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Eilat Real Estate Investment 2026: Currency Collapse Reshapes Buyer Economics

Eilat property valuations face structural collapse as shekel depreciation against dollar accelerates, creating asymmetric risk for foreign investors by mid-2026.

By Solly Marks
Jewish Property Report · 21 Jun 2026
1 min read· 189 words
Eilat Real Estate Investment 2026: Currency Collapse Reshapes Buyer Economics
Jewish Property Report Editorial · Markets

Eilat's real estate market entered a crisis phase in June 2026 as currency instability and oversupply fundamentals converged to destroy foreign investor returns. The Israeli shekel has depreciated 18% against the US dollar since January 2026, directly eroding the purchasing power of North American and European buyers who dominate Eilat's resort and residential segment. Simultaneously, new construction has flooded the Red Sea resort city with 1,200+ units across seven major developments, creating the highest inventory-to-absorption ratio in Israeli coastal markets.

For foreign investors, this dual dynamic—currency headwind plus structural oversupply—has crystallized a binary outcome: early exits at losses, or multi-year capital lock-in betting on shekel recovery. Neither position rewards passive ownership.

How Currency Depreciation Reshapes Eilat Buyer Arithmetic

The mathematics of Eilat investment have shifted dramatically. A foreign buyer who purchased a 120-square-meter apartment for 2.4 million shekels (approximately $685,000 USD at Q1 2026 exchange rates) now faces revaluation headwinds on both principal and rental income.

Currency loss alone accounts for 12-15% of principal erosion for dollar-denominated investors. Rental yields, typically quoted at 4-5% in shekel terms, collapse to 2.8-3.2% when converted to hard currency and adjusted for shekel depreciation risk.

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