Traveling to or from Israel in 2026 is not like it was two years ago. The security environment has changed dramatically, international flight routes remain disrupted, and the procedures at Israel’s land border crossings have become more intensive. And yet —thousands of people continue to cross every week. Journalists filing reports, NGO workers supporting humanitarian missions, diaspora families visiting loved ones, and business travelers with commitments that cannot wait.
This guide is written specifically for those people. Not for leisure tourists who can easily postpone a trip but for those who need to cross, want to do it safely, and want to minimize the stress and unpredictability that comes with crossing into Israel during the current situation.
Who Is Still Crossing Into Israel in 2026?
With leisure tourism down significantly, the profile of people crossing Israel’s borders has shifted. The travelers using land crossings today are primarily those with a purpose that goes beyond sightseeing — and their needs at the border are very different from a tourist with a carry-on bag.
Journalists & Media Workers
Foreign press continues to operate in Israel despite restrictions. Entry involves thorough documentation checks, equipment screening, and detailed questioning about assignments and itineraries.
NGO & Humanitarian Workers
Aid organizations continue operating in the region. Workers crossing via land borders need organizational documentation, accreditation letters, and clear mission statements ready at the crossing.
Israeli Diaspora & Dual Nationals
Families visiting relatives, dual nationals returning home — often with elderly parents or young children. The crossing process can be especially challenging for multi-generational family groups.
Business Travelers & Diplomats
Commercial activity continues. Business travelers, diplomats, and government officials crossing via land border face the same queues and security procedures as everyone else — without VIP assistance.
The Reality at Israel's Land Borders Right Now
Anyone who crossed Allenby Bridge or Sheikh Hussein before October 2023 will find the experience significantly different today. Here is what to expect honestly:
| What’s Changed | What It Means for You |
|---|---|
| Longer security screening | More detailed questioning, device checks, and documentation review. Budget 3–6 hours for standard crossing |
| Flight disruptions | Ben Gurion Airport has seen closures and cancellations — land borders are now the primary reliable route for many |
| Higher passenger volumes at land borders | More travelers using land crossings = longer queues. Especially heavy mid-morning on Sundays and Mondays |
| Short-notice closures possible | Both Allenby Bridge and Sheikh Hussein can close with minimal notice. Always verify status morning of travel |
| ETA-IL now required | Since January 2025, all visa-exempt travelers (US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia) must have ETA-IL approval before arrival |
| More thorough NGO/press documentation checks | Organizational workers face additional documentation scrutiny — accreditation letters, mission details, and staff lists may be requested |
None of this means crossing is impossible; thousands do it successfully every week. But preparation is the difference between a smooth crossing and a 6-hour ordeal.
Documents You Must Have — Updated for 2026
For All Travelers
Universal Document Checklist
- Valid passport — minimum 6 months validity beyond your travel date, at least one blank page
- ETA-IL approval — mandatory since January 2025 for US, UK, EU, Canadian, Australian passport holders and most other visa-exempt nationalities. Apply online before travel — do not arrive without it
- Jordan visa (if crossing at Allenby Bridge) — NOT available on arrival at Allenby. Must be arranged in advance at a Jordanian embassy, consulate, or online. Available on arrival at Sheikh Hussein (North Border) only
- Accommodation details — address of where you are staying in Israel, contact number, reservation confirmation
- Return / onward travel evidence — proof of your planned exit from Israel
- Cash in multiple currencies — USD, NIS, and JOD. ATMs at crossings are unreliable and card payments are not always accepted for fees
For Journalists & Media Workers
Press-Specific Documents
- Press credentials — official press card from your publication or organization, ideally with photo
- Assignment letter — on official letterhead, stating your role, assignment, and dates
- Government Press Office (GPO) accreditation — if you have Israeli GPO credentials, carry them
- Equipment inventory — detailed list of all cameras, recording equipment, and laptops. Be prepared for devices to be inspected
- Editorial contact — phone number of your editor or bureau chief who can be reached during your crossing
For NGO & Humanitarian Workers
NGO Worker Documents
- Organizational accreditation letter — signed by a senior official, on letterhead, describing your role and mission
- Mission documentation — clear description of your organization’s activities in Israel and/or the region
- Israel office contact — direct phone number of your organization’s Israel representative or partner
- Work permit — if your assignment requires one, ensure it is valid and current
- Donor/funding documentation — be prepared to explain your organization’s funding sources if questioned
Don't Navigate This Alone
Our VIP border representatives are experienced with current procedures for journalists, NGO workers, and business travelers. We handle the process — you focus on your mission.
View VIP Border Service Book Now — $219/personWhich Crossing to Use: Allenby Bridge or Sheikh Hussein?
Your choice of crossing can make a significant difference both in terms of travel time and the documentation you need.
| Allenby Bridge (King Hussein) | Sheikh Hussein (North Border) | |
|---|---|---|
| Best for reaching | Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, West Bank | Haifa, Galilee, northern Israel |
| Jordan visa on arrival | Must pre-arrange | Available on arrival |
| Israeli citizens | Not permitted | Permitted |
| Distance from Amman | 57km (~1 hour) | 90km (~1.5 hours) |
| Current wait times | 3–6 hours standard | 2–4 hours standard |
| VIP service available | Israel Welcome | Israel Welcome |
For most international travelers especially journalists, NGO workers, and diaspora families heading to Jerusalem or Tel Aviv Allenby Bridge remains the primary route. Just ensure your Jordan visa is arranged in advance.
How VIP Border Service Reduces Stress for Mission-Critical Travelers
For travelers crossing Israel’s border in 2026 for work, humanitarian missions, or family emergencies — the standard border experience adds unnecessary stress to an already demanding situation. This is where Israel Welcome’s VIP Border Service makes the biggest difference.
Here is what changes when you have professional assistance:
- You are met at the entrance by a personal VIP representative who knows the current procedures, the staff, and the fastest route through
- Your luggage and documentation are handled on your behalf — no juggling bags, forms, and passports simultaneously
- Fast-track security and passport control — you wait in a private lounge while your representative manages the process on both the Israeli and Jordanian sides
- Crossing time drops from 3–6 hours to approximately 45–90 minutes — giving you time and energy for what matters
- You are escorted directly to your driver — no confusion, no searching for transport in an unfamiliar and stressful environment
For a journalist on a tight filing deadline, an NGO worker arriving for urgent humanitarian work, or a family accompanying an elderly relative, this is not a luxury. It is the difference between arriving composed and arriving exhausted.
10 Practical Tips for Crossing Into Israel Right Now
- Apply for your ETA-IL before you travel. This is now mandatory for visa-exempt nationalities (US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia and others). Do not arrive at the border without it.
- Verify border status the morning of your crossing. Both crossings have closed with very little notice in 2026. Call ahead or contact Israel Welcome for real-time status.
- Arrive early. The first 60–90 minutes after opening are consistently the least congested. Mid-morning is the busiest period.
- Keep all documents in one place and accessible. Do not bury your paperwork in checked luggage. Have everything in a document wallet in your hand luggage.
- Be straightforward and consistent at security. Answer questions clearly and concisely. Inconsistent answers — even about minor things — extend the process significantly.
- Carry cash in USD, NIS, and JOD. Card payments are not always accepted. ATMs are unreliable. Government fees must be paid in local currency.
- Book VIP service at least 48 hours in advance. Walk-in availability cannot be guaranteed during peak periods, and demand has increased significantly in 2026.
- Download the Home Front Command Red Alert app before you enter Israel — it provides real-time rocket and missile alerts in Hebrew and English.
- Register with your country’s embassy. US citizens should enroll in STEP. UK citizens should register with the Foreign Commonwealth Office. This ensures you receive emergency communications.
- Have an exit plan. Know your options — Allenby Bridge, Sheikh Hussein, and the Taba-Egypt crossing are currently the most reliable exits from Israel.
For Families: Crossing With Elderly Relatives or Children
Israeli diaspora families are among the most common users of land border crossings right now — visiting parents, grandparents, and siblings in Israel at a time when flying has become more complicated. Crossing with elderly relatives or young children adds an additional layer of challenge to an already demanding process.
At a standard crossing, this means: managing luggage for multiple people, assisting elderly family members through long standing queues, keeping children calm during security checks, and handling documentation for everyone in the group simultaneously.
With VIP border service, your representative handles all of this. Luggage is taken at the entrance. The group waits in a private lounge. Your representative manages all documentation for the entire group. You are escorted to your driver as a complete family unit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Foreign journalists can still enter Israel in 2026, though the entry process involves thorough security screening, documentation review, and detailed questioning about assignments, itineraries, and organizations. Equipment — cameras, recording devices, laptops will be screened. Having organizational accreditation, an assignment letter, and GPO press credentials significantly smooths the process. A VIP border representative with experience handling press crossings is strongly recommended.
As of March 2026, Allenby Bridge (King Hussein Bridge) and Sheikh Hussein (North Border) remain open for international travelers. However, both crossings are subject to closure with very little notice due to the current security environment. The Canadian government confirmed as recently as March 2026 that land crossings with Jordan remain available as exit options. Always verify crossing status before travel — Israel Welcome monitors both crossings and can provide real-time updates to booked clients.
Yes. Since January 1, 2025, travelers from visa-exempt countries including the US, UK, EU, Canada, and Australia must complete an Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA-IL) before arrival — this applies at land border crossings as well as airports. Israeli citizens are exempt. Apply online before you travel and carry your approval confirmation. Do not arrive at the border without it.
NGO workers should carry: valid passport with 6+ months validity, ETA-IL approval, organizational accreditation letter on official letterhead, mission description, contact details for the organization’s Israel office, any relevant work permits, and funding documentation if likely to be questioned. Following Israel’s 2026 NGO registration changes, border officials may ask more detailed questions about organizational affiliations. Having a VIP representative experienced with current procedures is strongly recommended for NGO staff.
Without VIP assistance, journalists and NGO workers can expect 3–6 hours or more at the border in 2026, due to the combination of thorough security screening and higher passenger volumes. With Israel Welcome’s VIP border service, experienced representatives who understand the current documentation requirements can reduce the crossing time to approximately 45–90 minutes for most travelers.
As of March 2026, Ben Gurion Airport has had intermittent disruptions. The most reliable exit routes from Israel are currently via land: Allenby Bridge (King Hussein) to Jordan, Sheikh Hussein (North Border) to Jordan, or the Taba crossing to Egypt near Eilat. The Canadian, US, and Australian governments have all confirmed these land border options in recent travel advisories. Israel Welcome’s VIP service is available for border exits as well as entries.
Cross With Someone Who Knows the Way
Whether you are a journalist on assignment, an aid worker on a mission, or a family visiting loved ones — Israel Welcome's VIP border service gives you a professional at your side for every step of the crossing. Available 24/7, 7 days a week.
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