Best Translator App for Israel (2026)

Destination guide · Hebrew + Levantine Arabic · Updated April 2026 · By Rahul Kandoriya

Israel is a small country with two languages that matter for travelers: Modern Hebrew (Ivrit) for most everyday interactions, and Levantine Arabic for the Old City Muslim Quarter, Bethlehem, and Palestinian areas. TapSay covers both with native-speaker audio in a single offline install. Built for the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv-Galilee-Negev itinerary.

Two languages, both worth knowing

Hebrew works almost everywhere in Israel proper. But Israel is one of the few destinations where a second-language layer materially improves the trip — knowing 5–10 words of Levantine Arabic for the Old City souks, Bethlehem visits, or East Jerusalem changes the dynamic from tourist to guest. The "right Arabic dialect" principle applies: Levantine Arabic (Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Palestine) is the right choice for this region — not Egyptian, not Gulf, not Modern Standard Arabic.

Hebrew basics for travelers

Trip-by-trip language guidance

DestinationPrimary languageWhat to know
Tel Aviv (city, beaches)Hebrew + extensive EnglishMost cosmopolitan city in the country; English everywhere in tourism
Jerusalem (Jewish quarter, modern city)Hebrew + EnglishHotel English good; ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods (Mea Shearim) Hebrew/Yiddish only
Old City Muslim Quarter / Christian QuarterLevantine Arabic + Hebrew + EnglishSouk vendors switch to whatever the buyer speaks; Arabic gets warmer prices
Bethlehem / West Bank tourLevantine ArabicLimited English at smaller shops; Arabic essential for genuine interactions
Sea of Galilee / TiberiasHebrewTourism English at major sites; Hebrew elsewhere
Negev / Mitzpe Ramon / Bedouin tentsHebrew + Bedouin ArabicBedouin hospitality; basic Arabic appreciated
Eilat (Red Sea)Hebrew + extensive EnglishDive shops English; tourism city
Masada / Dead SeaHebrew + English at sitesNational park staff English; route to/from limited

Phrases that earn you respect in Israel

EnglishModern HebrewLevantine Arabic
Hello / Peaceshalommarhaba / salam
Thank youtoda (raba)shukran (jazilan)
You're welcomebevakashaafwan
How much?kama ze ole?bikam hada?
Where is the bathroom?eifo ha-sherutim?wein el hammam?
I don't eat meatani lo ochel basarana ma bakul lahmeh
I'm vegetarianani tzimchoni / tzimchonitana nabati
Take me to ___kach oti le ___khoudni la ___
I need a doctorani tzarich rofehbiddi tabib
Shabbat greeting (Fri-Sat)Shabbat shalom

Setup checklist before flying to Israel

  1. On home Wi-Fi: open tapsay.me and add to home screen.
  2. Set Modern Hebrew as primary; add Levantine Arabic for Old City and West Bank visits.
  3. Toggle airplane mode — confirm phrasebook still works.
  4. Download Moovit or use Google Maps for public transit (extensive bus network).
  5. Plan around Shabbat — many shops/transit reduced Fri sundown to Sat sundown.
  6. Bookmark medical phrases; emergency number is 101 (medical), 100 (police), 102 (fire).
  7. Bookmark airport transit phrases — Ben Gurion has thorough security questioning.

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