Two Retirement Systems, One Goal
If you made aliyah from the US, you likely spent years contributing to a 401(k) or similar employer-sponsored retirement plan. Now you have a new Israeli קרן פנסיה (Keren Pensia) building alongside it. These two systems share the same purpose — saving for retirement — but differ in almost every structural detail. Understanding both helps you make informed decisions about contributions, fees, and long-term strategy.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Israeli Keren Pensia | US 401(k) |
|---|---|---|
| Employee contribution | 6% of salary (mandatory by law) | Voluntary, up to $24,500/year (2026 limit) |
| Employer contribution | 6.5% (mandatory) + 8.33% toward severance (Section 14) | Varies; common match is 3-6% of salary |
| Tax treatment of contributions | Pre-tax; employee gets up to 35% tax credit on contributions | Pre-tax (Traditional) or post-tax (Roth) |
| Management fees | Negotiable דמי ניהול (Dmei Nihul) — typically 0.5-1.5% of assets + 0-4% of deposits | Depends on employer plan; typically 0.5-1.5% all-in expense ratio |
| Investment options | Fund-level allocation across risk tracks; you choose the track, the fund manages it | Self-directed from plan menu (typically 15-30 fund options) |
| Insurance component | Built-in disability insurance and survivor pension | None — insurance purchased separately |
| Withdrawal age | 67 for men, 65 for women (monthly annuity) | 59.5 (lump sum or systematic withdrawals) |
| Early withdrawal penalty | Generally cannot withdraw early; limited exceptions | 10% penalty + income tax before age 59.5 (with hardship exceptions) |
| Portability | Moves with you between employers; one account for life | Stays with employer plan; can roll over to IRA on departure |
| Inheritance | Survivor pension to spouse/children; lump-sum option in some cases | Passes to designated beneficiary as lump sum or inherited account |
How does the insurance built into Israeli pension differ from a 401(k)?
The most significant structural difference is that Israeli Keren Pensia includes disability insurance (kisuyi laovdan kosher avoda) and survivor benefits as standard components. A portion of your monthly contributions funds this insurance automatically. If you become unable to work, you receive a monthly disability pension. If you die, your spouse and dependent children receive a survivor pension.
A 401(k) is purely a savings vehicle. Disability and life insurance must be arranged separately, often through your employer's benefits package or individual policies. This means the Israeli pension's headline תשואה (Tsuaa) (returns) may look lower than a 401(k) because part of the contribution is diverted to insurance premiums rather than investment.
How do Israeli pension fees compare to 401(k) fees?
Israeli pension fees have two components: a percentage of deposits (0-4%) and a percentage of accumulated assets (0.5-1.5% annually). Crucially, these fees are negotiable. An oleh joining a large employer can often negotiate fees down to 0% on deposits and 0.5% or less on assets — significantly lower than the default rates.
A 401(k)'s fee structure is set by the employer's plan and is generally not negotiable by individual employees. If your employer chose a high-cost plan administrator, you are stuck with those fees until you leave the company and roll over to an IRA.
How is each system taxed at contribution and withdrawal?
Both systems offer tax-deferred growth. You do not pay capital gains tax on investment returns while the money stays in the account. The differences emerge at the contribution and withdrawal stages.
In Israel, mandatory pension contributions are pre-tax and employees receive a tax credit (not a deduction) of up to 35% on their portion. At retirement, the monthly pension payment is taxed as ordinary income, but with generous exemptions — many retirees pay little or no tax on their pension.
A Traditional 401(k) contribution reduces your taxable income dollar-for-dollar. At withdrawal, the full amount is taxed as ordinary income. A Roth 401(k) contribution is post-tax, but qualified withdrawals are entirely tax-free.
How do you withdraw from each system at retirement?
Israeli pension is designed as a lifetime annuity. At retirement age you receive a monthly payment calculated from your accumulated savings, expected lifespan, and fund factors. You cannot simply withdraw the lump sum (with limited exceptions for small balances). This provides longevity protection — you cannot outlive your pension.
A 401(k) offers more flexibility. At 59.5, you can take lump-sum withdrawals, set up systematic distributions, or roll over to an annuity. This flexibility is a double-edged sword: you have more control but also more risk of depleting your savings.
How should olim manage an Israeli pension and a 401(k) at the same time?
Most American olim end up with both systems running simultaneously. Your Israeli employer must start contributing to a Keren Pensia within six months of employment, while your existing 401(k) or IRA continues to grow in the US. Here is how to think about managing both:
- Do not transfer your 401(k) to Israel. There is no mechanism to roll a 401(k) into an Israeli pension, and attempting to cash it out triggers both a 10% US penalty (if under 59.5) and US income tax. Keep it invested in the US.
- Take advantage of the 10-year exemption. During your first 10 years as an Israeli tax resident, growth in your US retirement accounts is generally exempt from Israeli tax. This makes the early years ideal for leaving your 401(k) untouched.
- Negotiate your Israeli pension fees aggressively. The money you save on Dmei Nihul compounds over decades. Even a 0.5% fee reduction on a 30-year career can mean hundreds of thousands of shekels more at retirement.
- Coordinate withdrawal timing. When you eventually retire, you may draw from both systems. The Israeli pension pays a monthly annuity automatically, while your 401(k)/IRA withdrawals can be timed strategically for tax efficiency across both countries.
- Watch for Roth conversion opportunities. If your Israeli income is low in early years (or during the five-year Israeli earned-income exemption for olim who became resident between 5 Nov 2025 and 31 Dec 2026), it may be tax-efficient to convert Traditional 401(k)/IRA balances to Roth while in a low US tax bracket.
The Bottom Line
The Israeli pension and the 401(k) are both effective retirement savings vehicles, but they are built on fundamentally different philosophies. The Israeli system prioritizes collective risk pooling and guaranteed lifetime income with insurance. The American system prioritizes individual choice and flexibility. As an oleh with both, your strongest position is to understand each system on its own terms, negotiate your Israeli fees down, keep your US accounts invested, and work with advisors who understand the cross-border picture.
Israeli Keren Pensia is mandatory: the employee contributes 6% of salary, the employer adds 6.5%, plus 8.33% toward severance under Section 14. It bundles disability and survivor insurance and pays a lifetime monthly annuity from age 67 (men) or 65 (women). A US 401(k) is voluntary (up to $24,500 in 2026), savings-only, and allows lump-sum withdrawals from age 59.5.
By law, the employee contributes 6% of salary and the employer contributes 6.5%, with an additional 8.33% from the employer toward severance under Section 14. A portion of the contribution funds built-in disability and survivor insurance.
The 2026 employee deferral limit is $24,500. Savers aged 50 and over can add an $8,000 catch-up contribution, and those aged 60 to 63 can add up to $11,250.
No. There is no mechanism to roll a 401(k) into an Israeli pension, and cashing it out can trigger a 10% US penalty if you are under 59.5 plus US income tax. The accounts run in parallel under their own countries rules.
Israeli pension pays a lifetime monthly annuity from age 67 for men and 65 for women, with very limited lump-sum access. A 401(k) allows lump-sum or systematic withdrawals from age 59.5, with a 10% penalty for most withdrawals before that age.




