Tel Aviv has never been a vertical city. But in fifteen years, five towers have transformed its silhouette — and invented a residential standard that did not exist in Israel. Here is how they position in 2026.
Akirov Towers — the historical benchmark
Delivered in 2007 on Pinkas Avenue, the Akirov Towers remain Tel Aviv's gold standard. Three 35-story towers, 360° views of the city and the Mediterranean, 24/7 concierge, rooftop pool. The current record: €32M for a penthouse in March 2026.
Price per m²: €45,000 to €65,000. Profile: international families, tech executives.
W Residences — hotel-grade standing
Connected to the W hotel in Sarona Park Tzameret, these residences offer the full range of hotel services: concierge, spa, room service, rental management. Ideal for buyers who do not live full-time in Israel.
Price per m²: €40,000 to €55,000. Profile: non-residents, secondary residence.
Meier-on-Rothschild — signature architecture
Designed by Richard Meier, delivered in 2017. Signature white lines, Bauhaus view over Rothschild Boulevard. The most design-driven tower in the city.
Price per m²: €38,000 to €52,000. Profile: architecture enthusiasts, cultural profiles.
Sarona Park Tzameret — neighborhood urbanism
Not a single tower but a quarter: three residences (Meier, W, AKR) at the heart of Sarona park, with restaurants, food market and offices walking distance. The most livable area of the segment.
Price per m²: €35,000 to €50,000. Profile: families with teenagers.
Sde Dov — the future
The first towers delivered in 2024-2025 on the former military airport. Urban seafront, contemporary architecture, integrated services arriving. The ultra-prime segment's entry level.
Price per m²: €30,000 to €45,000. Profile: internationals seeking new construction with seafront.
How Maison Israël accesses these towers
We maintain direct relationships with the management of all five towers. For each program, we know which apartments are for sale before they appear publicly — often through a message from a neighbor or a co-owner on the building committee. That local mesh is what makes the difference for the international buyer.