Thousands of foreign nationals build lives in Israel each year. Some as spouses of Israeli citizens, others as long-term residents or professionals who arrived on work visas and simply never left. Many assume that years of paying taxes, raising children in Israeli schools, and buying property will eventually translate into citizenship. It does not work that way.
Unlike Aliyah under the Law of Return 5710-1950, which grants citizenship to Jews and qualifying family members almost automatically on arrival, naturalization under Section 5 of the Citizenship Law 5712-1952 is a different matter. The Minister of Interior is not legally required to approve anyone, even applicants who satisfy every statutory condition. Knowing exactly what the law demands and how PIBA tends to read it in practice can save applicants years of misdirected effort.
1. Two Routes to Israeli Citizenship and Where Non-Jews Fit
Israeli citizenship law recognizes several paths to citizenship:
- Birth: A child born to an Israeli citizen parent acquires citizenship by birth under Section 4A of the Citizenship Law, regardless of birthplace.
- Law of Return / Aliyah: Jews, their children, grandchildren, and the spouses of all three groups may immigrate under the Law of Return 5710-1950 and receive citizenship automatically upon registration as an Oleh.
- Registration: Children born in Israel to residents who are not yet citizens can be registered as citizens under Section 4B.
- Naturalization: Section 5 of the Citizenship Law 5712-1952 is the route for everyone who does not qualify under the above paths, including non-Jewish foreigners regardless of how long they have lived in Israel.
For most non-Jewish foreigners, naturalization is the only available option. It requires legal permanent residency as a prerequisite and involves a multi-step government review. The Minister of Interior has wide discretion throughout, which means the process can be slow, inconsistent, and sensitive to political climate. None of this makes naturalization impossible. Tens of thousands of non-Jewish foreigners have gone through it. The process rewards patience and thorough file preparation.
2. The Section 5 Eligibility Requirements
Section 5(a) of the Citizenship Law 5712-1952 sets the statutory conditions for naturalization. All five must be met at the time of application:
| Requirement | What It Means in Practice |
|---|---|
| Residency | Was a resident of Israel for 3 of the 5 years immediately preceding the application — must include the year of application |
| Physical presence | Is present in Israel on the date the application is submitted |
| Settlement intention | Has settled in Israel or intends to settle permanently — demonstrated by ties, property, employment, children in school |
| Hebrew language | Has a basic command of the Hebrew language sufficient to conduct a conversation with a PIBA officer |
| Renunciation | Has renounced prior citizenship or will renounce within 12 months of receiving Israeli citizenship |
A point that frequently surprises applicants: the "residency" requirement in Section 5(a) means legal permanent residency (toshav keva), not just physical presence. Holding an A/5 temporary residency permit or a B/2 tourist visa, even for many continuous years, does not count toward the 3-year clock. The clock starts only when permanent residency is formally granted.
3. The Permanent Residency Prerequisite
Because permanent residency is both a requirement under Section 5 and the starting point for the 3-year residency clock, the realistic path to naturalization for most non-Jewish foreigners is:
- Obtain legal entry to Israel (tourist visa, student visa, work visa, or A/5 family residency)
- Build a qualifying basis for permanent residency, most commonly the spousal graduated track for non-Jewish spouses of Israeli citizens
- Receive permanent residency (toshav keva)
- Maintain permanent residency for 3 of the next 5 years
- Apply for naturalization under Section 5
The spousal graduated track for non-Jewish spouses takes a minimum of 4.5 years from first A/5 status to permanent residency, and often longer when PIBA asks for more documentation or calls the couple in for additional interviews. Add the subsequent 3-year permanent residency requirement, and the full path to citizenship typically runs 7 to 10 years for someone going through the standard family reunification route.
Non-Jewish foreigners who receive permanent residency through humanitarian grounds or long-term A/5 history typically follow the same structure: permanent residency first, then 3 years, then naturalization application.
- Year 1: A/5 temporary residency granted (step 1 of spousal track)
- Year 2: A/5 upgraded to step 2 after PIBA interview confirms genuine marriage
- Year 3: A/5 upgraded to step 3; Israeli spouse tax returns reviewed
- Year 3.5: A/5 upgraded to step 4 (temporary residency near-permanent level)
- Year 4.5: Full toshav keva (permanent residency) granted — 3-year clock starts here
- Year 7.5: Section 5 naturalization application submitted to PIBA Jerusalem office
- Year 9: Naturalization granted after 18-month processing period; citizenship oath ceremony at Ministry of Interior
- Year 9 + 6 months: UK citizenship formally renounced at British Consulate Tel Aviv; Certificate of Renunciation received
4. Hebrew Language Requirement and the PIBA Interview
The Hebrew language condition in Section 5(a)(4) is not a written exam with a formal passing mark. PIBA assesses it at the personal interview, conducted by a Ministry of Interior officer in Hebrew. Applicants who cannot manage the interview in Hebrew are typically told to take an Ulpan course and come back.
What does "basic command" mean in practice? PIBA officers expect applicants to:
- Understand and respond to questions about their personal history, family situation, and life in Israel
- Describe their employment, property, and connections to Israel in Hebrew
- Follow explanations of the naturalization process and sign documents understanding their content
Fluency is not required. Academic or literary Hebrew is not tested. The standard is conversational competence for daily situations. Most applicants who have lived in Israel for 7 or more years and worked or interacted socially in Hebrew will meet it without formal preparation.
Waivers exist but are rare. Section 5(c) permits the Minister to waive the language condition for applicants who genuinely cannot meet it. Documented cognitive impairment combined with advanced age is the clearest qualifying case. Age alone is not enough — an 80-year-old who communicates effectively in Hebrew will not get a waiver on account of their age.
5. The Application Process Step by Step
Naturalization applications are processed by the Population and Immigration Authority (PIBA), a division of the Ministry of Interior. There is no online portal for initial applications. You must attend in person at the PIBA district office serving your area of residence.
Step 1 — Gather the required documents
The document list as currently required by PIBA:
- Form 10 (Baqashat Ezrahut) — Application for Israeli Citizenship — completed in Hebrew
- Current valid permanent residency certificate (te'udat toshav keva) and current Israeli ID card (te'udat zehut)
- Current passport and all previous passports covering the claimed residency period
- Certified birth certificate with apostille (from your country of birth) and a certified Hebrew translation
- Marriage or divorce certificates with apostille and certified Hebrew translations (if applicable)
- Police clearance certificate from your country of origin and any country where you resided for more than 1 year, with apostille and certified Hebrew translation
- Israeli police clearance extract (teudat yosher) — obtained through the Israeli Police website
- Documentary proof of continuous physical presence in Israel during the claimed residency period: lease agreements, utility bills, children's school records, tax returns (Form 1301 or employer confirmation of withholding), bank statements, or medical records
- Three recent passport-sized biometric photographs
- Payment receipt for the NIS 1,435 application fee (as of 2026), paid by bank transfer to the PIBA designated account number provided at your district office
Step 2 — Submit at your PIBA district office
PIBA district offices that process naturalization applications operate in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv (Bnei Brak branch), Haifa, Beer Sheva, and Nazareth. Appointment waiting times vary: in 2026, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem offices report 6 to 10 week waits for initial file submission appointments. PIBA's national appointment portal (tor.piba.gov.il) handles booking.
Step 3 — Background checks and committee review
After a complete file is accepted, PIBA conducts internal security and criminal background checks in coordination with the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), Israeli Police, and the Ministry of Defense. This stage is not visible to the applicant. It takes 6 to 18 months depending on the applicant's country of origin and any flags in the security databases.
Step 4 — Personal interview at PIBA
Most applicants are called for a personal interview at the district office. The interviewer assesses Hebrew language ability, genuine intention to settle permanently, ties to Israel, and consistency with the documentary record. The interview is typically 30 to 60 minutes.
Step 5 — Ministerial recommendation and decision
PIBA prepares a recommendation for the Minister of Interior. The Minister has discretion to approve, deny, or request additional information. The Minister's decision is final within the administrative process, though it can be appealed to the Administrative Court (Beit Mishpat La'Inyanim Minhaliyim) on procedural and proportionality grounds.
Step 6 — Citizenship oath and registration
Approved applicants are notified by letter and invited to a citizenship ceremony. At the ceremony, you swear an oath of loyalty to the State of Israel, sign the formal declaration, and receive your naturalization certificate. Your name is entered in the Population Registry as an Israeli citizen. You can then apply for an Israeli biometric passport (additional fee: NIS 220) and an Israeli te'udat zehut.
6. Renouncing Your Prior Citizenship
Non-Jewish applicants who receive Israeli citizenship through naturalization must renounce their prior nationality. This requirement, set in Section 5(a)(5) of the Citizenship Law, applies specifically to Section 5 naturalization. Jewish immigrants naturalizing through the Law of Return face no such requirement, and Israel expressly permits dual citizenship for new immigrants under that route.
The renunciation deadline is 12 months from the date Israeli citizenship is formally granted. If proof of renunciation is not submitted to PIBA within that window, the Minister of Interior may revoke the Israeli citizenship under Section 11 of the Citizenship Law 5712-1952.
Renunciation mechanics differ by country:
- United States: Renouncing US citizenship requires a personal appearance before a US consular officer at the US Embassy in Jerusalem or the consulate in Tel Aviv. Form DS-4079 and the formal oath of renunciation must be signed in person. The US State Department charges a fee of USD 2,350 — one of the highest renunciation fees in the world. The resulting Certificate of Loss of Nationality (CLN) is what PIBA requires as documentation of renunciation. Appointment waiting times at the US Embassy Jerusalem as of 2026 are 4 to 8 months.
- United Kingdom: UK nationals renounce through Form RN submitted to the UK Home Office. The fee is GBP 372 (2026 rate). Processing takes approximately 3 months. The UK will issue a Declaration of Renunciation confirming the person is no longer a British citizen.
- Germany: German citizenship law allows retention of German citizenship when naturalizing in another country if a Beibehaltungsgenehmigung (retention permit) is obtained before naturalization. Without that permit, German citizens who naturalize elsewhere automatically lose German citizenship — which technically satisfies the Israeli renunciation requirement without a formal renunciation ceremony, but creates complications because PIBA requires documentary evidence of loss of prior citizenship, not just an assertion.
- Countries that do not permit renunciation: A small number of countries (including several Gulf states and some Asian nations) do not accept formal renunciation of citizenship. In these cases, PIBA accepts a sworn declaration by the applicant and, in some instances, a letter from the foreign embassy confirming that renunciation is not legally possible. The Minister of Interior has discretion to waive the renunciation requirement under Section 5(c) for applicants whose countries do not legally allow it.
7. Waivers, IDF Service, and Special Cases
Section 5(c) of the Citizenship Law 5712-1952 grants the Minister of Interior discretion to waive any or all of the Section 5(a) requirements for applicants who fall into specific categories or whose circumstances the Minister determines warrant exception.
IDF veterans
Non-Jewish foreigners who have served in the Israel Defense Forces can apply for naturalization with a substantially reduced residency requirement. Under current PIBA policy, an IDF veteran who served a minimum of 12 continuous months may have the 3-year permanent residency requirement waived or reduced to 1 year. The IDF service must be documented through a formal military discharge letter (tofes shihrur) from the IDF Personnel Directorate (Agaf Eitan). This is, in practice, the fastest naturalization route available to non-Jewish foreigners and can compress the total timeline to 3 to 4 years from first arrival.
Minor children
Under Section 7 of the Citizenship Law, minor children (under 18) of a parent who has naturalized as an Israeli citizen may be included in the naturalization or registered as citizens separately. The applying parent must include the child in their application at Form 10. PIBA typically processes the child's status at the same time as the parent's without requiring the child to independently satisfy residency or language requirements.
Exceptional circumstances
The Minister of Interior retains broad discretion under Section 5(c) for cases involving exceptional public interest: recognized scientific, cultural, or economic contributions to Israel, for example. These cases are rare and heavily fact-dependent. They are not a mechanism for applicants who simply do not meet the ordinary requirements but would prefer a faster path.
Bereaved families
Section 5(c) also covers parents who lost a child in IDF service. For these families, all residency and language requirements may be waived, and naturalization is typically granted as a matter of ministry policy within 6 to 12 months of application.