Introduction
If you come from a country with a well-established credit system, FICO scores in the US, Experian and Equifax in the UK, the Israeli credit landscape can feel opaque. There is no single three-digit number that follows you around. There is no app that pings you when your score changes. And most importantly, none of your carefully built credit history from abroad transfers to Israel.
The good news: as a new oleh, you start with a blank slate. That is both a challenge and an opportunity. You do not carry bad credit, you simply have no data. Understanding how the Israeli system works, and taking deliberate steps early, can set you up for better mortgage rates, easier rental approvals, and smoother access to financial products within your first year.
How does the Israeli credit system work?
Israel's credit infrastructure is younger and less consumer-facing than what you may be used to. The main credit bureau is BDI (Business Data Israel), which plays a similar role to Equifax or TransUnion, collecting data from banks and lenders and producing credit reports.
In 2019, the Bank of Israel launched the Credit Data System (Maarechet Nitunim Ashrait), a centralized database that aggregates אשראי (Ashrai) data across all banks. Before this system, each bank only knew about its own customers. Now, when you apply for a הלוואה (Halvaa) or a mortgage, the lender can see your full picture across all Israeli financial institutions.
Every bank and lender reports data to this system: loan payments, overdraft usage, bounced checks, and credit card behavior. Your "credit profile" is not a single score like FICO. Instead, it is a comprehensive report that lenders interpret according to their own internal criteria.
Banks assess creditworthiness based on several factors:
- Income stability: Regular salary deposits into your חשבון עובר ושב (Cheshbon Over VeShav) (checking account)
- Account history: How long you have held your account and how you have managed it
- Existing debts: Outstanding loans, credit card balances, and their repayment patterns
- Overdraft patterns:Whether you frequently dip into your overdraft (known as "minus") and how deep
What affects your credit in Israel?
Positive Factors
- Regular salary deposits landing on time each month
- Maintaining a positive balance in your חשבון עובר ושב (Cheshbon Over VeShav)
- Paying all bills on time, including utilities and phone
- Keeping a low credit card usage ratio relative to your limit
- Successfully repaying a הלוואה (Halvaa) on schedule
Negative Factors
- Bounced checks: This is taken very seriously in Israel. Writing a check that bounces can result in being declared מוגבל (Mugbal) (restricted), meaning you are banned from writing checks for an entire year. This is a severe mark on your financial record and is visible to all banks.
- Chronic overdraft: Using your overdraft (מינוס (Minus)) regularly is not penalized per se, but persistent deep overdraft signals risk to lenders. Banks see the pattern and factor it into lending decisions.
- Late loan payments: Missed or late payments on any הלוואה (Halvaa) are recorded and remain on your report.
- Multiple credit applications in a short period: Each application is logged. Submitting many in rapid succession makes you appear desperate for credit.
How do you build credit as a new oleh?
Building Israeli credit is a deliberate process. Here is a realistic timeline for what to do and when.
Months 1-3: Establish the Foundation
- Open a חשבון עובר ושב (Cheshbon Over VeShav) at an Israeli bank. All major banks have olim-specific packages.
- Set up salary direct deposit (if employed) or regular transfers from your foreign account.
- Get a basic כרטיס אשראי (Kartis Ashrai) (credit card). Your bank will likely offer one with a modest limit as part of the oleh package.
- Set up הוראת קבע (Hora'at Keva) (standing orders) for recurring bills, electricity, internet, phone, arnona.
Months 3-6: Build Positive Patterns
- Use your credit card for regular purchases, groceries, gas, subscriptions. This generates activity on your profile.
- Pay the full balance every month, not just the minimum. Full repayment demonstrates financial discipline.
- Avoid using your overdraft. Keep your account in the positive.
Months 6-12: Solidify Your History
- By now you should have a pattern of: positive balance, no overdraft, regular הוראת קבע (Hora'at Keva) paid on time, and steady credit card usage with full monthly repayment.
- If you need to borrow, consider a small personal הלוואה (Halvaa) and repay it promptly. A successfully completed loan adds positive data to your profile.
Year 1 and Beyond
- After 12 months of consistent behavior, you will have enough history to apply for better credit cards, larger loans, or be taken seriously in a משכנתא (Mashkanta) (mortgage) application.
- Practical tip: Ask your bank for a small credit limit initially. It is easier to get approved, and consistently using and repaying a small limit builds history just as well as a large one.
How does credit differ by your country of origin?
Your FICO score does not transfer to Israel. There is no mechanism to "import" your US credit history into the Israeli system. You start from zero regardless of whether you had an 800 score in the US.
However, some Israeli banks may accept a US credit report as supplementary documentation when applying for a משכנתא (Mashkanta). It is not a substitute for Israeli credit history, but it can help demonstrate your financial track record to a mortgage officer.
One advantage: your US credit cards still work in Israel. You can continue using them for purchases (useful for building points on US rewards programs) while simultaneously building Israeli credit with your local card.
When does your credit matter most?
Your Israeli credit profile becomes relevant in several important situations. Understanding when it matters helps you plan ahead.
- Renting an apartment: Landlords may ask your bank for a reference letter or check your financial standing. Many require guarantors (ערבים (Arevim)), having established credit can reduce the number of guarantors needed.
- Getting a משכנתא (Mashkanta): This is where credit matters most. A strong credit profile means better interest rates and higher approval likelihood. The difference between good and mediocre credit can translate to tens of thousands of shekels over the life of a mortgage.
- Car loans and leasing: Requires established credit history. Most leasing companies will not approve someone with less than 6-12 months of Israeli financial data.
- Opening a business: If you plan to work as self-employed or open a company, business credit lines and loans require personal creditworthiness.
- Better credit cards: Premium cards with travel perks, cashback, or higher limits require demonstrated credit history. You may start with a basic card and upgrade after 6-12 months.
How do you check your credit in Israel?
Unlike the US where you can check your score instantly through dozens of apps, accessing your Israeli credit data requires a bit more effort, but it is possible and free.
- BDI report: You are entitled to one free annual credit report from BDI (Business Data Israel). You can request it through their website. The report shows your credit history, outstanding debts, and any negative marks.
- Bank of Israel credit data:The Maarechet Nitunim (Credit Data System) allows you to access your information through the Bank of Israel's website. This shows data aggregated across all your Israeli financial institutions.
- Your bank: Your bank relationship manager (בנקאי (Bankai)) can tell you your internal credit standing and what products you qualify for. Simply ask at your next branch visit.
- Dispute rights: If you find errors in your credit report, an incorrectly recorded late payment, for example, you have the right to dispute them through BDI. The bureau must investigate and correct verified errors.
What credit mistakes do olim commonly make?
New immigrants often fall into the same patterns. Being aware of these pitfalls can save you months of credit-building setbacks.
- Using the overdraft as a cash buffer: Many olim discover their bank-approved overdraft limit and treat it as available cash. This builds bad habits, costs significant interest (overdraft rates in Israel typically range from 6-12%), and signals financial instability to lenders.
- Skipping automatic payments: Not setting up הוראת קבע (Hora'at Keva) (standing orders) for bills leads to late payments. In Israel, utilities, phone, and internet are typically paid via standing order. Late payments get noticed.
- Applying for multiple credit products at once: Each credit application is recorded in the system. Submitting five credit card applications in one month flags you as high-risk. Apply for one product, wait for approval, and build from there.
- Ignoring the 90-day supplemental insurance window: While not directly a credit issue, missing this deadline shows a pattern of not managing financial obligations proactively. Building good financial discipline early extends to credit behavior.
- Refusing to use a guarantor: Some olim let pride prevent them from asking for a guarantor (ערב (Arev)) when needed. In Israel, having an ערב (Arev) is extremely common and carries no stigma. If a guarantor gets you approved for a lease or a loan, use one. You can always operate independently once your own credit is established.
Israel has no single FICO-style credit score. The main credit bureau is BDI (Business Data Israel), and since 2019 the Bank of Israel has run the Credit Data System (Maarechet Nitunim Ashrait), a centralized database that aggregates loan, overdraft, bounced-check, and credit-card data across every Israeli bank. None of your foreign credit history transfers, so as a new oleh you start from a blank slate, with no bad credit but no data either. You build an Israeli profile in 6-12 months by opening a checking account (Cheshbon Over VeShav), setting up Hora'at Keva standing orders for recurring bills, using a credit card and paying the full balance every month, staying out of overdraft (minus), and applying for only one credit product at a time since every application is logged. After about 12 months of consistent positive behavior you have enough history to qualify for better cards, larger loans, and competitive mortgage (mashkanta) rates. You can check your data for free via one annual BDI report and the Bank of Israel's Credit Data System website, and you have the right to dispute errors through BDI.
No. None of your foreign credit history transfers to Israel. Whether you had an 800 FICO score in the US, long-standing Experian and Equifax records in the UK, or a strong banking relationship in France, South Africa, Argentina, or Australia, there is no mechanism to import that data into the Israeli system. Every oleh starts from a blank profile. The upside is that you also carry no negative history, so you get a fresh start. Note that some Israeli banks may accept a US credit report as supplementary documentation when you apply for a mashkanta (mortgage). It is not a substitute for Israeli credit history, but it can help demonstrate your financial track record to a mortgage officer.
Israel has no single three-digit score that follows you around and no app that pings you when your score changes. The main credit bureau is BDI (Business Data Israel), which plays a role similar to Equifax or TransUnion. In 2019 the Bank of Israel launched the Credit Data System (Maarechet Nitunim Ashrait), a centralized database that aggregates Ashrai (credit) data across all banks. Before this system, each bank only knew about its own customers; now lenders can see your full picture across all Israeli financial institutions when you apply for a loan or mortgage. Your credit profile is not a single score like FICO. It is a comprehensive report, and each lender interprets it according to its own internal criteria.
A realistic timeline is 6-12 months. In months 1-3, establish the foundation: open a checking account (Cheshbon Over VeShav) at an Israeli bank with an olim-specific package, set up salary direct deposit or regular transfers, get a basic credit card, and set up Hora'at Keva standing orders for recurring bills like electricity, internet, phone, and arnona. In months 3-6, build positive patterns: use the credit card for regular purchases, pay the full balance every month rather than the minimum, and avoid your overdraft. In months 6-12, solidify your history with a steady pattern of positive balance, no overdraft, on-time Hora'at Keva, and full monthly card repayment, and consider a small personal loan (halvaa) repaid promptly. After 12 months of consistent behavior you have enough history to apply for better cards, larger loans, and competitive mashkanta terms.
Bounced checks are taken very seriously in Israel. Writing a check that bounces can result in being declared Mugbal (restricted), meaning you are banned from writing checks for an entire year across all Israeli banks. This is a severe mark on your financial record and is visible to all banks. It is one of the most damaging negative factors on your Israeli credit profile, alongside chronic overdraft, late loan payments, and multiple credit applications in a short period.
Using your overdraft (minus) is not penalized per se, but persistent deep overdraft signals risk to lenders. Banks see the pattern and factor it into their lending decisions. Many olim discover their bank-approved overdraft limit and treat it as available cash, which builds bad habits and costs significant interest. Overdraft rates in Israel typically range from 6-12%. Chronic overdraft use signals financial instability, so the recommended pattern while building credit is to keep your account in the positive and avoid relying on the overdraft as a cash buffer.
Yes, you can check it and it is free, though it takes a bit more effort than in the US. You are entitled to one free annual credit report from BDI (Business Data Israel), which you can request through their website; it shows your credit history, outstanding debts, and any negative marks. You can also access your information through the Bank of Israel's Credit Data System (Maarechet Nitunim) website, which shows data aggregated across all your Israeli financial institutions. In addition, your bank relationship manager (bankai) can tell you your internal credit standing and what products you qualify for. If you find errors in your report, such as an incorrectly recorded late payment, you have the right to dispute them through BDI, and the bureau must investigate and correct verified errors.
Your Israeli credit profile becomes relevant in several situations. When renting an apartment, landlords may check your financial standing and many require guarantors (arevim), so established credit can reduce the number of guarantors needed. Getting a mashkanta (mortgage) is where credit matters most: a strong profile means better interest rates and higher approval likelihood, and the difference between good and mediocre credit can translate to tens of thousands of shekels over the life of the loan. Car loans and leasing usually require established history, with most leasing companies declining applicants who have less than 6-12 months of Israeli financial data. Credit also matters for opening a business and for qualifying for premium credit cards with travel perks, cashback, or higher limits.
Yes, if a guarantor gets you approved, use one. A common mistake among olim is letting pride prevent them from asking for a guarantor (arev) when needed. In Israel, having an arev is extremely common and carries no stigma. If a guarantor helps you get approved for a lease or a loan, it is a practical tool, and you can always operate independently once your own credit is established.
The Bottom Line
Building credit in Israel is not complicated, but it requires patience and consistency. You cannot shortcut the process, there is no way to import your foreign credit history, and no amount of documentation from your home country will substitute for 6-12 months of positive Israeli banking behavior.
Start with the basics: open an account, get a card, pay your bills on time, and avoid the overdraft. By the end of your first year, you will have a meaningful Israeli credit profile that opens doors to better financial products, smoother rental applications, and ultimately the משכנתא (Mashkanta) terms you want when you are ready to buy.




