How do I disconnect from Israeli tax residency?

A step-by-step guide to officially disconnecting from Israeli tax residency when relocating abroad.

Disconnecting from Israeli tax residency is not automatic. Israel uses the center-of-life test: if the Tax Authority (רשות המסים) considers your center of life to still be in Israel, you remain a resident for tax purposes even if you physically left.

The center-of-life test

The ITA looks at four primary indicators:

  • Permanent home: Do you own or rent a home in Israel?
  • Family: Is your spouse/partner and children in Israel?
  • Economic ties: Do you have business interests, investments, or income sources in Israel?
  • Social/community ties: Regular visits, club memberships, social life

Minor indicators: Israeli bank accounts, phone numbers, vehicles.

Steps to disconnect

  1. Relocate physically: spend fewer than 183 days in Israel in the tax year.
  2. Establish foreign residency: register as a resident in the destination country, open a bank account, sign a lease or purchase property.
  3. Notify the Israeli Tax Authority: file Form 1301 for the year of departure.
  4. Close or restructure Israeli assets: consult a tax advisor about pensions (קרן פנסיה), rental income, and business interests.
  5. Apply for exit tax ruling if relevant: if you hold appreciated assets, a tax event may be triggered.

What the ITA can challenge

The ITA can dispute your disconnection for up to 6 years after departure. Keep documentation: lease agreements abroad, foreign employment contracts, school enrollment for children, foreign health insurance.

Common mistakes

  • Keeping your Israeli apartment as a primary residence "just in case"
  • Returning to Israel for more than 183 days in the first two years
  • Not filing the year-of-departure tax return

Get professional help

Disconnecting tax residency involves both Israeli and destination-country tax law. A cross-border tax advisor is essential for anyone with significant assets, shares, or pension rights.

This content is for informational purposes only.