How long is your foreign license valid in Israel?
When you arrive in Israel, your foreign driving license is valid for one year from your aliyah date. During this first year, you can drive legally using your foreign license (along with an international driving permit if your license is not in English or Hebrew). After one year, your foreign license is no longer valid for driving in Israel, and you must hold an Israeli license.
5-Year Deadline
You have up to 5 years from your aliyah date to convert your foreign license through an abridged process. After 5 years, the abridged process is no longer available and you would need to go through the full Israeli licensing process (written test, lessons, and road test) - which is significantly more time-consuming and expensive.
How does the abridged conversion process work?
As a new oleh, you benefit from a streamlined conversion process. The key advantage is that the written theory exam (the "test" in Hebrew) is waived. You only need to pass a practical road test. The steps are:
- Get a medical form (Tofes Yarok): Visit any authorized physician (your קופת חולים (Kupat Cholim) family doctor or an authorized clinic) for a basic medical exam. The doctor fills out the green medical form confirming you are fit to drive. Cost: covered by your health fund or approximately 100-150 NIS privately
- Translate your foreign license: Get a certified Hebrew translation of your driving license from a notarized translator (Notar). Cost: approximately 100-200 NIS
- Take a driving lesson (optional but recommended): Book at least one lesson with a licensed Israeli driving instructor (Moreh Nehiga) to familiarize yourself with Israeli road conventions, the test route in your area, and the specific expectations of Israeli examiners
- Book the road test: Your driving instructor or a licensing office (Misrad HaRishui) can book the practical test for you. Wait times vary by location - central areas like Tel Aviv and Jerusalem may have 2-4 week waits
- Pass the practical road test: A 20-30 minute driving test with an examiner. You drive your instructor's vehicle (dual-control car). The test covers urban driving, intersections, parking, lane changes, and general vehicle control
- Receive your Israeli license: Upon passing, the Misrad HaRishui issues your Israeli driving license, typically within 1-2 weeks by mail
Which documents do you need to bring?
Bring all of the following to the Misrad HaRishui:
- Foreign driving license (original, not expired)
- Certified Hebrew translation of the foreign license
- Completed medical form (Tofes Yarok) signed by an authorized doctor
- Teudat Zehut (Israeli ID)
- Passport photos - one recent passport-sized photo (some offices now take photos digitally on-site)
- Teudat Oleh - to confirm your aliyah date and eligibility for the abridged process
How much does converting your license cost?
The total cost of converting your license is approximately 400-500 NIS, broken down as follows:
| Item | Cost (NIS) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Medical exam | 100-150 | Free if covered by your Kupat Cholim |
| License translation | 100-200 | Certified notarized Hebrew translation |
| Road test fee | ~70 | Paid at booking |
| License issuance fee | ~100 | Paid upon passing |
| Driving lesson (recommended) | 150-200 per lesson | 1-2 lessons typically sufficient for experienced drivers |
How do you pass the Israeli road test?
The practical test has a reputation for being strict. First-time pass rates are estimated at around 50-60%. Here are key tips:
Road Test Tips
- Mirror checks must be visible: The examiner needs to see you physically turn your head to check mirrors and blind spots. Subtle eye movements are not enough
- Full stops at stop signs: A rolling stop through a stop sign is an automatic fail. Come to a complete stop, count to three, then proceed
- Speed limits are strictly enforced during tests: Israeli drivers regularly exceed speed limits, but during the test you must not. Stay at or slightly below the posted limit
- Parking precision matters: You will likely be asked to parallel park and/or back into a space. Practice tight parking - Israeli spaces are smaller than you are used to
- Stay calm in traffic: Israeli drivers honk frequently and may drive aggressively around you. The examiner is testing your composure as much as your technique
Does your license cover automatic or manual?
If your foreign license covers manual (stick shift) vehicles, your Israeli conversion covers both manual and automatic. If your foreign license is automatic-only, your Israeli license will also be restricted to automatic vehicles. You cannot "upgrade" to a manual license through the conversion process - that would require taking the full licensing process with a manual car.
In practice, most newer cars in Israel are automatic, and an automatic-only license is rarely a limitation for daily driving. However, if you plan to drive older vehicles or specific work vehicles, check whether a manual license matters for your situation.
As a new oleh, your foreign driving license stays valid for driving in Israel for one year from your aliyah date. Within 5 years of aliyah you can convert it through an abridged process that waives the written theory exam, requiring only a green medical form (Tofes Yarok), a certified Hebrew translation of your license, and a passing practical road test. Total conversion cost runs roughly NIS 400-500 in official fees (medical exam, translation, test and issuance), plus NIS 150-200 per recommended driving lesson. Miss the 5-year window and you must complete the full Israeli licensing process from scratch, which is more expensive and time-consuming.
Your foreign driving license is valid for driving in Israel for one year from your aliyah date. During that first year you can drive legally on your foreign license, along with an international driving permit if your license is not in English or Hebrew. After one year your foreign license is no longer valid for driving in Israel, and you must hold an Israeli license.
You have up to 5 years from your aliyah date to convert your foreign license through the abridged process, which waives the written theory exam and requires only a practical road test. After 5 years that simplified route is no longer available, and you would need to go through the full Israeli licensing process (written test, lessons, and road test), which is significantly more time-consuming and expensive. Many olim put off the conversion and then scramble as the deadline approaches, so starting within your first year is the safer choice.
As a new oleh, the written theory exam is waived and you only need to pass a practical road test. The steps are: get a green medical form (Tofes Yarok) from an authorized physician; obtain a certified Hebrew translation of your license from a notarized translator; optionally take at least one driving lesson with a licensed Israeli instructor (Moreh Nehiga); book the road test through your instructor or a licensing office (Misrad HaRishui); pass the 20-30 minute practical test in your instructor's dual-control vehicle; and receive your Israeli license by mail, typically within 1-2 weeks of passing.
The total cost in official fees is approximately NIS 400-500. That breaks down as a medical exam (NIS 100-150, often free if covered by your Kupat Cholim), a certified notarized Hebrew translation (NIS 100-200), a road test fee (about NIS 70 paid at booking), and a license issuance fee (about NIS 100 paid upon passing). Driving lessons are extra at roughly NIS 150-200 per lesson, with 1-2 lessons typically sufficient for experienced drivers.
Bring your original, non-expired foreign driving license; a certified Hebrew translation of that license; the completed green medical form (Tofes Yarok) signed by an authorized doctor; your Teudat Zehut (Israeli ID); a recent passport-sized photo (some offices now take photos digitally on-site); and your Teudat Oleh to confirm your aliyah date and eligibility for the abridged process.
The practical test is a 20-30 minute drive with an examiner covering urban driving, intersections, parking, lane changes, and general vehicle control, and it has a reputation for being strict, with first-time pass rates estimated around 50-60%. Key tips: physically turn your head so the examiner sees you check mirrors and blind spots; come to a full stop at stop signs (a rolling stop is an automatic fail); stay at or slightly below the posted speed limit even though local drivers often exceed it; practice tight parallel and reverse parking since Israeli spaces are smaller; and stay calm, since the examiner is testing your composure amid frequent honking and assertive driving.
If your foreign license covers manual (stick shift) vehicles, your Israeli conversion covers both manual and automatic. If your foreign license is automatic-only, your Israeli license will also be restricted to automatic vehicles, and you cannot upgrade to manual through conversion (that would require the full licensing process with a manual car). In practice most newer cars in Israel are automatic, so an automatic-only license is rarely a limitation, though it can matter if you plan to drive older or specific work vehicles.
The abridged process is the same regardless of home country, provided your country is on Israel's list of recognized license-issuing nations, which includes most Western and many other countries. UK license holders are not covered by a direct exchange agreement and still must pass the practical road test, though British drivers generally find it manageable. American olim are often surprised that the written test is waived entirely, but should note that Israeli roads are narrower, parking tighter, roundabouts far more common, and driving more aggressive, so at least one lesson is worth considering. If your country is not on the recognized list, you may need the full process including the written exam, so confirm eligibility with the Misrad HaRishui or your driving instructor.
The Bottom Line
Many olim put off the license conversion and find themselves scrambling as the 5-year deadline approaches. The practical test has waiting times, and if you fail the first attempt, you need to rebook - which may add weeks. Start the process within your first year while your foreign license is still valid for driving, so you have ample time for the medical exam, paperwork, and test scheduling.
Some ביטוח לאומי (Bituach Leumi) benefits and insurance matters reference your Israeli driving license status, and having a local license simplifies car insurance, car rental, and any official documentation that requires valid Israeli ID.




