Quick Answer: DNA testing is not banned in Israel. The Genetic Information Law 5761-2000 restricts who can perform tests and for what purpose — most relationship-establishing tests (including paternity) require a court order and must be conducted in a Ministry of Health-accredited laboratory. Home kits from services like 23andMe are unregulated for personal use but their results carry no legal weight in Israeli courts or government proceedings. Foreign nationals can petition the Israeli Family Court for a court-ordered paternity test under Section 28 of the Law.

Few legal myths generate as much confusion online as the idea that DNA testing is "illegal in Israel." The story circulates widely, framed as a religious or political mystery, and leaves foreigners genuinely unsure whether they can access genetic testing for practical legal needs: proving paternity, registering a child with the Population Authority, or supporting an Aliyah application.

DNA testing in Israel is restricted, not banned. Israel enacted the Genetic Information Law 5761-2000 as one of the world's earliest comprehensive bioethics statutes, passed the same year as the Human Genome Project's draft. It was designed to protect genetic privacy, prevent discrimination, and safeguard the interests of children and potential test subjects. It restricts DNA testing. It does not prohibit it.

If you are a foreign national dealing with a paternity dispute, a child registration problem, an inheritance question with biological components, or an Aliyah application requiring proof of lineage, this guide explains exactly what you can and cannot do.

1. What the Genetic Information Law 5761-2000 actually says

The Genetic Information Law (Hebrew: Chok Meidah Genetit) was passed by the Knesset in 2000. Three principles run through the whole statute:

  • Privacy: Genetic information is uniquely sensitive personal data. It reveals not just the individual tested but their relatives, their medical risks, and their ancestry. The law treats it differently from other personal data.
  • Consent: No person may be subjected to a genetic test without their informed consent, except by court order.
  • Licensed labs only: Genetic tests in Israel may only be performed in laboratories accredited by the Director General of the Ministry of Health under Section 12 of the Law. Sending samples abroad or using non-accredited labs for legal purposes is not permitted.

The key provision for foreigners is Section 28, which governs identification tests: tests that establish biological relationships between people, including paternity. Under Section 28(a), such tests require one of the following:

  1. A court order
  2. Consent of all parties being tested (and, where a minor is involved, the consent of both legal guardians and the court's approval)

This is what people mean when they say DNA testing "requires a court order" in Israel — they mean relationship-establishing tests. Medical diagnostic tests ordered by a doctor operate under a different provision and do not require court involvement.

In Practice — The Accredited Lab Requirement: The Ministry of Health publishes the list of accredited genetic laboratories in Israel. Tests must be conducted by a laboratory holding a license under Section 12 of the Genetic Information Law 5761-2000. Violations carry criminal penalties under Section 30: fines of up to NIS 75,600 for an individual, or NIS 151,200 for a corporation. Results from non-accredited labs, including results produced by services operating abroad, are not admissible as legal evidence in Israeli court proceedings or administrative decisions by the Population and Immigration Authority (PIBA), the Ministry of Interior, or the National Insurance Institute (NII/Bituach Leumi).

2. Types of DNA tests permitted in Israel

Not all genetic testing falls under the same rules. Four categories matter:

  • Medical/diagnostic tests: Ordered by a physician for diagnostic purposes — identifying genetic disease risk, prenatal testing, carrier status. These require a doctor's prescription and can be conducted without court involvement. Covered under Section 2 of the Law.
  • Court-ordered relationship tests: Tests establishing whether two people are biologically related — primarily paternity, maternity, and sibling tests. Require a court order or full mutual consent under Section 28. The most relevant category for foreigners in family law disputes.
  • Forensic DNA testing: Used in criminal investigations by the Israel Police under the Criminal Procedure (Enforcement Powers — DNA Samples) Law 5756-1996, a separate statute. Not relevant to civil family law matters.
  • DNA for immigration/lineage purposes: Relevant to child registration and Law of Return applications. Covered by separate administrative policy — see Sections 5 and 6 of this guide.

Private companies offering "home paternity tests" — either Israeli or foreign mail-in services — operate in a grey area for recreational use but their results have no standing in any Israeli legal proceeding.

In Practice: Under Section 28 of the Legal Capacity and Guardianship Law 5722-1962, the Family Court (Beit HaMishpat LeMishpacha) can order a paternity DNA test when parentage is disputed and the result affects the child's legal status, inheritance rights, or maintenance obligations. The court-appointed test is conducted by a laboratory accredited by the Ministry of Health (Misrad HaBriut) — typically the Forensic Institute at Abu Kabir or a licensed genetics lab — and results are submitted directly to the court within 4-6 weeks of sample collection. The cost of a court-ordered paternity test runs NIS 3,500-6,000 and is typically allocated between the parties by court order. A refusal to submit to a court-ordered DNA test is treated as evidence supporting the opposing party's position under Israeli evidentiary rules — courts have held that an unexplained refusal creates a rebuttable presumption of paternity.

3. Court-ordered paternity testing: the Family Court process

When paternity is disputed in Israel, whether to establish child support, register a child with the Population Authority, or resolve an inheritance question, the standard route is a petition to the civil Family Court (*Beit Mishpat LaMishpacha*) for a court-ordered DNA test.

How it works:

  1. Filing the petition: Either parent, a legal guardian, or in some cases a public authority can petition the Family Court. The petition sets out why paternity determination is needed and requests an order under Section 28 of the Genetic Information Law 5761-2000. File at the Family Court in the district where the child or respondent resides. Foreign nationals living abroad may appoint an Israeli attorney with a power of attorney to file on their behalf — travel to Israel is not required to initiate the proceeding.
  2. Court hearing: The court reviews the petition, usually within four to eight weeks of filing. The respondent receives notice and an opportunity to respond. If the court is satisfied that paternity determination serves a legitimate purpose (child welfare, legal rights), it issues the order.
  3. Sample collection: The accredited lab sends a collection kit to each party's address or arranges a collection appointment. Major accredited labs — including Sheba Medical Center (Tel Hashomer) and Assuta Medical Center (Tel Aviv) — operate collection points at multiple hospitals and sometimes at Israeli consulates abroad.
  4. Results: DNA paternity results from accredited Israeli labs are typically available within two to four weeks of sample receipt. Results are submitted to the court and become part of the case record.
  5. Court ruling: The court incorporates the DNA result into its judgment on paternity, child registration, support, or whatever relief was sought.
In Practice — Filing Timeline and Costs: A petition for a court-ordered DNA paternity test carries a court filing fee of approximately NIS 1,600 under the Civil Procedure Regulations. The laboratory test itself (conducted at an accredited Israeli genetics lab) typically costs NIS 1,500 to NIS 3,500 per person tested, depending on the lab and complexity of analysis. The total proceeding from filing to receiving a DNA result runs approximately three to five months in an uncontested case. Where the respondent is abroad, international service of process through the Hague Service Convention (Israel is a signatory) adds one to three months. Results showing 99.99% probability of paternity are treated as conclusive by Israeli Family Courts.

4. What happens when someone refuses a court-ordered DNA test

The court cannot physically compel anyone to provide a blood or cheek swab sample. Israeli law acknowledged that limitation early and built around it — in the statute itself and in decades of case law.

Under Section 28(c) of the Genetic Information Law 5761-2000, if a party refuses to comply with a court-ordered DNA test without reasonable justification, the court may draw an adverse inference from the refusal. The judge may conclude that the person refused because the result would have damaged their position.

In paternity cases, the stakes are real:

  • A father who refuses to be tested without adequate justification may be declared the legal father by the court, based on the refusal alone, combined with other evidence (relationship history, the mother's testimony, circumstantial evidence).
  • A mother who refuses testing ordered in a non-paternity dispute may similarly suffer adverse findings on custody or support matters.
  • The court may also impose cost sanctions — ordering the refusing party to pay the other side's legal fees.

Israeli Supreme Court case law has consistently upheld the adverse inference principle. A refusal needs a genuine, legally recognized reason — a documented health contraindication, for example. "I'd rather not know" does not qualify.

In Practice — The Refusal Inference in Action: In cases handled by the Israeli Family Court, where a man refuses a court-ordered paternity test without documented medical grounds, courts regularly apply the adverse inference rule under Section 28(c) of the Genetic Information Law 5761-2000 and declare him the legal father. The court combines the refusal with the mother's sworn testimony and any corroborating evidence (text messages, photographs, travel records showing shared residence). A declaration of legal paternity triggers automatic child support obligations under the Child Support Law and the Capacity and Guardianship Law 5722-1962. The refusal typically also results in the father bearing the petitioner's legal costs under Regulation 512 of the Civil Procedure Regulations.
In Practice: Under the Population Registry Law 5725-1965, registration of a child's parentage with the Population and Immigration Authority (Misrad HaPnim) requires documentary proof of biological connection when the parents are not married to each other or when the father is not an Israeli resident. Where documentary proof is unavailable, the Authority accepts a DNA paternity report from an Israeli Ministry of Health-accredited laboratory confirming biological parentage at a probability threshold of 99.5% or above. The registration process after submitting the DNA report takes 4-8 weeks at the Population Authority's central office in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv. Errors in the initial registration — for example, registering a child under incorrect parentage — require a Family Court order to correct, a process that typically takes 6-12 months and costs NIS 8,000-18,000 in legal fees.

5. DNA testing for child registration with the Population Authority

One of the most common problems foreign nationals hit: registering a child born in Israel, or born abroad to an Israeli parent, with the Population and Immigration Authority (PIBA), which issues identity documents and Israeli birth certificates.

PIBA does not automatically register a child as Israeli based on the parents' declarations alone. It typically demands DNA confirmation when:

  • The child was born to an unmarried couple where the father is Israeli
  • The child's mother is a foreign national and questions arise about the father's identity
  • The child was born through surrogacy or other assisted reproduction
  • There is any question about the documentary chain connecting the child to an Israeli parent

In these situations, PIBA routinely refers the matter to the Family Court and requires a court-ordered DNA test as a condition of registration. This is not punitive; it is how the registry protects the integrity of Israeli civil status records.

The sequence:

  1. Apply to PIBA with available documents. PIBA issues a requirement for DNA confirmation.
  2. File a paternity petition in the Family Court (or, if paternity is uncontested, an application under the Genetic Information Law for a mutually consented test).
  3. Conduct the test at an accredited lab. Submit results to both the court and PIBA.
  4. PIBA processes registration once the court ruling or test result confirms biological parentage.
In Practice — Ministry of Interior (PIBA) and DNA: PIBA operates under the Population Registry Law 5725-1965. Its internal guidelines (available in Hebrew through the ministry's official portal) specify that registration of a child where paternity is disputed or where one parent is foreign requires either a court judgment or a court-supervised DNA test. The National Insurance Institute (NII/Bituach Leumi), which pays child allowances and requires proof of child residency, applies a parallel requirement. Obtaining DNA confirmation does not automatically resolve the immigration status of a foreign mother or the visa status of the child; those are separate proceedings before PIBA under the Entry into Israel Law 5712-1952 and must be addressed concurrently.

6. DNA and Aliyah: does genetic testing help an immigration application?

For citizenship purposes, the answer is simply no. Jewish Agency representatives and Israeli immigration lawyers are consistent on this point: DNA ancestry results do not establish Jewish identity under the Law of Return 5710-1950.

Under the Law of Return, a person qualifies as Jewish if they were born to a Jewish mother or converted to Judaism under recognized auspices. "Jewish" is a legal-religious classification, not a genetic one. The grandchild clause extended Aliyah rights to grandchildren and their spouses regardless of whether the grandchild is themselves Jewish, but the criterion is documented lineage, not a DNA result.

Concretely: a 23andMe result showing 40% Ashkenazi Jewish genetic ancestry does not qualify anyone for Aliyah. An AncestryDNA result matching known Jewish genetic markers does not satisfy the Jewish Agency's documentation requirements. The Ministry of Interior does not accept commercial DNA results as substitute documentation for Jewish identity.

DNA does help in one narrow context: demonstrating a biological relationship to an already documented Jewish ancestor when documentary records have been destroyed. In Holocaust-related cases, or where civil registries were lost during war or persecution, a DNA test establishing biological relationship to a known Jewish relative, combined with all available documentary evidence, may be considered as part of a broader evidentiary package. This is handled case by case by the Ministry of Interior's Population Registry Department, not as a standard track.

In Practice — DNA for Law of Return Applications: The Jewish Agency (Sochnut) and the Ministry of Interior's immigration department evaluate Aliyah applications based on documentary proof of Jewish lineage — birth certificates, ketubah (marriage contract), synagogue membership records, and sworn declarations from recognized Jewish communities. Where documents are partially missing, the Jewish Agency's regional offices (in New York, London, Paris, Kyiv, Buenos Aires, and elsewhere) can advise on what supplementary evidence will be accepted. A consult with an Israeli immigration attorney before submitting an application with incomplete documentation can prevent a rejection that is harder to appeal than a first-time application. Contact the Ministry of Interior's Aliyah Department in Jerusalem: HaNetziv Street 1, Jerusalem, 9101002, or through the Jewish Agency's office in your country.

7. Home DNA kits (23andMe, AncestryDNA, MyHeritage): what they can and cannot do in Israel

Direct-to-consumer genetic testing kits from companies like 23andMe, AncestryDNA, MyHeritage DNA, and FamilyTreeDNA have become genuinely popular in diaspora communities, often as a first step in genealogical research. What can you actually do with the results in an Israeli legal context?

What home kit results can do:

  • Help you identify potential relatives through shared DNA matches in the company's database — useful as a starting point for genealogical research
  • Inform your own understanding of ethnic ancestry
  • Provide leads for documentary follow-up (e.g., a DNA match with a cousin who has documents you don't)
  • Assist in preparing documentation for a Law of Return application by helping identify relatives who can provide corroborating evidence

What home kit results cannot do:

  • Establish paternity or any biological relationship in Israeli court proceedings — they are not conducted by accredited Israeli labs and do not meet the evidentiary standard of the Genetic Information Law 5761-2000
  • Satisfy Ministry of Interior requirements for child registration, citizenship, or PIBA administrative decisions
  • Prove Jewish identity for Aliyah or Law of Return purposes
  • Substitute for a court-ordered test in any Israeli legal proceeding

A separate legal question: does using a home kit in Israel violate the Genetic Information Law? The law's enforcement provisions target laboratories and professionals who conduct unauthorized tests, not individual consumers testing themselves. Sending your own saliva sample to a foreign company for personal use is not a criminal act. Using the result in an Israeli court proceeding is another matter. The judge will treat it as inadmissible.

In Practice — The Admissibility Gap: In Israeli Family Court proceedings, judges apply the Israeli Evidence Ordinance (New Version) 5731-1971 and require that scientific evidence meet reliability and methodology standards. DNA results from commercial ancestry services are not conducted under chain-of-custody procedures, are not subject to accredited laboratory oversight under the Genetic Information Law 5761-2000, and are not presented with expert witness testimony. They will not be admitted as probative evidence of biological relationship. If you have a commercial DNA match that you believe establishes a relevant biological relationship, the correct step is to use it as a lead — identify the matched individual, obtain consent if possible, and then apply for a court-ordered test using the accredited Israeli laboratory process described in Section 3 of this guide.

8. Practical steps for foreigners who need DNA testing in Israel

If you need to establish paternity for child support, custody, or registration:
File a petition in the civil Family Court under Section 28 of the Genetic Information Law 5761-2000. An Israeli attorney can file on your behalf with a power of attorney — you do not need to travel to Israel to initiate proceedings. Once the court issues the order, the test can often be arranged at an Israeli consulate or diplomatic facility in your country if sample collection in Israel is impractical.

If both parties agree and consent to testing:
Mutual consent tests under Section 28 of the Law can be arranged without a court order, provided all adults consent in writing and any involved minor's interests are protected. An accredited lab can proceed directly. The results will be legally valid for administrative purposes including PIBA registration, National Insurance matters, and inheritance proceedings.

If the other party is in Israel and you are abroad:
A cross-border paternity petition is handled through international service of process under the Hague Service Convention (Israel ratified in 1972). Your Israeli attorney files the petition, the court issues a summons, and it is served on the other party directly in Israel, or through the Convention channel in your country if you are the one being summoned. The Ministry of Justice's International Legal Assistance Division (HaNetziv Street 1, Jerusalem) coordinates Hague Convention service requests from foreign authorities.

If you need DNA testing for an inheritance dispute:
In cases where an heir's biological relationship to the deceased is disputed, the Israeli Family Court (or the Registrar of Inheritance Affairs) can order DNA testing as part of the succession order application. This is less common but well-established in Israeli inheritance law under the Inheritance Law 5725-1965. The accredited lab process is the same as for paternity testing.

Choose an Israeli attorney who handles cross-border family cases. The procedural requirements for obtaining a court order, selecting the right lab, managing international service, and interpreting results are not straightforward. A misstep in the petition, such as failing to name the correct respondents or misfiling the consent documentation, can cause months of delay.

In Practice — Accredited Labs and International Sample Collection: Several Ministry of Health-accredited genetics laboratories in Israel offer international sample collection coordination. The genetics departments at Sheba Medical Center (Tel Hashomer), Hadassah Medical Center (Jerusalem), Assuta Medical Center (Tel Aviv), and Rambam Health Care Campus (Haifa) all conduct court-ordered paternity and relationship testing. For parties abroad, sample collection kits with documented chain-of-custody protocols can in some cases be arranged through Israeli consulates or notarized collection services in the foreign country. The specific arrangement must be confirmed with both the court and the accredited lab before sample collection begins — results from uncertified collection procedures may be challenged. Costs for international coordination are typically NIS 800 to NIS 2,500 per person, in addition to the laboratory testing fee. The entire process, from court order to results, typically runs 10 to 18 weeks when cross-border sample collection is involved.