign real estate investment must be lauded
To truly change the image of our city, we need to push Jerusalem as a sound investment for all types of buyers.
From the ground up: ‘When is the property bubble going to burst?’
The assumption here is that Israeli real estate is in a bubble similar to the one in the United States, which when it burst, created the property crisis.
Housing cabinet approves plans for bringing down cost of housing in Israel
Construction and Housing Minister Ariel aims to bring down costs by imposing new guidelines for construction companies.
Cabinet approves first-time home-buyer VAT exemption
The law has been criticized for failing to address the central problem in the booming cost of housing: a lack of supply of new housing units.
Doubling of property taxes on capital’s ‘ghost apartments’ expected to be ratified
Over 10,000 owned but uninhabited residences have drained city’s economy, created cost-prohibitive market for young residents, says deputy mayor.