Home / Rights & Programs / Right to Public Housing — Waiting List and How to Apply
Right to Public Housing — Waiting List and How to Apply in Kfar Saba
Low-income families with long residency can apply for public housing. Average wait: 8-15 years, but special eligible groups receive priority.
About Kfar Saba
Kfar Saba hosts an Israeli-Ethiopian community with a concentration of academics and professionals integrated into the regional job market. The city offers quiet neighbourhoods, high quality of life and easy access to transportation and employment centres in the Sharon region.
What is Public Housing?
State-owned apartments (Amidar/Amigour) rented at subsidised prices (~20-30% of market rate) to low-income families.
Who Qualifies?
Israeli resident for at least 12 years; no property ownership; income below threshold (by family size). Priority: severe physical disability, homeless elderly, family with disabled child.
Average Wait Time
8-15 years nationally. Apply regardless — the clock starts from application date.
Special Priority for Ethiopian Immigrants
Falashmura and Operation Solomon olim may have priority on the waiting list under special government decree — check with Ministry of Aliyah.
📞 Amidar: 03-9533333 | Ministry of Housing: *5442
About Kfar Saba
Related rights
Free Mortgage Counselling — Guide for Those Entitled
The Ministry of Housing funds free mortgage counselling for housing benefit recipients. A certified adviser saves tens of thousands of ILS in interest.
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.
Direct Absorption — Falash Mura 2026 Pilot
2026 pilot — Falash Mura olim placed directly into housing rather than absorption centers. Rolling out in cities with established community support frameworks. First direct-absorption deployment for the community.