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religious courts arbitration israel

What Israel's 2026 Law Allowing Rabbinical & Sharia Courts to Arbitrate Civil Disputes Means for Businesses

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

On March 24–25, 2026, the Knesset approved the Adjudication of Religious Courts Bill (Arbitration) in its second and third readings, formally authorising state rabbinical and Sharia courts to serve as arbitral fora for certain civil disputes when both parties consent. The change to religious courts arbitration in Israel represents the most significant expansion of religious‑court jurisdiction in decades, and it carries immediate consequences for every business operating in the country, from commercial contracts and real‑estate development agreements to employment relationships and vendor arrangements. General counsel, HR directors and litigators must now evaluate existing contract portfolios, determine whether forum‑selection language is sufficiently protective, and establish internal protocols for handling consent requests before a counterparty attempts to invoke the new law.

Immediate Action Checklist for General Counsel

Before exploring the law’s mechanics in detail, in‑house teams should initiate these six steps without delay:

  1. Contract audit. Identify all agreements with Israeli counterparties that lack an explicit, exclusive forum‑selection or arbitration clause.
  2. Stop‑gap clauses. Insert interim riders into new and renewing contracts directing disputes exclusively to civil courts or named commercial arbitration bodies.
  3. HR notice. Circulate an internal advisory to HR and people‑operations confirming that no employee dispute may be submitted to a religious court without board‑level legal sign‑off.
  4. Consent log. Create a centralised register so that any request, or inadvertent agreement, to submit a matter to religious‑court arbitration is tracked and escalated.
  5. Privileged review. Commission outside litigation counsel to stress‑test existing dispute clauses under the new statutory framework.
  6. Litigation hold. For any pending or anticipated disputes, confirm that no step has been taken that could be construed as consent to religious‑court jurisdiction.

Scope: What Religious Courts in Israel May Now Hear Under the 2026 Law

According to the Knesset press release published on March 24, 2026, the new legislation permits rabbinical courts and Sharia courts in Israel to adjudicate civil disputes that fall outside their traditional personal‑status mandate, provided both parties give their consent. The Israel Democracy Institute’s March 30, 2026 explainer places the reform in context: religious courts have historically been limited to marriage, divorce and related personal‑status matters, and this expansion marks a structural departure from that principle.

Which Matters Are Explicitly Included

Industry observers expect the practical scope to encompass a wide range of civil claims where the parties share a communal or commercial relationship. The categories most likely to arise include:

  • Commercial debt and contract disputes between parties who share a religious community affiliation.
  • Neighbour and real‑estate disputes, including boundary disagreements, easements and co‑ownership conflicts.
  • Employment claims where a worker and employer both consent, though significant protective limitations apply (discussed below).
  • Partnership and shareholder disputes within closely held businesses, particularly family enterprises.

Which Matters Remain Exclusively in Civil Courts

Criminal matters, regulatory enforcement proceedings and disputes involving the State as a party remain outside the scope of this law. Additionally, where protective legislation, such as labour statutes, consumer‑protection rules or anti‑discrimination provisions, mandates adjudication before a specific tribunal or labour court, those statutory requirements are expected to take precedence over any consent to religious‑court arbitration.

Consent, Parties and Jurisdictional Mechanics of Religious Courts Arbitration in Israel

The consent mechanism is the single most important safeguard, and the single greatest area of risk, created by the 2026 changes. Understanding how consent operates is essential for any business that wants to avoid religious court jurisdiction in Israel.

Pre‑Dispute Forum Selection vs Post‑Dispute Consent

Under the legislation, consent may be given either before a dispute arises (via a contractual forum‑selection clause) or after a specific dispute has materialised. This distinction matters enormously. A pre‑dispute clause buried in general terms and conditions could, if drafted carelessly, be interpreted as blanket consent to religious‑court arbitration. Conversely, a well‑drafted exclusive forum clause designating civil courts or a named commercial arbitration institution should, as a matter of contractual interpretation, prevent any party from unilaterally invoking the religious‑court option. As reported by the Times of Israel on March 24, 2026, critics warned that the consent requirement alone may not be sufficient to prevent pressure on weaker parties to agree to religious‑court proceedings.

Corporate Authority to Consent

For corporate entities, the question of who has authority to consent is critical. Early indications suggest that consent to religious‑court arbitration constitutes an extraordinary act that should require a specific board resolution, not merely the signature of a mid‑level manager on a contract addendum. Companies should update their internal authority matrices to ensure that no officer or employee may agree to religious‑court jurisdiction without explicit board or legal‑committee authorisation.

Employee and Worker Consent Limitations

Employment relationships involve an inherent power imbalance. The likely practical effect will be that labour courts and regulators scrutinise any purported employee consent to religious‑court arbitration with heightened scepticism, particularly where mandatory protective legislation applies. Employers should proceed on the assumption that employee consent to religious‑court arbitration obtained during hiring or as a condition of continued employment may be vulnerable to challenge.

Redrafting Contracts: Forum‑Selection and Arbitration Clause Templates

The most urgent operational task for businesses is a systematic review and, where necessary, redraft of dispute‑resolution clauses across the contract portfolio. The goal is clear: ensure that no existing or future agreement can be read as consenting to religious‑court arbitration unless that outcome is deliberately chosen. Below are illustrative clause templates and a practical audit checklist. These are provided for guidance only, seek legal advice before adopting any clause in a binding agreement.

Sample Clauses

Clause A, Exclusive civil court jurisdiction (for illustrative purposes only):

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be submitted exclusively to the competent civil courts of the State of Israel sitting in [Tel Aviv / Jerusalem / Haifa]. The parties expressly exclude the jurisdiction of any religious court, whether rabbinical, Sharia or otherwise, and confirm that no consent to religious‑court arbitration shall be implied from, or read into, any provision of this agreement.”

Clause B, Named commercial arbitration with religious‑court exclusion rider (for illustrative purposes only):

“All disputes shall be finally resolved by arbitration administered by [the Israeli Institute of Commercial Arbitration / ICC / LCIA] in accordance with its applicable rules. The seat of arbitration shall be [Tel Aviv]. The parties agree that no dispute under this agreement shall be referred to any religious court or tribunal, and any purported consent to religious‑court arbitration, whether express or implied, shall be void and of no effect.”

Clause C, Model employer clause for employment contracts (for illustrative purposes only):

“Any employment‑related dispute shall be adjudicated exclusively by the Regional Labour Court with jurisdiction, or by a mutually agreed commercial mediator or arbitrator licensed under the Arbitration Law, 5728‑1968. The employer shall not request, and the employee shall not be required to consent to, the adjudication of any dispute by a religious court.”

Checklist: Contract Audit Steps

  1. Identify all active agreements governed by Israeli law or with Israeli‑domiciled counterparties.
  2. Flag any agreement that lacks a dispute‑resolution clause entirely, these are the highest‑risk contracts.
  3. Review existing arbitration clauses for language that could be construed as consent to “any tribunal” or “any court of competent jurisdiction.”
  4. Prioritise amendments for customer‑facing agreements, vendor contracts, joint‑venture agreements and all employment contracts.
  5. Insert an express religious‑court exclusion rider (see Clause A or B above) into every new contract and every renewal.
  6. Engage litigation counsel to review any clause where ambiguity remains.

Model Employer Clause

The model employer clause (Clause C above) should be inserted into all new employment agreements, offer letters and HR policy handbooks. For existing employees, a supplementary addendum, signed voluntarily, outside of any performance‑review or disciplinary context, is the safest route to establishing an express exclusion.

Choosing the Forum: Arbitration vs Religious Court vs Civil Litigation in Israel

Decision‑makers now face a three‑way choice when structuring dispute‑resolution provisions. The comparative table below summarises the key trade‑offs for each forum available for commercial disputes in Israel.

Forum Typical Advantages for Businesses Key Risks and Enforcement Notes
State civil courts (regular courts) Established procedure; predictable precedent; full appellate rights; recognised enforcement domestically and internationally Longer timelines; public record; court congestion; limited specialised expertise for niche religious‑law issues
Commercial arbitration (seat chosen by parties) Confidential; party‑selected arbitrators; flexible procedure; international enforcement under the New York Convention where applicable Higher upfront costs; limited appeal options; enforcement may be challenged in certain jurisdictions
Rabbinical or Sharia religious court (as arbitral forum under the 2026 law, by consent) Communal expertise for specific religious‑law disputes; potentially faster for local community matters; lower fees Questions regarding impartiality standards; limited or unclear appellate pathways; uncertain cross‑border enforceability; reputational and human‑rights risks; evidentiary rules may diverge from civil procedure

When Consenting May Be Strategic

There are narrow scenarios in which consenting to religious‑court arbitration could serve a legitimate business purpose, for example, intra‑community commercial disputes among parties who share a strong preference for religious‑law norms, or low‑value neighbour disputes where speed and informality are more important than precedent. Even in those cases, the consent should be documented with precision, time‑limited, and accompanied by a clear agreement on appellate rights and enforcement pathways.

Employment Disputes and Religious Courts: Immediate HR Steps

The intersection of employment disputes and religious courts is the area of greatest sensitivity. As reported by TheMediaLine on March 29, 2026, women’s‑rights organisations have raised concerns that employees, particularly women, could face pressure to consent to religious‑court arbitration of workplace claims, where evidentiary standards, witness rules and substantive norms may differ significantly from those applied by labour courts.

Template Employee Consent Refusal Language

HR departments should prepare a standard response for any request, whether from an employee, a counterparty or a religious authority, to submit an employment dispute to a religious court:

“[Company] policy requires that all employment‑related disputes be adjudicated exclusively before the competent Regional Labour Court or through a commercial mediation/arbitration process approved by the legal department. We are unable to consent to the referral of any employment matter to a religious court. This position applies to all employees equally and without exception.”

Collective Agreements and Union Considerations

Where a workforce is covered by a collective bargaining agreement, in‑house counsel should verify that the dispute‑resolution provisions in the collective agreement do not inadvertently permit religious‑court arbitration. If the collective agreement is silent on this point, the employer should initiate discussions with the relevant union to insert an express exclusion. This is also an opportunity to confirm that the union itself does not have the authority to consent to religious‑court arbitration on behalf of individual members without their informed, personal agreement.

Enforcement, Recognition and Appeals: A Practical Roadmap for Religious Courts Arbitration in Israel

If a religious‑court arbitral award is issued, affected parties need a clear understanding of the enforcement and challenge pathways available under Israeli law.

Domestic Enforcement Steps

The likely practical effect of the 2026 law is that awards issued by religious courts acting as arbitral tribunals will be enforceable through the civil court system, analogous to other arbitral awards under Israel’s Arbitration Law, 5728‑1968. The anticipated enforcement pathway includes:

  1. Preserve all evidence and procedural records from the religious‑court proceedings, including the written consent, any procedural orders and the final award.
  2. File for confirmation of the award with the competent civil district court within any statutory time limit.
  3. Challenge window. The losing party may seek to annul the award on grounds analogous to those available under the Arbitration Law, including lack of valid consent, procedural irregularity, or a determination that the award conflicts with public policy.
  4. Enforcement order. Once confirmed, the award is enforced through the Execution Office (Hotza’a LaPoal) in the same manner as a civil judgment.

Cross‑Border Enforcement Issues

For businesses with international operations, the cross‑border enforceability of a religious‑court arbitral award raises significant questions. The New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards applies to awards rendered in the territory of a contracting state; however, courts in other jurisdictions may scrutinise whether a religious court satisfies the Convention’s requirements for an arbitral tribunal. Industry observers expect that enforcement courts in Europe, the United States and Asia will examine issues of due process, impartiality and whether the arbitral body’s composition and procedure met international minimum standards. Foreign parties should factor this uncertainty into any decision to consent to religious‑court arbitration.

Litigation Strategy: Challenge Arguments and Tactical Motions

Litigators advising clients who have been drawn, or risk being drawn, into religious‑court proceedings should consider the following tactical approaches:

  • Jurisdiction challenge. If consent is disputed, file an immediate application in the relevant civil court seeking a declaration that no valid consent exists and an injunction restraining the religious‑court proceedings.
  • Public policy arguments. Where mandatory protective legislation applies (labour law, consumer protection, anti‑discrimination statutes), argue that the subject matter is non‑arbitrable before a religious court and that the civil court retains exclusive jurisdiction.
  • Due process and impartiality challenges. If religious‑court procedural rules diverge materially from civil standards, for example, differential treatment of witness testimony based on gender, raise these concerns as grounds for refusing to participate or for seeking annulment of any resulting award.
  • Forum non conveniens analogues. Even where consent appears valid, argue that the civil court is the more appropriate forum on grounds of efficiency, witness availability, or the complexity of the legal issues involved.

When to Seek Injunctive Relief in Civil Courts

Injunctive relief should be sought at the earliest possible stage. Once religious‑court proceedings are well advanced, civil courts may be reluctant to intervene. The optimal moment to act is immediately upon receiving a summons, notice or request to submit a dispute to a religious court. Delay may be construed as acquiescence, and in the context of this new law, acquiescence carries the risk of being treated as implied consent.

Practical Checklist for In‑House Counsel: 30–60 Day Plan

The following ten‑step plan assigns ownership and indicative deadlines to the most critical tasks:

Step Action Owner Target Deadline
1 Complete contract portfolio audit (Israeli‑law agreements) Legal operations Day 14
2 Flag and prioritise contracts without exclusive forum clauses Legal operations + outside counsel Day 14
3 Draft and approve standard religious‑court exclusion riders General counsel Day 7
4 Insert riders into all new and renewing contracts Commercial / procurement teams Ongoing from Day 7
5 Amend all employment contract templates and offer letters HR + employment counsel Day 21
6 Issue internal advisory to all business units General counsel Day 7
7 Brief senior leadership and the board on litigation risk General counsel Day 14
8 Establish consent‑tracking register and escalation protocol Legal operations Day 21
9 Review collective bargaining agreements for gaps Employment counsel + HR Day 30
10 Conduct training session for contract managers and HR on new law General counsel + outside counsel Day 45–60

Conclusion

The 2026 expansion of religious courts arbitration in Israel is not merely a constitutional or political development, it is an operational risk that demands a concrete, time‑bound response from every business with Israeli contracts, employees or counterparties. The law’s consent mechanism provides a real safeguard, but only for organisations that act promptly to ensure their contract language is watertight, their HR policies are updated and their litigation teams are prepared to challenge unwanted jurisdictional claims. Businesses that treat this as a news story rather than an action item risk finding themselves in a forum they never intended to enter.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Eyal Soref at Soref & Co. Law Office, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Knesset Press Release, Adjudication of Religious Courts Bill (Arbitration)
  2. Times of Israel, Knesset Passes Law Allowing Rabbinical Courts to Arbitrate Civil Disputes
  3. Haaretz, Knesset Passes Law Expanding Religious Courts’ Authority
  4. Jerusalem Post, Religious Courts Arbitration Law Coverage
  5. Israel Democracy Institute, Explainer on Expansion of Religious Courts Powers
  6. Emory Law ScholarlyCommons, Religious ADR Comparative Analysis
  7. TheMediaLine, New Arbitration Framework Draws Scrutiny Over Women’s Rights

FAQs

What disputes can rabbinical or Sharia courts now hear under the 2026 law?
The law permits rabbinical and Sharia courts to arbitrate civil disputes, including commercial, contractual, real‑estate and certain employment matters, provided both parties consent. Criminal matters and disputes subject to exclusive statutory tribunals remain outside the scope. The Knesset press release of March 24, 2026 and the Israel Democracy Institute’s March 30 explainer confirm that this expansion is limited to consensual arbitration and does not grant religious courts unilateral civil jurisdiction.
Yes. The most effective opt‑out is a clearly drafted exclusive forum‑selection clause designating civil courts or a named commercial arbitration institution, combined with an express statement that no consent to religious‑court arbitration is given. Contracts that are silent on the issue leave the door open for a counterparty to request religious‑court proceedings.
Every arbitration and forum‑selection clause in an Israeli‑law agreement should now include an express religious‑court exclusion rider. Sample clauses are provided in the “Redrafting Contracts” section above. The key drafting principles are: name the specific forum or arbitration institution, use the word “exclusively,” and state that religious‑court arbitration is expressly excluded.
Awards are expected to be enforceable through the civil court system under the Arbitration Law, 5728‑1968. The losing party may seek annulment on grounds including absence of valid consent, procedural irregularity or conflict with public policy. Cross‑border enforcement remains uncertain and will depend on whether foreign courts recognise the religious tribunal as a qualifying arbitral body under the New York Convention.
Employers should take three immediate steps: (1) amend all employment contract templates to include an express religious‑court exclusion clause, (2) issue a company‑wide policy statement confirming that no employment dispute will be submitted to a religious court, and (3) review collective bargaining agreements for any gap that could permit a union or employee representative to consent on an individual’s behalf.
Religious‑court arbitral awards bind only the parties who have consented. Third parties who did not consent cannot be compelled to participate or to comply with an award. For foreign parties, enforceability is uncertain: courts outside Israel may question whether the religious tribunal meets the procedural and impartiality standards required for recognition under international enforcement conventions.
Action should begin within the first seven days following the law’s passage. The General Counsel or Chief Legal Officer should own the response, with immediate delegation to legal operations (for the contract audit), HR (for employment‑contract amendments) and outside litigation counsel (for strategic advice on pending disputes). A 30–60 day implementation plan is set out in the checklist above.

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What Israel's 2026 Law Allowing Rabbinical & Sharia Courts to Arbitrate Civil Disputes Means for Businesses

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