Capital Gains Tax (Mas Shevach): Exemptions to Know Before Selling
Real Estate Taxation 15.05.2026 5 min read

Capital Gains Tax (Mas Shevach): Exemptions to Know Before Selling

Adv. Eliram Elgarably
Written by Adv. Eliram Elgarably Real Estate Law Specialist practicing since 2013

Selling a residential property in Israel involves Capital Gains Tax (Mas Shevach) representing 25% of the real profit. However, tax laws offer several exemptions that can lower this tax liability to zero.

1. The Single Residential Home Exemption

This is the most common exemption. A seller is exempt from tax when selling their sole residential home, provided they owned it for at least 18 months prior to the sale and have not utilized this exemption in the preceding 18 months.

2. Inherited Property Exemption

An heir of a residential property may be exempt from capital gains tax upon its sale, even if they own other properties, provided they are a direct descendant or spouse, the deceased owned only one home, and the deceased would have been exempt if alive.

3. The Beneficiary Linear Calculation

For sellers who do not qualify for a full exemption (e.g. investors), the pro-rata linear method taxes gains accumulated only after January 1, 2014, exempting any gains accrued before that date.

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