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Israel: visas, tax & cost of living

Israel: honest, sourced estimates on entry rules, the digital nomad visa, tax residency and the cost of living, tailored to your passport.

Israel: visas, tax & cost of living
Your passport

United KingdomIsrael

Your move to Israel on a United Kingdom passport

  • VisitEasyVisa-free entry
  • NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
  • RelocateHardLimited residence routes

Visiting

Visa-free for up to 90 days. Travel on a passport valid for your whole stay, with a return or onward ticket and proof you can support yourself.

Passport validity:Passport valid at least 3 months beyond arrival for visa-exempt (ETA-IL) entry, or 6 months if you need an entry visa

Heads-up:Since 1 January 2025 visa-exempt travellers must obtain an ETA-IL (about 25 NIS) before arrival for stays up to 90 days.

At the border:ETA-IL or visa, passport, proof of onward or return travel and accommodation, and evidence of health/travel insurance

Working remotely

No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.

Tax and residency

You are generally an Israeli tax resident if your center of life is in Israel, presumed when you spend 183 or more days in a tax year (or 30 or more days plus 425 over three years); residents are taxed on worldwide income while non-residents are taxed only on Israeli-source income. New immigrants typically get a 10-year exemption on foreign income, though reporting is required from 2026.(estimate)

The UK decides residence with its Statutory Residence Test (days in the UK plus your ties). As a non-resident you are usually taxed only on UK income; where one exists, a double-tax treaty with the destination decides who taxes what.

Practical

Currency:ILS. Cost of living:high.

Healthcare:Tourists and short-term foreigners are not covered by the public system and should hold private travel or international health insurance, which is expected at entry.

Driving:You may drive on a valid foreign or international licence for up to one year from your entry date; an International Driving Permit is recommended and some rental firms ask for one.

Sources: Population and Immigration Authority - ETA-IL and entry · Population and Immigration Authority - foreign entry and visas · Israel Tax Authority (gov.il) · Ministry of Foreign Affairs - entry visa information · GOV.UK: tax on foreign income · HMRC: double-taxation treaties

Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.

Frequently asked questions

Israel: is there a digital nomad visa?
No dedicated digital nomad visa; most people use a standard residence permit instead.
Israel: when do you become a tax resident?
You are generally an Israeli tax resident if your center of life is in Israel, presumed when you spend 183 or more days in a tax year (or 30 or more days plus 425 over three years); residents are taxed on worldwide income while non-residents are taxed only on Israeli-source income. New immigrants typically get a 10-year exemption on foreign income, though reporting is required from 2026.
Israel: what is the cost of living?
The cost of living is high and the local currency is the ILS. Treat any figures as estimates.
Israel: do you need health insurance?
Tourists and short-term foreigners are not covered by the public system and should hold private travel or international health insurance, which is expected at entry.
Israel: can you drive on a foreign licence?
You may drive on a valid foreign or international licence for up to one year from your entry date; an International Driving Permit is recommended and some rental firms ask for one.

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Last verified: 2026-06-26

Voymo gives general information to help you organise your move. It is not legal, tax, or immigration advice, always confirm with an official source or a qualified professional before you act.

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