Most first-time gap year students either overpack and drag a 70-pound suitcase through Ben Gurion, or underpack and spend their first week scrambling to find things at the shuk. This guide covers exactly what to bring, what to skip, and what you'll find cheaper in Israel anyway.
The Golden Rule: Pack Less Than You Think
Israel is not a remote posting. Jerusalem, Gush Etzion, Modi'in, Ramat Bet Shemesh — wherever your yeshiva or seminary is located, you're close to malls, markets, and pharmacies. If you forget something, you can almost certainly buy it within a 20-minute bus ride. The cost of overpacking — a checked bag fee each way, a heavy case to haul up apartment stairs — usually isn't worth it.
The students who pack best bring two weeks of clothing, the medications they actually need, and leave room in their bag for things they'll pick up locally. Think carry-on plus one checked bag, max.
Clothing: What Actually Works in Israel
Israel's climate varies more than people expect. Summers are hot and dry. Winters in Jerusalem are genuinely cold — below freezing some nights — and it rains. The coast stays mild, but if you're in the hills, you need real layers.
What to bring
- 7–10 days of clothing (you'll do laundry weekly)
- One warm jacket or fleece — Jerusalem winters are colder than they look on a map
- Comfortable walking shoes broken in before you leave — your feet will thank you
- Shabbos clothes: one or two nicer outfits depending on your yeshiva/seminary dress code
- Modest layers for seminary students — most programs have specific requirements
- Rain jacket or compact umbrella if you're arriving between November and March
What to skip
- More than one heavy sweater — buy a cheap one in Israel if needed
- Fancy shoes — you're walking on ancient cobblestones, not a runway
- Full wardrobes of casual clothes — you'll quickly adopt what the locals wear
Buy in Israel: Basic T-shirts, socks, and casual clothes are all cheaper in Israel than in the US. The Malcha Mall in Jerusalem and the Azrieli in Tel Aviv have everything. Don't waste suitcase space on clothes you can replace cheaply on arrival.
Electronics and Adapters
Israel uses Type H plugs and runs on 220V. Most modern electronics (laptops, phone chargers, hair tools) are dual-voltage and just need an adapter, not a converter. Check the small print on your device's brick — it should say "100-240V" if it's safe.
- Universal travel adapter or 2–3 Type H adapters (they're cheap to buy in Israel too)
- Laptop with its charger
- Unlocked smartphone — essential for using an Israel eSIM or SIM card
- Portable battery pack for long days out
- Earbuds or headphones for shiurim, music, flights
Check if your phone is unlocked before you leave. A locked phone won't work with an Israeli SIM or eSIM. Contact your US carrier before departing — most will unlock it for free if your account is in good standing. If your phone supports eSIM, you can activate an Israeli number the moment you land, no physical SIM needed.
Medications and Health Essentials
Israel has excellent pharmacies (SuperPharm is everywhere), but some US medications aren't available, are prescription-only, or go by different brand names. Bring a full supply of anything you take regularly, plus a little extra in case your flight home is delayed.
- Prescription medications — bring enough for the full year plus two weeks extra
- A letter from your doctor if you're carrying controlled substances through customs
- Over-the-counter basics: ibuprofen, antihistamines, antidiarrheal, cold medicine
- Sunscreen — Israeli sun is intense and SPF 50 is expensive there
- Insect repellent if you're doing any hiking or camping
Documents — Don't Leave Without These
Losing a document in Israel is a headache that can cost you days. Keep originals on you and digital copies in Google Drive or your email.
- Passport (valid for at least 6 months beyond your planned return date)
- Program acceptance letter or enrollment confirmation
- Travel insurance documentation and emergency contacts
- US health insurance card (even if you're getting local coverage)
- A little USD cash — useful for taxis on arrival before you have shekel
- Copies of everything emailed to yourself
Jewish and Religious Items
You'll find more seforim and Judaica in Israel than you'll ever need — and often cheaper than in the US. But there are a few things worth bringing from home.
- Your own siddur, if you have a particular nusach you daven
- Tefillin and bag
- Tallit if you wear one
- Any seforim you're actively learning from
Don't pack an entire shelf of seforim. You'll buy what you need in Geula, Mea Shearim, or at the yeshiva itself — and at far better prices than in the US.
What Most Students Forget
After talking to hundreds of gap year students, a few things come up again and again as overlooked:
- A good lock — for dorm lockers, luggage on buses, hostel stays on trips
- Noise-canceling earplugs — Israeli dorms and apartments are not quiet
- A reusable water bottle — you'll drink more water in Israeli heat than you think
- Photos of family — printed, not just digital. It sounds small. It isn't.
- An Israel phone plan sorted before you land — arriving without data is stressful
Sort your phone plan before you board. GapYearSIM's eSIM can be set up from your phone before you even leave the US. The moment you land at Ben Gurion, you're on Israeli 5G — no sim-swap queue, no airport kiosk, no waiting. $24/month, everything included.
What to Buy in Israel Instead
Plenty of things are genuinely cheaper or better in Israel. Save the suitcase space:
- Basic toiletries — shampoo, soap, toothpaste, razors
- Bedding and towels (if your program doesn't provide them)
- Casual clothing and layers
- Seforim and Jewish books
- Snacks and local food staples
- Small rugs, room decor, or anything to make a dorm feel like home
One less thing to worry about.
Get your Israel phone plan set up before you land. eSIM active within 6 hours — $24/month, 400 GB 5G, no contracts.
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