Tel Aviv
Jerusalem's Old City
The Dead Sea
Israel · Multi-city itinerary
Israel itinerary — August 2026
By Tripsapien Research · Updated May 20, 2026
August 2026 is an off-season time for the Israel trip (Tel Aviv, Jerusalem & the Dead Sea). Daytime highs sit around 32°C / 90°F in Tel Aviv. Plan around 5–7 days using Tel Aviv as your base for the day trips. Tripsapien checks every place on your list against your exact dates — hours, closures and booking pressure at each stop.
The route
About 5–7 days · 1 city
Israel from Tel Aviv: a Mediterranean city of Bauhaus architecture, beaches and nightlife, with the Old City of Jerusalem and the Dead Sea — the lowest point on Earth — each about an hour away. A compact country you can see from one coastal base.
Tel Aviv
Tel Aviv in August
Temperature
90°F / 73°F
32.1°C / 23°C
Precipitation
0d
0in · 0mm
Daylight
13.2h
Sea
86.5°F
30.3°C
August is the hottest month, with beach mornings and air-conditioned breaks important for comfort.
August is the hottest month, with beach mornings and air-conditioned breaks important for comfort.
City overview
Tel Aviv-Yafo combines a modern Hebrew city founded beside ancient Jaffa, a Mediterranean beach strip, Bauhaus-era White City streets, markets, nightlife, and Israel main secular business culture. Jaffa, Neve Tzedek, Florentin, Rothschild Boulevard, the beaches, and the Yarkon corridor each feel distinct while staying close enough for bikes, buses, light rail, and long walks.
Food & drink
Tel Aviv eating is built around hummus, falafel, sabich, shakshuka, bourekas, malabi, Israeli breakfast, fresh salads, grilled fish, market snacks, and a major vegan restaurant scene. Carmel Market, Levinsky Market, Jaffa flea market, Sarona, Florentin, Rothschild, and the beachfront cover most visitor appetites from quick counters to reservations.
Top sights
Ranked for August suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Old Jaffa and Jaffa Port
- 2Tel Aviv beaches and Tayelet
- 3Yarkon Park and Tel Aviv Port
- 4Carmel Market
- 5Nachalat Binyamin and Levinsky Market
- 6Tel Aviv Museum of Art
- 7ANU Museum of the Jewish People
- 8Bialik Square and Bauhaus Center
- 9Rothschild Boulevard and the White City
- 10Sarona
1Old Jaffa and Jaffa Port
4.7★ · 7,303outdoorOpen dailyJaffa is the ancient port city from which Tel Aviv grew, with stone lanes, sea views, churches, mosques, galleries, and the old harbor. The Clock Tower and flea market make it easy to pair history with food and shopping.
2Tel Aviv beaches and Tayelet
4.7★ · 1,912outdoorOpen dailyThe Mediterranean beach strip runs along the Tayelet from Jaffa toward the port, with swimming areas, volleyball, cafes, cycling, and sunset crowds. Beach choice depends on hotel location, swimming flags, and crowd style.
3Yarkon Park and Tel Aviv Port
4.6★ · 19,119outdoorOpen dailyYarkon Park gives the city a long green corridor for cycling, rowing, picnics, and family time. West of the park, Tel Aviv Port has boardwalk dining, shops, and sea-facing sunset walks.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Carmel Market
- 5Nachalat Binyamin and Levinsky Market
- 6Tel Aviv Museum of Art
- 7ANU Museum of the Jewish People
- 8Bialik Square and Bauhaus Center
- 9Rothschild Boulevard and the White City
- 10Sarona
Neighborhoods
1Central Tel Aviv
Central Tel Aviv includes Rothschild Boulevard, Dizengoff, Bialik, Allenby, hotels, cafes, nightlife, Bauhaus streets, and the fastest access to many visitor sights.
2Old North and the Port
The Old North and port area add calmer residential streets, Yarkon Park, Tel Aviv Port, family beaches, restaurants, and quick cycling routes.
3Neve Tzedek
Neve Tzedek is the restored early Tel Aviv neighborhood of narrow lanes, boutiques, small hotels, Suzanne Dellal Center, and routes toward Jaffa.
4
Florentin and Levinsky
Florentin and Levinsky bring street art, workshops, spice shops, bars, vegan food, casual restaurants, and late-night energy south of the center.
5Jaffa
Jaffa mixes the old port, flea market, Arab and Jewish communities, churches, mosques, galleries, seafood restaurants, and sea-facing stone lanes.
6
Sarona and City Center east
Sarona and the eastern center cluster offices, restored Templar buildings, food halls, train and light-rail links, and the main art and performance institutions.
Getting around
Use Rav-Kav or supported transit payment apps for buses, trains, and light rail, with Ben Gurion Airport trains reaching Tel Aviv stations quickly. The Red Line light rail links Jaffa, Neve Tzedek, Allenby-Rothschild, Sarona, and eastern stations, while buses, sheruts, bikes, scooters, and beach walking fill the dense center.
Don't-miss stops along the way
Jerusalem's Old City
An hour from Tel Aviv, the walled Old City packs the Western Wall, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the Dome of the Rock into a few stone alleys.
The Dead Sea
The lowest point on land, where the salt water lets you float — an easy day trip down from Jerusalem.
Best time to do the Israel trip
In August, the Israel trip runs daytime highs near 32°C / 90°F, with nights down to about 23°C / 73°F. Rain is rare, so days are reliably dry for sightseeing. August is an off-season time to travel.
The most comfortable months across Tel Aviv, Jerusalem & the Dead Sea are April, May and March, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at every stop. August 2026 is off-peak to go.
Check this route against your dates
Tripsapien starts with the sights on this page or places you paste, then checks hours, closures, booking pressure and neighborhoods for your exact August dates — across every city on the Israel trip.
Plan this Israel tripCommon questions about the Israel trip
- When is the best time to do the Israel trip?
- The most comfortable months in Tel Aviv are April, May and March, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall. August is an off-season time — see the weather below for the exact picture in August 2026.
- How many days do you need for the Israel trip?
- A comfortable Israel trip runs about 5–7 days — roughly 5 nights in Tel Aviv with day trips to the featured sights. Add a day if you want a slower pace or extra day trips.
- What's the route for the Israel trip?
- The classic order is Tel Aviv, Jerusalem & the Dead Sea. Jerusalem's Old City and The Dead Sea are the standout side-trips along the way. The city below has its own August weather, events and top-sights list, plus the featured day-trips above.
- Will the sights be open during my August Israel trip?
- Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season and public holiday. Paste your Israel list into Tripsapien and it checks every place in Tel Aviv against your exact dates, flagging closures and what needs booking ahead before you go.