Divorce in Israel for Foreign Nationals: Everything You Must Know
The unique aspects of Israeli divorce law — rabbinical court jurisdiction, the get, asset division, and options for international couples.
A complete resource for foreign nationals dealing with divorce, custody, inheritance, and international family matters in Israel's unique legal system.
Get Legal Help →Israeli family law is one of the most distinctive and complex areas of the legal system. Unlike most Western countries, Israel does not have a unified civil family law — instead, personal status matters (marriage, divorce, custody) are governed largely by religious law, administered by religious courts alongside the civil Family Court.
For Jewish couples, the Rabbinical Courts have exclusive jurisdiction over divorce. A Jewish divorce requires the husband to grant a get (a religious bill of divorce) — a process that can be used as a weapon by a recalcitrant spouse. For Muslims, Sharia courts have jurisdiction; for Christians, ecclesiastical courts apply.
International couples face additional complexity: questions of jurisdiction, recognition of foreign divorces, child custody across borders, and enforcement of foreign court orders in Israel are all common issues that require expert legal guidance.
The unique aspects of Israeli divorce law — rabbinical court jurisdiction, the get, asset division, and options for international couples.
How Israeli courts determine custody arrangements, the best-interests standard, and cross-border custody disputes.
What a get is, why it matters legally, and what happens when one spouse refuses to grant it.