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Tel Aviv Apartment Prices Per Sqm in 2026

Tel Aviv per-sqm valuations hit 52,300 NIS (June 2026), signaling yield compression that forces investor portfolio rebalancing across regional Israeli markets.

By Solly Marks
Jewish Property Report · 23 Jun 2026
2 min read· 306 words
Last reviewed: 3 Jul 2026 · Checked against official sources including Misrad Haklita, Nefesh B'Nefesh, the Jewish Agency and Bituach Leumi where relevant.
Tel Aviv Apartment Prices Per Sqm in 2026
Jewish Property Report Editorial · News

Tel Aviv's apartment price-per-square-meter reached 52,300 NIS in June 2026, up 8.4% year-over-year, marking a structural shift in how international and domestic investors allocate capital across Israeli real estate. This metric—the single most actionable datapoint for comparing Tel Aviv's valuation trajectory against other metropolitan regions—reveals a portfolio decision inflection: investors must now choose between Tel Aviv's compressed yields and emerging opportunities in secondary markets.

The price-per-sqm baseline matters because it eliminates unit size distortion. A 3-room and 5-room apartment can obscure true market direction. Per-sqm pricing cuts through that noise and tells portfolio managers exactly what they pay for location, transit access, and liquidity premium.

For foreign investors and olim chadashim (new immigrants), this June 2026 data point carries portfolio weight because it forces a direct calculation: at 52,300 NIS/sqm, a 70-sqm apartment in central Tel Aviv (Dizengoff, Sheinkin corridor) commands 3.66 million NIS. Mortgage availability for non-residents remains tight; this reinforces the cash-buyer segment's dominance in Tel Aviv's premium inventory.

Market Drivers: Why Per-Sqm Pricing Accelerated in 2026

Three structural forces compressed per-sqm valuations upward in the first half of 2026. First, foreign currency flows: shekel weakness against the dollar throughout Q1 2026 made Israeli real estate cheaper for US-based buyers, triggering acquisition activity in Tel Aviv's trophy asset tier. Second, limited new supply: Tel Aviv's zoning constraints mean per-sqm pricing rises when inventory tightens, not when demand surges uniformly.

Third, and most material for portfolio managers: institutional capital reallocation.

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Solly Marks
Jewish Property Report · News

Solly Marks is an Israeli property analyst and publisher writing for diaspora Jewish buyers and investors. JewishPropertyReport covers real estate prices, buying guides, and market data across Israel — practical intelligence for overseas buyers.