
Israel’s Population at the Start of the New Year: 10,148,000
On the eve of the Jewish New Year, updated data from Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics placed the population at 10.148 million by the end of 2024, with Jews at roughly 78.6% and Arabs at 21.4%, alongside a small cohort of foreign residents. The annual birth rate moderated compared to the previous year, while emigration rose and immigration fell from 2023 levels, contributing to demographic shifts that officials and analysts will watch closely in the coming year.
Marriage and divorce figures, household counts, and fertility rates rounded out the snapshot: an average of 3.18 persons per household, 2.87 children per woman, and tens of thousands of marriages and divorces recorded in 2023. The statistics portrayed a society balancing growth with the strains of conflict, mobilization, and economic uncertainty, even as communities prepared for Rosh Hashanah and the customary reflections on continuity and resilience.
The figures also intersect with long-running debates over the social fabric—religious affiliation across the Jewish public, the city-to-periphery distribution of families, and the draw of opportunities abroad versus the pull of home. Policymakers are likely to weigh incentives for returnees, integration strategies for new immigrants, and cost-of-living measures to stabilize trends. (INN/VFI News)