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Land Registry (Tabo) — Guide for the Ethiopian-Israeli Community in Netivot
Registering property in the Tabo (Land Registry) is the only way to legally protect your ownership. Guide to the process, costs, and common issues for Ethiopian-Israelis.
About Netivot
Netivot is a small southern city with an Israeli-Ethiopian community that has lived there for many years. The city offers a quiet, quality living environment with accessible real-estate prices for the Negev region.
What is the Tabo?
The Land Registry (Tabo) is the government body that manages Israel's property register. Every real estate transaction — buying, selling, inheriting, gifting — must be registered to be legally valid.
Why Registration Matters
Without registration, you have no legal protection on your apartment, even if you paid for it. Known cases in the Ethiopian-Israeli community: families living unregistered for 15 years, only for the developer to sell to someone else; unregistered inheritances contested in court.
Registration Process
- Purchase/gift/inheritance agreement — must include parcel numbers
- Pay capital gains / purchase tax — get clearance from the Tax Authority
- Submit to Land Registry with all documents
- Fee: approx. 700–2,000 ILS
- Processing: 2–8 weeks
Common Issues in the Community
Wrong name: Names transliterated from Amharic may differ between ID and registry. Bring a notarised name-change affidavit.
Inheritance without a will: Register via a family-court inheritance order.
📞 Land Registry: 02-5028000 | Free advice: Tebeka 1-800-20-20-16
About Netivot
Related rights
Tenant Rights in Demolish-Rebuild (Pinui-Binui) Projects
Apartment owners in pinui-binui projects are entitled to a larger new apartment, rental compensation during construction, and capital-gains tax exemption.
Community Mortgage — 600,000 ILS for Ethiopian-Israelis
Govt loan for Ethiopian-Israeli families: ₪600,000 over 25 years, 0% interest for the first 10, 2% for the next 15. Allocated by annual lottery (~200 families).
Military Discharge Benefits for Ethiopian-Israeli Veterans
Ethiopian-Israeli discharged soldiers are entitled to a discharge grant of up to 120,000 ILS, an education scholarship, mortgage points, and preference in civil service.
Right to an Interpreter in Court and Government Offices
Anyone who does not speak Hebrew is entitled to an interpreter in any legal proceeding — a constitutional right. Government offices (BTL, Interior Ministry, Aliyah Ministry) must also provide translation. The right is free and at state expense.