Tel Aviv Flights and Travel Guide

Tel Aviv

General Information

Tel Aviv-Jaffa

34.77782100

32.06615700

Israel Standard Time
(GMT +3 hrs)

-

-

-

-

        

Tel Aviv - Introduction

Tel Aviv is the second largest and the second most populous city in Israel. Located on the Mediterranean coast, it lies some 60 km northwest of the country capital, Jerusalem. The city’s official name is Tel Aviv-Yafo.

Its name is derived from Theodor Herzl’s novel Altneuland, Old New Land. The city name Tel Aviv is a combination of ideas of antiquity and newness; ‘tel’ means ancient site and ‘aviv’ springtime. The city is a mixture of old and new; diverse neighborhoods exist side by side.

The city is not even 100 years old. It was founded in 1909 when a group of Jewish families moved here from the nearby Arab town Jaffa. The city emerged with surprising speed.

Tel Aviv is a sophisticated city, full of energy and activity. The city is a fusion of high culture, modern shopping malls, beaches, restaurants and bars. The city also boasts the world’s largest assortment of Bauhaus buildings, a pre WW II architectural style. These are now being restored to its original brilliant white color. In 2003 the ‘White City’ was proclaimed a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The city is also a great nightlife destination. It boasts the biggest abundance of bars, clubs and restaurants in Israel, and the entertainment is revolving around the clock.

Tel Aviv is a beach city. There is a sandy beach extending 10 km along the sea shore. It is very popular with visitors and locals alike, and is packed on weekends.

The nearby city of Jaffa is also a must-see. It offers an abundance of art galleries, restaurants, and antique shops and makes a nice place to stroll around.

Jerusalem and Caesarea are also ideal day trips from Tel Aviv. In addition, the Dead Sea is only a two-hour drive away.

Next: Tel Aviv Climate »

Tel Aviv - Climate

Tel Aviv has a subtropical climate. It has hot summers (average temperatures around 25 °C) and mild winters (around 14 °C). The wet season lasts from approximately November to April but relative humidity is high all year round.

January average temperature 11.6 deg Celsius, 139 mm rainfall
February average temperature 13 deg Celsius, 88.9 mm rainfall
March average temperature 15 deg Celsius, 61 mm rainfall
April average temperature 19 deg Celsius, 20.3 mm rainfall
May average temperature 20.5 deg Celsius, 2.5 mm rainfall
June average temperature 24 deg Celsius, 0 mm rainfall
July average temperature 25.5 deg Celsius, 0 mm rainfall
August average temperature 25.5 deg Celsius, 0 mm rainfall
September average temperature 25 deg Celsius, 0 mm rainfall
October average temperature 23 deg Celsius, 27.9 mm rainfall
November average temperature 18 deg Celsius, 73.7 mm rainfall
December average temperature 14 deg Celsius, 144.8 mm rainfall

Next: Tel Aviv Getting There »

Tel Aviv - Getting There

If you are searching for cheap flights to Tel Aviv click here. We guarantee the best deals for international Tel Aviv flights.

PLANE

The main international gateway is Ben Gurion International Airport, located 16 km southeast of the city. The modern and efficient airport has good connections with the entire world.
www.iaa.gov.il/Rashat/en-US/Airports/BenGurion/

Transfer

There is a convenient train connection. The train station is located near Terminal 3. Transfer to the city is inexpensive. Trains run from 4:45 am – midnight (it does not operate on weekends). Other options include taxi, shared taxi and car. In normal traffic conditions it takes about 20 minutes to reach the airport/city, but during rush hours allow at least 45 minutes.
Buses are also convenient and cheap but, like trains, do not operate during weekends and at night.

CAR

Israel has modern highways and Tel Aviv is well served by a network of freeways. Highway police are strict and speed limits are enforced. Driving conditions in Israel are much better than in the rest of the Middle East.

BUS

There are good bus connections to every part of Israel. Tel Aviv is home to one of the biggest bus stations in the world. Note that services do not operate during Sabbath (from Friday afternoon until Saturday after sunset). Tickets can be bought from the bus driver or at the station.

TRAIN

Trains are fast and comfortable, and serve major cities as well as several smaller ones. Trains tend to get crowded during rush hours and on Sundays.
http://www.rail.co.il/EN/Pages/HomePage.aspx

 

Getting Around

BUS

The city’s bus  network is modern and extensive, run by the company Dan. The services operate from 5:00 am to midnight. Most drivers speak English and are happy to help.
www.dan.co.il/english/

TAXI

Taxis can be hailed in the street or ordered by telephone (extra charge). The use of meters is obligatory. Note that there is an extra charge on Friday night and Saturday.

SHARED TAXI

Van-sized taxis are often faster and cheaper than bus and they operate longer hours.

Next: Tel Aviv Activities »

Tel Aviv - Activities

THE BEACHES

The city’s sandy beaches attract thousands of bathers from May to September. The best time to visit one of the beaches is during the summer, on Friday afternoon. This is the time when the city population hits the sand for barbecues, playing drums and watching sunsets.



OUTDOOR SPORTS

Tel Aviv is a city with many opportunities for jogging, cycling and walking. If you are used to exercise on a regular basis you will have no problems here. The locals usually exercise in the Yarquon Park or at the beach.



BASKETBALL, SOCCER

Tel Aviv is home to the Maccabi, one of Europe’s top basketball teams which plays live every Thursday night at the Nokia Sports Center against other European teams.

The most popular sport in Israel is soccer. Hapoel and Maccabi are Israel’s best teams. The Derby match played by both teams is the country’s most popular sporting event and games tend to be really intense.

Next: Tel Aviv Attractions »

Tel Aviv - Attractions

NEVE TZEDEK

Address: Neve Tzdek

Neve Tzedek is Tel Aviv’s first neighborhood, built around 1887. Today it is a stylish place featuring interesting old buildings, quiet streets, and great atmosphere. It is a charming place of cultural importance, where numerous notable authors used to live, including the Nobel Prize winner Shemuel Agnon.

Visit the Beit Hasofrim (house of writers), which has now become the Nachum Gutman Museum.

The Suzanne Dellal Center for Dance and Theatre (6 Yehieli Street) featuring a lovely garden and piazza is also worth visiting. The area is home to the first cinema in Tel Aviv.

 

THE WHITE CITY

Address: between Allenby Street, Begin Road and Ibn Gvirol Street

The ‘White City’ is an area of Tel Aviv, characterized by its international architectural style known as Bauhaus. The building begun in 1930s and continued until the establishment of the state of Israel, during which time some 4,000 buildings were erected. The buildings were designed by Jewish architects who studied in Europe before migrating to Israel. The city’s design is marked by asymmetry, functionality and simplicity, with balconies, building pillars, flat roofs and "thermometer" windows being key trademarks.

The White City was proclaimed a UNESCO World heritage Site in 2003. 

 

OLD JAFFA

Old Jaffa is a charming old city, which offers numerous picturesque alleys, museums, and lovely galleries. The area also offers nice restaurants. Do not miss the city’s charming old port, one of the oldest still active ports in the world. You can easily spend a few hours at the beautiful Givat Aliya Beach. Do not miss the flea market, which is at its liveliest on Fridays. The best time to visit is late morning, when vendors put up their stalls.

 

ERETZ ISRAEL MUSEUM (THE LAND OF ISRAEL MUSEUM)

Address: 2 Haim Levanon Street, Ramat Aviv
Phone: (03) 641 5244
Web:
www.eretzmuseum.org.il/
Open: Sunday –Wednesday: 10:00 am – 4:00 pm; Thursday: 10:00 am – 8:00 pm; Friday - Saturday 10:00 am – 2:00 pm

The museum encompasses history, culture and art of Israel spanning 3,000 years. The museum’s many pavilions are clustered around the mound of Tel Kasile where archeological work is still ongoing.

 

THE CARMEL MARKET

Wander around the Carmel market and immerse your senses in colors, aromas and atmosphere. Its stalls are offering fresh fruit and vegetables, meat, fish, cheese, and flowers. Pay a visit to the small shops hidden in alleys behind the market where you will find such delicacies as smoked cheese and meat, salted fish, as well as halvah and other sweets. The genuine bazaar yields a great insight into the city’s soul.

Next: Tel Aviv Restaurants »

Tel Aviv - Restaurants

Tel Aviv is a cosmopolitan city with a wide range of restaurants and eateries. The cheapest fare can be found at street stalls selling falafel and shawarma.

Restaurants offer a range of world cuisines: from local Israeli food, to international cuisines. There are many international fast food chains present as well. Kosher restaurants are harder to come by in Tel Aviv than in Jerusalem, but if you stick to hotel restaurants you should have no problem finding one.

The Mediterranean influence in Tel Aviv is influences its dining hours. Diner is usually eaten quite late – around 10 pm.
Restaurants can be found all over the city, particularly around Sheinkin Street, Rothschild Street, Basel, Ibn Gvirol Street, and the Old Port. The most upscale restaurants are located in the Arena Mall, in the Marina.

Next: Tel Aviv Events »

Tel Aviv - Events

JAFFA NIGHTS

Date: August

The festival offers a rich cultural program consisting of music, theatre and dance. It is held in the picturesque square of the Old Jaffa. Stages are set up in the streets and the audience can enjoy a wide variety of cultural events.



TEL AVIV INTERNATIONAL DANCE FESTIVAL

Date: October 5 – November 6
Location: various
 

The International Dance Festival takes place in 4 different venues throughout the city and offers a great program of modern dance performances.



KRISTALLNACHT

Date: November 9
Location: various

The event commemorates the events of November 9, 1938. German Jews were terrorized by Nazi gangs, who looted their homes, destroyed synagogues and businesses. The ‘Night of the Broken Glass’ is now thought to mark the beginning of holocaust, as afterwards 26,000 German Jews were sent to concentration camps. The festival is celebrated throughout Israel, as well as in Germany and other European countries.

 

LOVE PARADE

Date: October 20-21, 12:00 pm
Location: Hayarkon Street
Web:
www.loveparade.com/

Love Parade is a giant, annual manifestation of love, peace and tolerance that takes place on the beachfront road Hayarkon and attracts thousands of people. The partying on the streets includes a procession of huge floats, each equipped with its own sound system.

Next: Tel Aviv Night Life »

Tel Aviv - Night Life

Classical music

Classical music fans will have a great time here, as Tel Aviv is Israel’s hub of performing arts. You can enjoy Israel’s Philharmonic Orchestra at the New Israel Opera (www.israel-opera.co.il/).

Rock music

For rock music visit the Barby (52, Kibutz Galuyot street), and the Goldstar Zappa (24, Habarzel street), featuring a daily program of mostly Israeli and occasionally foreign rock.

Theater and Dance Performances

Suzanna Dellal Center in Neve Tzedek (www.suzannedellal.org.il/) is the place to enjoy dance performances.

Most theatre performances are held in Hebrew. English interpretation is available at some shows in Habima National Theater (tel.: 03-6295555) and HaCameri Municipal Theater.

Clubbing

Tel Aviv is world renowned for its cutting-edge clubbing scene that is characterized by unique hardcore music style.

The city also offers numerous pubs where you can drink in the genuine Anglo-Saxon atmosphere: pints, football, darts and more.

Next: Tel Aviv History »

Tel Aviv - History

PRE – 20TH CENTURY

The Jaffa Gulf has been home to a port for over 4,000 years, making the Jaffa port the oldest in the world. The Israelites lost the port to the Egyptians in 1468 B.C. but some Jewish scholars remained in the area until the 13th century when they were killed by the Arab Mamaluks. From the 8th century to 1917 Jaffa was under Arab rule.

Jews began to settle in the area during the 1840s. The settlement activity intensified during the late 19th century due to the anti-Jewish Pogroms (riots) that occurred in Eastern Europe.

Tel Aviv was settled in the 1880s due to overcrowding of Jaffa. A new neighborhood, Neve Tzedek, emerged around 1886. In 1909 sixty families bought a stretch of land extending from Neve Tzdek to the Yarkon River, naming it ‘the Housing Project’.
In 1908 a surge of building activity started in Tel Aviv. In 1910 the settlement adopted the name Tel Aviv, meaning ‘Spring Hill’.
Anti-Jewish
protests begun in Jaffa in 1921 due to the rising numbers of Jews and many Jews were killed as a result. Many Jews moved from Jaffa to Tel Aviv quickly increasing its population. The city outline was designed in 1925 by Patrick Geddes and was based on a framework of central routes and boulevards.

During the 1930s many German Jews fleeing the Nazi persecution arrived. Around 4,000 new buildings were designed in the Bauhaus style, which the refugees brought from Europe. The UN Partition Plan of 1947 anticipated a partition of Palestine into Arab and Jewish states. Tel Aviv was to be a part of the Jewish state, and Jaffa was to be an Arab enclave but hostilities emerged immediately. Many Arabs fled Jaffa during the 1948 Independence war.

MODERN (20TH CENTURY)

Israeli independence was proclaimed on May 14, 1948 in Tel Aviv, and the city served as the provisional capital. In April 1949 Tel Aviv and Jaffa were united into one municipality, together with the surrounding villages, Tel Aviv thus grew to an area of 42 square kilometers. In 1950s the Mann Auditorium, home to the Israeli Philharmonic was built, and the Tel Aviv University was established.

RECENT

Tel Aviv today is a cosmopolitan, hedonistic, liberal city, standing in sharp contrast to the conservative Jerusalem. Tel Aviv is home to the Israeli celebrities and chic crowd, and also a lively nightlife hub.

Next: Tel Aviv Etiquette »

Tel Aviv - Etiquette

Do not photograph any military or police personnel, building or installation.

It is advisable to be discreet when taking photographs in Jewish Orthodox areas. Israel is a religious country and religious customs should be respected. Indecent behavior is not tolerated - offenders can get arrested or heavily fined.

Next: Tel Aviv Safety »

Tel Aviv - Safety

Tel Aviv is a safe city to visit, but keep in mind Israel in general has a significant risk of terrorist attacks and travelers should remain vigilant in all crowded areas such as bars, nightclubs, markets and buses. Visitors should monitor current developments. Situation in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank remains very tense and all travel to the area should be avoided.

Petty crime is rare. However, beware of pick-pockets who mostly operate in HaCarmel Market, Nachlat Binyamin market, both, the old and the new central bus stations, the beach promenade, the flea market, and the entire Jaffa.

It is advisable to carry identification with you at all times, as security checks are frequent for both tourists and Israelis. The security checks are hassle-free and are mostly carried out when entering shopping malls, markets, many hotels, restaurants, cafes and the central bus station.

It is wise to keep away from parks in the southern neighborhoods at night, especially if alone.

Always swim at beaches patrolled by lifeguards as many people have drowned due to strong currents off Tel Aviv coast. Beach safety in early summer includes watching out for jelly fish.

Next: Tel Aviv When To Go »

Tel Aviv - When To Go

July and August are the peak season and tend to be very busy. This is the time of school holidays and many Israelis have vacations as well. It is advisable to visit Tel Aviv off-season when crowds are smaller and accommodation prices are lower.
Weather-wise Tel Aviv is a year-round destination. The period from May to September experiences virtually no rain, but many prefer the low season (November to March) for cooler temperatures and more affordable prices.
Prices go up during local holidays of Passover (early April) and Sukkoth (late September to early October). If you plan to visit during these periods plan and book well in advance.

  • Round Trip
  • One-way
  • Multi-City

From

(any city in the world)

To

Return from

Return to

Hide this option

Depart

Return

From

To

Depart

From

To

Depart

Number of passengers

Adults
(12+)
Children
(2 - 12)
Infants in lap (0 - 2)

More options (show)

Prefered Airline(s)*

* Hold down Ctrl/Command key for multiple selections

Cabin

        
        
Current weather in
Tel Aviv
Mostly sunny. Mild.
24°C
15°C

Friday
Mostly sunny. Mild.
Chance of Precip.: 0 %
Wind: WNW 12 km/h

Sunny. Warm.
26°C
16°C

Saturday
Sunny. Warm.
Chance of Precip.: 0 %
Wind: NW 15 km/h

Overcast. Warm.
27°C
18°C

Sunday
Overcast. Warm.
Chance of Precip.: 0 %
Wind: NNW 16 km/h

Flights - Hotels - Vacations - Cars - Cruises - Last Minute - Travel Guides

© 2002-2024 Best Travel Store All Rights Reserved.