Israel Map

Tel Aviv and Central Israel
  • South is Jaffa, Tel Aviv’s “older sister” and where its story began. Jaffa boasts bountiful biblical history, along with charming alleys, antiquities, quiet churches and a picturesque and recently restored fishing port. Not to miss is the Ottoman clock tower and the vibrant flea market, especially on Fridays.

  • Neve Tzedek was the first neighborhood built in the “new” city of Tel Aviv. After years of neglection and with streets and buildings crumbling away, the place recaptured its former prestige, and has become a stylish yuppie residence with plenty of restaurants, galleries and designer shops.

  • Nachalat Binyamin arts and crafts fair is the first and biggest of its kind in Israel, a very special experience. It is full of very special and unique handmade creations and designs, beautiful buildings, coffee shops and street performances and live music.

  • Tel Aviv is the largest open-air Bauhaus museum in the world, known as the “White City” and now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and Rothschild Blvd is probably the most beautiful.

  • This is the historic hall in which the State of Israel was declared.
    Most of the exhibited items are originals, while others were meticulously reconstructed. The names of the public figures who attended the ceremony are inscribed on the dignitaries’ stage and on the chairs.

  • A world of entertainment and leisure awaits along the breathtaking shoreline, including shows, culture, art exhibitions, shopping at leading stores, weekend markets and a culinary experience brought to you by the best restaurants and chefs that Tel Aviv has to offer – all against the backdrop of the city’s historic port.

  • The Palmach Museum is an experiential museum, covering the Palmach legacy through the stories of individuals and groups. Visitors to the museum join the group of young Palmach recruits from its establishment, and advanced through the story of the Palmach until the end of the War of Independence.

  • The Israeli Museum at the Yitzhak Rabin Center is the first and only museum in Israel to explore the development of the State of Israel as a young democracy, and the story of the life of Yitzhak Rabin, the connecting thread in the country’s history.

  • Beit Hatfutsot, the Museum of the Jewish People, is a unique global institution tells the ongoing and extraordinary story of the Jewish people, and connects them to their roots and strengthens their personal and collective Jewish identity.

  • Neot Kedumim is a biblical landscape reserve. This unique recreation of the physical setting of the Bible in all its depth and detail allows visitors to see life as it was lived by our ancestors 3,000 years ago. More than a "garden" showing various plants, Neot Kedumim embodies the panorama and power of the landscapes which shaped the values of the Bible and provided the rich vocabulary for expressing those values.