Quick Answer: Israeli courts apply the best interests of the child standard. There is a presumption favouring the mother for children under age 6. For older children, the child's own preferences carry increasing weight. International custody disputes are governed by the Hague Convention framework.

1. Overview

Child custody — determining where a child lives, who makes decisions about their life, and how parents share time and responsibilities — is one of the most emotionally charged aspects of any family separation. In Israel, custody disputes are governed by a combination of civil legislation, religious law principles, and a substantial body of Family Court precedent.

For international parents — whether one or both parents are foreign nationals, or where parents live in different countries — the complexity multiplies. Questions of jurisdiction, enforcement of foreign court orders, relocation requests, and abduction risk all require expert legal navigation.

The primary legislation governing custody in Israel is the Legal Capacity and Guardianship Law 1962. Under this law, both parents are joint guardians of their children by default — meaning both parents have equal rights and obligations regarding the child's upbringing, education, and welfare.

Guardianship is distinct from custody . Guardianship refers to the legal right to make decisions about the child's life. Custody refers to the day-to-day physical care and residence of the child. It is common for both parents to retain joint guardianship while one parent has primary physical custody.

Family Courts have jurisdiction over custody disputes. Where the parties are Jewish, the Rabbinical Court may also claim jurisdiction, particularly where custody is raised as part of divorce proceedings — creating a "race to file" dynamic between the two court systems.

3. The Best-Interests Standard

The overriding principle in all Israeli custody decisions is the best interests of the child . Courts consider a wide range of factors, including:

  • The child's existing bonds with each parent and siblings
  • Each parent's ability to provide a stable, nurturing home environment
  • The child's educational, social, and emotional needs
  • Each parent's willingness to facilitate the child's relationship with the other parent
  • The child's own expressed preferences (weighted by age and maturity)
  • Any history of domestic violence, abuse, or neglect
  • Geographic proximity of each parent's home to school, friends, and extended family

Courts often appoint a social worker from the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs to investigate the family circumstances and submit a recommendation to the court. While the court is not bound by this recommendation, it carries significant weight in practice.

In Practice: Under Section 68 of the Legal Capacity and Guardianship Law 1962, the Family Court may order a welfare investigation by a social worker from the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs (Misrad HaRavaha VeHaSherutim HaHevratiyim). This report typically takes 6–12 weeks to complete and is presented to the court before any final custody order is made. The social worker is looking for stability, routine, emotional availability, and each parent's willingness to support the child's relationship with the other parent — not for who is the "better person." A parent who speaks disparagingly about the other parent will receive a worse report. If the social worker's report goes against you, a private expert counter-report (typically NIS 10,000–25,000 from a licensed psychologist) may be the only effective rebuttal. Prepare for the home visit: the home should be clean and clearly child-ready. The visit lasts 1–2 hours; your entire case can be won or lost in that window.

4. Types of Custody Arrangements

Primary physical custody: The child lives primarily with one parent (the "custodial parent"), with the other parent having scheduled visitation rights . Visitation schedules are typically detailed in a court order and cover regular weekly arrangements, school holidays, and special occasions.

Shared (joint) custody: The child spends roughly equal time with both parents. This arrangement has become increasingly common in Israel in recent years and is often approved where both parents live in close proximity, maintain an amicable co-parenting relationship, and the child is old enough to manage transitions between households.

Sole custody: One parent has both physical custody and decision-making authority. This is reserved for cases where the other parent is deemed unfit, absent, or where ongoing conflict makes joint decision-making impractical.

In practice, most Israeli custody arrangements involve primary custody with one parent and generous visitation rights for the other. The trend is increasingly towards shared arrangements where circumstances permit.

5. Young Children: The Under-6 Presumption

Israeli law and established case law have long recognised a presumption that children under age 6 should remain in the primary care of the mother (known as the chezkat hashichnut — presumption of maternal custody). This presumption reflects a view — shared by many legal systems — that young children have a particular need for maternal care.

However, the presumption is rebuttable. A father can overcome it by demonstrating that the mother is unfit or that the specific circumstances favour paternal or shared custody. Israeli courts have in recent years been more open to questioning the automatic application of this presumption where the evidence supports a different arrangement.

For children over 6, the presumption no longer applies, and the court weighs all relevant factors — including the child's own stated preferences — without a gender-based starting point.

6. Relocation and International Travel

One of the most contentious custody issues is the desire of one parent to relocate with the child — whether within Israel or to another country. Israeli courts take a cautious approach to relocation requests that would materially diminish the other parent's relationship with the child.

A parent wishing to relocate abroad with a child must obtain either the other parent's written consent or a court order. Courts weigh the relocating parent's reasons (work, family, new relationship) against the impact on the child's relationship with the non-relocating parent.

In all cases involving minor children, either parent can apply for an exit restriction order preventing the child from leaving Israel without both parents' consent or a court order. Such orders are routinely granted in contested custody cases.

In Practice: Under Section 24(a) of the Legal Capacity and Guardianship Law 1962, the Family Court can issue an exit restriction order (tzav ikhul yetzia min ha'aretz) against a minor on an ex-parte application — without the other parent being heard — within 24–48 hours of filing. Court filing fees are approximately NIS 500–800; the more significant cost is an urgent attorney retainer, which typically runs NIS 5,000–12,000 for an emergency ex-parte application. The Airports Authority (Rashut Snaey HaTeufa) is notified electronically, and the restriction takes effect at all Israeli border crossings. The first a non-Israeli parent often learns of the order is at passport control at Ben Gurion Airport. I have represented foreign nationals in this situation on multiple occasions; in several cases the client had already purchased plane tickets and arranged school leave before discovering the restriction was in place. If you are a foreign national in a deteriorating marriage in Israel with minor children, consult an Israeli family law attorney before the situation escalates. Leaving Israel with children in violation of a restriction order constitutes international child abduction under the Hague Convention and carries criminal liability in both Israel and the destination country.

7. International Custody Cases

Where one parent is a foreign national or lives abroad, custody proceedings become significantly more complex. Key issues include:

Jurisdiction: Israeli courts generally have jurisdiction where the child is habitually resident in Israel. Where a child has recently been brought to Israel from abroad, or taken abroad from Israel, the Hague Convention on International Child Abduction may apply — see our separate guide on International Child Abduction and the Hague Convention.

Recognition of foreign custody orders: Israeli courts may recognise foreign custody orders in certain circumstances, but are not obligated to do so where the order conflicts with Israeli law or the child's best interests as assessed by an Israeli court.

Enforcement: Enforcing an Israeli custody order against a parent who has relocated abroad, or a foreign order against a parent in Israel, requires navigating complex international enforcement mechanisms. Legal representation in both jurisdictions is often necessary.