| name | israeli-childcare-navigator |
| description | Navigate the Israeli childcare system from birth to age 12: daycare subsidies (ma'on yom), preschool registration (gan chova/trom-chova), Bituach Leumi child allowances, tza'haronim (after-school programs), and special education rights. Use when user asks about daycare, gan registration, child allowance, tza'haronim, special education committee (va'adat hashama), chinuch meyuchad, or any child-related benefit in Israel. Covers the full parent journey from infancy through elementary school. Do NOT use for Bituach Leumi contribution calculations or general NI benefits (use israeli-bituach-leumi), maternity leave (dmei leida), or Bagrut exams (use israeli-bagrut-psychometric). |
| license | MIT |
Israeli Childcare Navigator
Problem
Israeli parents face a fragmented system spanning multiple ministries and municipalities with different rules, deadlines, and eligibility criteria. Missing a gan registration window in February means losing your neighborhood placement. Applying late for daycare subsidies means paying full price for months. Parents of children with special needs must navigate the va'ada process with little guidance on their rights. This skill consolidates the entire childcare journey into one place, preventing costly mistakes and missed deadlines.
Instructions
Step 1: Identify the Parent's Situation
Determine which stage and need applies:
| Stage | Ages | Key Topics |
|---|
| Infancy | 0-3 | Daycare (ma'on/peuton) subsidies, child allowance, matapelet (nanny) options |
| Preschool | 3-5 | Gan registration (trom-trom-chova, trom-chova, gan chova), tza'haronim |
| Elementary | 6-12 | School registration, tza'haronim, special education, gifted programs |
| Cross-cutting | 0-18 | Child allowance (kiztavat yeladim), child savings plan (chisachon), special education |
Step 1.5: After-Birth Registration Logistics
Before any benefits flow, several registration steps happen in the first few weeks. Cover these for any "I just had a baby" question:
- Birth registration: most hospitals submit the registration directly to Misrad HaPnim (Ministry of Interior), but you must confirm and request the newborn's TZ (Israeli ID number). It's printed on the parent's TZ after the next update.
- Kupat cholim registration: the newborn must be enrolled in a kupat cholim (HMO) within ~24 hours of hospital discharge to maintain coverage. Choose the kupa via Bituach Leumi (you can stay or switch from the parent's kupa) and notify the chosen HMO.
- Tipat Chalav (well-baby clinic): enroll the newborn in the local tipat chalav clinic for routine immunizations, growth monitoring, and developmental checkups in the first 6 years.
- Maternity grant (mae'nak leida): a one-time Bituach Leumi grant paid automatically when the hospital reports the birth. Amounts vary by birth order (highest for the first child). This is distinct from
dmei leida (maternity-leave wages); the grant covers the equipment of the newborn (crib, layette).
- Child allowance kicks in automatically after birth registration; see Step 5.
Step 2: Daycare Subsidies (Ma'on Yom) -- Ages 0-3
Daycare subsidies are handled by the Ministry of Labor, Social Affairs and Social Services (Misrad HaAvoda), NOT the Ministry of Economy or Education.
Eligibility criteria (both parents must meet at least one):
- Working 24+ hours/week with minimum gross income of 3,333 NIS/month (couple) or 2,778 NIS/month (single parent)
- Enrolled in recognized studies 24+ hours/week (20 hours for single parents)
- Registered as unemployed with the Employment Service
Application process:
- Verify the daycare is recognized by the Ministry (misrad haavoda registry)
- Apply via the Ministry's online service: https://www.gov.il/he/service/daycare-registration
- Required documents: income verification, employment letter, identity documents
- Subsidy amount depends on income tier and family size (means-tested)
Important notes:
- New immigrants (olim) receive up to 2 years of subsidy regardless of income
- Subsidy depends on space availability at recognized facilities
- Apply early -- processing takes 4-8 weeks
- Private (non-recognized) daycare centers do not qualify for subsidy
Step 3: Preschool Registration (Gan) -- Ages 3-5
Municipal preschool registration is handled by the local Education Department (Agaf Chinuch).
Age categories (by Gregorian birth year, Jan 1 - Dec 31):
| Level | Hebrew Name | Age | Compulsory |
|---|
| Trom-Trom Chova | טרום-טרום חובה | Turning 3 | No (free since 2015-16 under Compulsory Education Law Amendment 9) |
| Trom-Chova | טרום חובה | Turning 4 | No (free since 2015-16 under Compulsory Education Law Amendment 9) |
| Gan Chova | גן חובה | Turning 5 | Yes (Compulsory Education Law) |
Registration timeline:
- December: Municipalities send registration information to parents
- February-March: Registration window (exact dates vary by municipality)
- Missing the window does NOT mean no placement, but you lose neighborhood priority
Registration process:
- First-time registration requires in-person visit to Agaf Chinuch
- Required documents: parents' ID copies showing child's name and address, proof of residency
- Choose religious orientation: Mamlachti (secular), Dati (religious), Torani, Charedi
- Pay annual fee: 300-700 NIS (varies by municipality) for enrichment and insurance
Religious framework: The municipality must honor your religious orientation choice but is not obligated to assign a specific gan.
Step 4: Afternoon Programs (Tza'haronim)
Tza'haronim provide supervision after gan/school hours, typically until 16:00-17:00.
- Operated separately from the regular gan (different staff, separate registration)
- Additional tuition required (varies by municipality and provider)
- Some municipalities offer subsidized tza'haronim for eligible families
- Registration is usually done through the municipality or the specific gan
Step 5: Child Allowance (Kiztavat Yeladim)
Paid by Bituach Leumi to all Israeli residents with children under 18.
Monthly amounts (2026):
| Children | Per Child | Total Example |
|---|
| 1st child | 173 NIS | 173 NIS |
| 2nd child | 219 NIS | 392 NIS |
| 3rd child | 219 NIS | 611 NIS |
| 4th child | 219 NIS | 830 NIS |
| 5th+ child | 173 NIS | 1,003 NIS |
- Paid on the 20th of each month, automatically
- No application needed (starts automatically after birth registration)
- Amounts are CPI-adjusted each January, always confirm against the Bituach Leumi rates page for the current year
Child Savings Plan (Chisachon LeKol Yeled):
- Bituach Leumi deposits 58 NIS/month per child into a savings plan
- Parents can opt to add another 58 NIS/month from the child allowance (total 116 NIS/month)
- Money is available to the child at age 18
- Parents choose between bank deposit or provident fund (kupat gemel) via the Bituach Leumi website
- One-time bonus of ~582 NIS added by Bituach Leumi if the child does not withdraw before age 21
Step 5a: Disabled Child Allowance (Kiztavat Yeled Nechet)
If a child has a recognized disability (developmental, physical, sensory, or psychiatric), the family is entitled to a separate disabled child allowance, distinct from regular kiztavat yeladim.
- Amounts (2026 ranges): roughly 1,910-3,820 NIS/month for most disability levels, scaling with the assessed severity; up to 10,774 NIS/month for ventilator-dependent children.
- Eligibility is determined by a medical committee (Bituach Leumi) and depends on the disability type and severity, NOT means-tested on parental income.
- Application: submit Bituach Leumi form 7821 with medical documentation. Initial decisions take 60-90 days.
- The allowance is paid alongside the standard child allowance and the child savings plan continues.
- For developmental-delay diagnoses surfaced via the Va'ada (Step 6), ask Bituach Leumi to assess eligibility for kiztavat yeled nechet as a separate track; the Va'ada itself does not trigger this benefit.
- Always confirm current 2026 amounts at the Bituach Leumi disabled-child page before quoting figures to a parent.
Step 5b: Income Tax Credit Points (Nekudot Zikui) for Parents
Working parents receive additional tax credit points (nekudat zikui) per child. This is a tax benefit, not a direct payment, and reduces the parent's monthly income tax. Each credit point in 2026 is worth approximately 242 NIS/month.
Mother's credit points per child (typical structure):
- Child age 0 (year of birth): 1.5 points
- Child ages 1-5: 2.5 points
- Child ages 6-12: 1 point (resumes for working mother of children up to age 18 in some cases)
Father's credit points per child: 1 point per child up to age 5 if both parents claim, or transferable in single-parent families.
Single parents (hore yachid) receive additional points beyond the standard split. Always verify the current point allocation and the per-point shekel value via the Israel Tax Authority (https://www.gov.il/he/departments/israel_tax_authority) before quoting an exact monthly tax saving.
Step 6: Special Education (Chinuch Meyuchad) -- Ages 3-18
Governed by the Special Education Law 1988, significantly reformed by Amendment 11 (2018).
The Va'adat Zakaut V'Iyun (Eligibility and Characterization Committee):
Amendment 11 (2018) renamed the old "Va'adat Hashama" (placement committee) to "Va'adat Zakaut V'Iyun" (eligibility and characterization committee). The colloquial name "va'adat hashama" is still widely used.
This is an external government body (not school-based) that determines:
- Eligibility for special education services
- The service basket (sal sherutim) the child receives
- Support hour allocation (3-5 hours for mild needs, up to 21+ hours for profound needs)
Key change in Amendment 11: Parents now choose the educational framework (regular school with inclusion, special ed class in regular school, or special education school). The committee determines eligibility and service level, but the placement choice belongs to the parents.
Committee composition: Ministry of Education official with special education expertise (chair), psychologist, social worker, special education supervisor, and sometimes physicians or therapists.
Process timeline:
- School-based intervention and identification (3-6 months)
- Referral to Va'ada with documentation
- Psychoeducational evaluation (2,500-4,500 NIS if done privately in 2026; price varies by region and depth)
- Committee meeting (2-4 months after referral)
- Decision issued (2-4 weeks post-meeting)
- Service implementation (2-3 months)
Placement continuum:
| Level | Description | Support Hours |
|---|
| Regular class with support | Mainstream class, pull-out services | 3-12 hours/week |
| Integration class (kita meshulevet) | Mixed abilities, co-taught | Varies |
| Special education class | Small group (6-12 students), within regular school | Full day |
| Specialized school (beit sefer meyuchad) | Comprehensive, therapy-integrated | Full day + therapies |
Available services: Speech therapy, occupational therapy, physical therapy, psychological services, assistive technology.
Parental rights (strengthened by Amendment 11):
- Right to choose the educational framework (regular, special ed class, or special school)
- Right to attend the committee meeting
- Right to bring an advocate or professional
- Right to file an objection (hashaga) to the regional committee, then to the national committee
- Right to request reevaluation annually
Testing accommodations (for Bagrut and classroom tests):
- Extended time (25-50%)
- Reader/scribe services
- Computer use
- Separate quiet room
- Oral exams (rare, requires special approval)
Step 7: Gifted Programs (Mechunot LiMechonanim)
- Identification begins around grade 2-3 through school-administered tests
- Gifted programs are available in select schools (not all municipalities)
- The Ministry of Education's Division for Gifted and Outstanding Students manages the program
- Pull-out enrichment programs typically 1 day/week
- Full-time gifted classes exist in some cities (Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Haifa)
Step 8: Helpline and Government Information
When parents need to talk to a human or escalate, point them to these official entry points:
*2969 (Ministry of Labor daycare hotline): the dedicated hotline for ma'on yom subsidies, recognized-facility lookup, and ma'on application status. This is the number parents actually need for daycare subsidy questions.
118 (Ministry of Welfare general hotline): 24/7 multilingual hotline for general social services, family welfare, and child protection questions that fall outside the daycare-subsidy track.
*6050 (Bituach Leumi): for child allowance (kiztavat yeladim), Chisachon LeKol Yeled, and disabled child allowance (kiztavat nechut).
105 (MAOR): national child-protection online hotline for online harm and abuse reports.
- Ministry of Welfare daycare portal:
https://www.gov.il/he/service/daycare-registration for subsidy eligibility, online applications, and the recognized facility lookup.
- Kol Zchut (childcare entitlements portal):
https://www.kolzchut.org.il/he/ילדים_ונוער for plain-language summaries of every benefit, with appeal templates and recent updates.
Examples
Example 1: First-time Parent with Newborn
User says: "I just had a baby, what benefits and registrations should I know about?"
Actions:
- Explain child allowance starts automatically after birth registration (173 NIS/month for first child)
- Walk through after-birth registration logistics: confirm birth registration + newborn TZ, enroll in kupat cholim within 24h of discharge, enroll in tipat chalav, confirm mae'nak leida grant (Step 1.5)
- Recommend choosing savings plan option (bank vs. kupat gemel) via Bituach Leumi website
- If both parents work, guide through daycare subsidy application (Step 2)
- Note the gan registration timeline (February-March when child turns 3)
Result: Parent has a clear timeline and action list from birth through preschool.
Example 2: Gan Registration
User says: "How do I register my child for gan chova?"
Actions:
- Determine child's age and birth year to confirm level (trom-trom-chova/trom-chova/gan chova)
- Explain registration window (February-March) and that it's done at the municipal Agaf Chinuch
- List required documents (IDs, proof of residency)
- Explain religious orientation options (Mamlachti, Dati, Torani, Charedi)
- Note the annual fee (300-700 NIS) and tza'haronim option
Result: Parent knows exactly when, where, and how to register.
Example 3: Special Education Concerns
User says: "My child's teacher suggested we consider special education evaluation"
Actions:
- Explain the Va'adat Hashama process and timeline
- Clarify the placement continuum (inclusion in regular class is an option)
- Note parental rights (attend meeting, bring advocate, appeal)
- Advise on psychoeducational evaluation (can be done privately for 2,500-4,500 NIS in 2026 for faster results)
- Emphasize: request in writing, keep copies of all documents
Result: Parent understands the process, their rights, and how to prepare.
Bundled Resources
References
references/childcare-timeline.md -- Complete timeline of registrations, deadlines, and milestones from birth to age 12. Consult when creating a personalized plan for parents.
references/special-education-rights.md -- Detailed guide to the Va'ada process, parental rights, appeal procedures, and available services. Consult when advising on special education.
Reference Links
| Source | URL | What to Check |
|---|
| Ministry of Labor - Daycare Subsidy | https://www.gov.il/he/service/daycare-registration | Ma'on yom subsidy eligibility, recognized facilities, online application |
| Bituach Leumi - Child Allowance | https://www.btl.gov.il/benefits/children/Pages/default.aspx | Current monthly amounts, payment schedule, savings plan options |
| Bituach Leumi - Disabled Child Allowance | https://www.btl.gov.il/benefits/Disabled_Child/Pages/default.aspx | Eligibility, amounts, form 7821 |
| Israel Tax Authority - Credit Points | https://www.gov.il/he/departments/israel_tax_authority | Annual nekudat zikui value and per-child allocation |
| Ministry of Education - Preschool | https://www.gov.il/he/departments/ministry-of-education | Compulsory education ages, registration calendar, religious streams (navigate to preschool/early-childhood section) |
| Kol Zchut - Children and Youth | https://www.kolzchut.org.il/he/ילדים_ונוער | Plain-language entitlements, appeal templates, recent updates |
| Helpline *2969 (Ministry of Labor daycare hotline) | https://www.gov.il/he/service/daycare-registration | Direct hotline for ma'on yom subsidy and facility list |
| Helpline 118 (Ministry of Welfare general hotline) | https://www.gov.il/he/departments/ministry-of-welfare-and-social-affairs | Social services, family welfare, child protection |
Gotchas
-
Wrong ministry for daycare subsidies. Agents often attribute daycare subsidies to the Ministry of Education or Ministry of Economy. The correct authority is the Ministry of Labor, Social Affairs and Social Services (Misrad HaAvoda). Getting this wrong sends parents to the wrong office.
-
Gan registration is municipal, not national. There is no single national registration system. Each municipality runs its own process with different dates, fees, and forms. Always ask which city the parent lives in before giving registration instructions.
-
Child allowance amounts change annually. The 2026 amounts (173/219 NIS per child) are CPI-adjusted each January. Do not use previous year's figures. Always specify the year when stating amounts.
-
The committee was renamed in 2018. Amendment 11 renamed "ועדת השמה" (Va'adat Hashama) to "ועדת זכאות ואפיון" (Va'adat Zakaut V'Iyun). Both names are used colloquially, but the legal name is the new one. Critically, Amendment 11 gave parents the right to choose the educational framework -- do not tell parents the committee decides placement. The committee decides eligibility and service basket; the parents choose where their child learns.
-
Free education does not mean zero cost. While gan tuition is covered from age 3 (under Amendment 9, since school year 2015-16), municipalities charge for enrichment, insurance, and the parent committee (vaad horim). Real all-in cost for the basic line items runs ~500-1,200 NIS/year, and adding a tza'haron pushes the family bill to ~6,000-12,000 NIS/year. Agents should never tell parents "gan is completely free."
-
Major cities have moved gan registration online. First-time municipal registration in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Haifa, Rishon LeZion, Petach Tikva and several others is digital-first since ~2023. In-person Agaf Chinuch visits are now exceptions for missing documents or special cases, not the default. Always ask which city; recommend the municipal portal first.
-
Disabled child allowance is a separate Bituach Leumi track. If the Va'ada (Step 6) surfaces a developmental delay, parents must apply for kiztavat yeled nechet separately (Bituach Leumi form 7821). The Va'ada itself does not trigger this allowance. Missing this leaves up to thousands of shekels/month on the table for eligible families.
Troubleshooting
Problem: "Parent missed the gan registration window"
Cause: Registration was in February-March and parent didn't register on time.
Solution: Contact the municipal Agaf Chinuch directly. Missing the window does NOT mean no placement, but the municipality assigns you a gan without neighborhood priority. They must still honor your religious orientation choice.
Problem: "Daycare subsidy application was rejected"
Cause: Common reasons include income below minimum threshold, daycare not on recognized list, or missing documentation.
Solution: Verify the daycare is on the Ministry of Labor's recognized facility list. Check income meets minimum (3,333 NIS/month for couples). New immigrants should mention oleh status for up to 2 years of automatic eligibility. Appeal through the Ministry.
Problem: "Parent disagrees with Va'ada placement decision"
Cause: Va'ada placed child in more restrictive setting than parent wants, or denied services.
Solution: Parents have the right to appeal to the regional Va'ada, and then to the national Va'ada. The Integration Law (2002) gives weight to parental preference for inclusion. Recommend bringing a special education advocate to the appeal hearing.