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How to Make Aliyah in 2026: Complete Step-by-Step Guide

The complete 2026 Aliyah roadmap: what to do 12 months before, 6 months before, 30 days before, on landing day, in your first 7 days, and in your first 90 days in Israel.

By Solly Marks
Aliya Today · 1 Jul 2026
5 min read· 920 words

Quick Answer

Making Aliyah in 2026 happens in six phases: 12 months before (documents and Jewish status proof), 6 months before (visa, shipping, city choice), 30 days before (flights and bank prep), landing day (Teudat Oleh at Ben Gurion), your first 7 days (bank account, Bituach Leumi), and your first 90 days (Teudat Zehut, Ulpan, rental contract). This guide walks through every phase in order, with links to the detailed guide for each step.

12 Months Before Aliyah: Documents & Eligibility

This is the foundation phase. Most delays in the entire Aliyah process trace back to documents that should have been started here.

  • Proof of Jewish status — a letter from a recognized rabbi, synagogue membership records, or a ketubah (yours or your parents'). Start this early; some communities take months to issue official letters.
  • Valid passport — with at least 6 months' validity from your planned arrival date, plus your birth certificate.
  • Background/police check with apostille — an FBI check (US), DBS check (UK), or SAPS police clearance (South Africa), all apostilled through the relevant government office. This is consistently the longest lead-time item — 8-12 weeks is common.
  • Marriage/divorce certificates — apostilled, if applicable.
  • Apply through Nefesh B'Nefesh or the Jewish Agency — NBN handles most English-speaking olim from North America, the UK, and South Africa; the Jewish Agency is the umbrella organization globally. Submitting your application here starts your official file.

Country-specific detail matters here — see the full guides for USA, UK, Canada, France, South Africa, and Australia.

6 Months Before: Visa, Shipping & City Choice

  • Aliyah visa approval — once your documents clear and you complete your Aliyah interview, you'll receive visa approval, the final green light to book travel.
  • Shipping decision — get quotes for a shipping container if you're bringing furniture, or plan to sell locally and buy new in Israel using new-immigrant customs exemptions. Use the Aliyah Cost Calculator to compare.
  • Selling or renting your current home — start this process now if you own property abroad; six months gives enough runway to avoid a rushed sale.
  • School research — if you have children, start researching schools now. Many popular schools in Anglo-heavy cities fill up early.
  • City choice — this is the decision that shapes everything else: budget, community, schools, and commute. Take the Best City for Olim Quiz, or read the city guides for Netanya, Ra'anana, and Jerusalem.

30 Days Before: Flights, Health & Temporary Housing

  • Book flights — only after visa approval. Nefesh B'Nefesh runs a well-known summer charter flight from New York; outside that, standard El Al or partner-airline flights work.
  • Health documents — gather vaccination records and any ongoing prescriptions/medical letters (translated if possible) to hand over during Kupat Holim registration.
  • Temporary housing — decide whether you're going straight into a rental or staying in an absorption center (merkaz klita) or short-term apartment while you house-hunt in person.
  • Bank prep — some banks let you begin the account-opening process remotely before landing; at minimum, have your documents ready to open an account fast.

Landing Day: Ben Gurion & Teudat Oleh

Landing day is administratively the most important single day of the entire process. At Ben Gurion Airport, new olim go through a dedicated arrivals process where you receive your Teudat Oleh (immigrant certificate) — the document that unlocks almost everything else: Kupat Holim registration, your first Sal Klita (absorption basket) payment, and your official oleh status. Keep multiple copies; you'll need it repeatedly in your first weeks.

First 7 Days: Bank Account, Phone, Bituach Leumi

  • Open an Israeli bank account — needed for Sal Klita deposits, salary, and rent payments. Bring your Teudat Oleh, passport, and proof of address.
  • Get a local phone plan — an Israeli number makes everything from bank SMS codes to landlord communication easier.
  • Register with Bituach Leumi (National Insurance) — this is what activates your health coverage and various benefit eligibility. Don't delay this; gaps here can delay Kupat Holim registration too.
  • Book your Misrad Hapnim appointment — for your Teudat Zehut (national ID). Appointments can have long waits, so book as early as possible in your first week.

First 90 Days: Teudat Zehut, Ulpan & Settling In

  • Receive your Teudat Zehut — your Israeli ID card, the document you'll use constantly for the rest of your life in Israel.
  • Upgrade health insurance — many olim add supplemental Kupat Holim coverage (shaban) once they understand their needs; compare Clalit, Maccabi, Meuhedet and Leumit.
  • Register for free Ulpan — new olim are entitled to free Hebrew classes; register early since popular locations and time slots fill up.
  • Sign your rental contract — if you didn't land into a signed lease, this is typically finalized within the first months once you've seen apartments in person.
  • Claim your Arnona discount — new olim are entitled to a municipal tax discount for a set period; this needs to be actively claimed at your local municipality, it isn't automatic.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does the whole Aliyah process take? From starting your application to landing, most olim take 4-8 months; the fastest document (usually a background check) is often the pacing item.

Do I need to speak Hebrew before I go? No — free Ulpan is provided after you land, though some early Hebrew study makes the first few months noticeably easier.

What's the very first thing I should do? Start your Jewish-status documentation and background check — they take the longest and gate everything else.

Sources checked: Misrad Haklita, Nefesh B'Nefesh, the Jewish Agency, Bituach Leumi. Last reviewed: July 2026. This guide is for general planning purposes only — confirm exact requirements with the official authorities before making decisions.

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Solly Marks
Aliya Today · Start Here

Solly Marks is an Israeli publisher, media buyer, and experienced oleh writing practical aliyah guides for English-speaking Jews worldwide. AliyaToday covers real costs, bureaucratic steps, money-saving tips, and life in Israel — everything you need to make a successful aliyah.