Four-Room Apartment in Kfar Saba Sells for NIS 2 Million, Matching a Three-Room Flat in Petah Tikva
A four-room apartment in Kfar Saba was sold for NIS 2 million, roughly the same price as a three-room apartment in Petah Tikva, highlighting recent comparisons in Israel’s housing market. The article is presented among a set of real-estate and finance headlines, with the main focus on the surprising pricing gap, or lack of one, between the two cities.
The text does not give details on the exact building, neighborhood, or the identities of the buyer and seller, but places the sale in the context of broader market discussions. It appears alongside claims about where Israel’s property market may be headed in 2026 and other housing-related developments.
The surrounding items in the article mention a 22% jump in mortgage volume in May to NIS 9.7 billion, a major court loss for Israel Zeira in a class-action dispute that was largely rejected and left a purchasing group to pay NIS 3 million, and a win for residents against Tel Aviv Municipality over parking spaces in a Tama 38 building. The page also includes unrelated headlines on the dollar shekel rate, stock indexes, hedge funds, autism, and several business disputes.
No further information is provided about the Kfar Saba transaction beyond the sale price and the comparison to Petah Tikva. The headline frames the deal as a sign of how closely priced some apartments in different central Israel markets have become.