Israel's Social Safety Net
ביטוח לאומי (Bituach Leumi) is the National Insurance Institute of Israel - the government body that administers most of Israel's social welfare programs. Every Israeli resident contributes, and in return, Bituach Leumi provides a comprehensive safety net covering everything from retirement to work injuries.
As a new oleh, you become part of this system from the moment you register your residency. Understanding what you're covered for - and from when - is essential for your financial planning.
What does Bituach Leumi cover?
Old-Age Pension (Kitzvat Zikna)
The state pension is paid to men from age 70 and women from age 62-65 (gradually rising). The amount depends on your contribution history in Israel. As a new oleh, your Israeli pension will initially be small - but it compounds over your working years here. Most olim supplement this with their private pension (keren pensia) and any foreign pension entitlements.
Child Allowances (Kitzvat Yeladim)
Every child under 18 living in Israel is entitled to a monthly child allowance, regardless of family income. In 2025, the rate is approximately 190 NIS per child per month for the first three children, with higher amounts for larger families. Payments are deposited directly to your bank account - no application needed after initial registration of your children.
Maternity and Paternity Benefits (Dmei Leida)
Working mothers receive maternity pay for the duration of their maternity leave (a minimum of 15 weeks, and up to 26 weeks paid for parents who share leave). The benefit replaces up to 100% of average income based on your last three months of salary. Fathers can also take paid paternity leave. Importantly, you must have worked and contributed for a qualifying period before the birth - typically 10 months in the preceding 14 months.
Work Injury Insurance (Nifga BaAvoda)
If you're injured at work or travelling to/from work, Bituach Leumi covers your medical treatment and replaces your lost income during recovery. This applies from your first day of employment, with no waiting period.
Disability Benefits (Nechut)
If illness or injury prevents you from working, Bituach Leumi provides disability allowances based on your degree of incapacity and contribution history. This is separate from any private disability insurance your employer may provide.
Unemployment Benefits (Dmei Avtalah)
If you lose your job involuntarily, you may qualify for unemployment benefits for up to 175 days. You must have worked and contributed for at least 12 months in the previous 18 months before becoming unemployed.
Survival Benefits (Gimal)
In the event of a breadwinner's death, Bituach Leumi pays survivor allowances to the spouse and dependent children. The amounts depend on the deceased's contribution history.
When Does Coverage Begin?
Most Bituach Leumi benefits begin once you establish Israeli residency. However, some benefits have qualifying contribution periods:
- Child allowances: begin after child registration, no waiting period
- Work injury: from your first day of employment
- Maternity pay: requires 10 months of contributions in prior 14 months
- Unemployment: requires 12 months of contributions in prior 18 months
- Old-age pension: accumulates over your entire working career in Israel
How do you register with Bituach Leumi?
New olim should register with Bituach Leumi shortly after arriving. Visit the nearest branch with your Teudat Oleh and Teudat Zehut. If you're employed, your employer handles registration and contributions for you. If you're self-employed or not working, you must register independently.
Bituach Leumi, the National Insurance Institute of Israel, is the government body that administers most of Israel's social welfare programs, combining social security, health funding, and welfare under one roof. As a new oleh you join the system the moment you register your residency, and coverage for many benefits begins from day one, unlike US Social Security, which requires about 40 work credits (roughly 10 years) before you are eligible. Benefits include the old-age pension (the income-test-free entitlement age is 70 for both men and women; you may be able to claim earlier from retirement age, which is 67 for men and rising from 62 toward 65 for women, subject to an income test), universal child allowances of roughly 190 NIS per child per month in 2025 for the first three children paid regardless of income, maternity and paternity pay, work injury cover from your first day of employment, disability allowances, unemployment benefits for up to 175 days, and survivor benefits. Some benefits have qualifying contribution periods: maternity pay needs 10 months of contributions in the prior 14 months, and unemployment needs 12 months in the prior 18 months. Register at your nearest branch shortly after arrival with your Teudat Oleh and Teudat Zehut. If you are employed, your employer handles registration and contributions; if you are self-employed or not working, you must register independently.
Bituach Leumi is the National Insurance Institute of Israel, the government body that administers most of Israel's social welfare programs. Every Israeli resident contributes, and in return it provides a comprehensive safety net covering retirement (old-age pension), child allowances, maternity and paternity benefits, work injury insurance, disability allowances, unemployment benefits, and survivor benefits. As a new oleh, you become part of this system from the moment you register your residency.
Most Bituach Leumi benefits begin once you establish Israeli residency, but some have qualifying contribution periods. Child allowances begin after child registration with no waiting period. Work injury cover applies from your first day of employment. Maternity pay requires 10 months of contributions in the prior 14 months. Unemployment requires 12 months of contributions in the prior 18 months. The old-age pension accumulates over your entire working career in Israel.
You can think of Bituach Leumi as Social Security and Medicare combined into one system, plus unemployment insurance, child allowances, and maternity pay, all under one roof. The key difference is eligibility: US Social Security requires 40 work credits (about 10 years) before you are eligible, whereas in Israel coverage for many benefits begins from the first day you establish residency. This makes Bituach Leumi significantly more accessible for new immigrants.
Every child under 18 living in Israel is entitled to a monthly child allowance, regardless of family income. In 2025, the rate is approximately 190 NIS per child per month for the first three children, with higher amounts for larger families. Payments are deposited directly to your bank account, with no application needed after the initial registration of your children. For olim from the UK, this differs from UK Child Benefit, which is means-tested at higher incomes.
The state old-age pension (Kitzvat Zikna) becomes payable without an income test at age 70 for both men and women; you may be able to claim earlier from your retirement age (67 for men, and rising from 62 toward 65 for women depending on birth year), subject to an income test. The amount depends on your contribution history in Israel. As a new oleh, your Israeli pension will initially be small, but it builds up over your working years here. Most olim supplement it with their private pension (keren pensia) and any foreign pension entitlements.
Working mothers receive maternity pay for the duration of their maternity leave, a minimum of 15 weeks and up to 26 weeks paid for parents who share leave. The benefit replaces up to 100% of average income based on your last three months of salary, and fathers can also take paid paternity leave. To qualify you must have worked and contributed for a qualifying period before the birth, typically 10 months in the preceding 14 months.
If you lose your job involuntarily, you may qualify for unemployment benefits (Dmei Avtalah) for up to 175 days. To qualify, you must have worked and contributed for at least 12 months in the previous 18 months before becoming unemployed.
New olim should register with Bituach Leumi shortly after arriving. Visit the nearest branch with your Teudat Oleh and Teudat Zehut. If you are employed, your employer handles registration and contributions for you. If you are self-employed or not working, you must register independently.




