Aliyah flight

Aliyah application files opened through Nefesh B’Nefesh climbed from 8,943 in 2022 to 13,389 in 2025.

By Shmuli Volkin, Jewish Breaking News

As 2025 wraps, Nefesh B’Nefesh says more than 4,100 olim from North America moved to Israel this year—4,150 in total—up over 12% from last year’s 3,706 and the strongest annual figure in four years.

The wave includes 297 families, 946 children, 1,476 single adults, and 548 retirees, spanning ages four months to 96, with the largest numbers coming from communities in New York, New Jersey, California, Maryland, Florida, and Illinois.

The story behind the spike is as much emotional as it is strategic.

Nefesh B’Nefesh says Zionism and solidarity have intensified since Hamas’s October 7 massacre and the war that followed, with more than half of applicants citing that surge of identification with Israel as a key driver.

The pipeline is swelling too: Aliyah application files opened through the organization climbed from 8,943 in 2022 to 13,389 in 2025—about a 50% cumulative increase—pushing the group to expand staff and run dozens of events across North America to move people from “thinking about it” to actually boarding a flight.

Where these newcomers are landing matters. Through the Go Beyond initiative with Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael, 1,505 olim chose Jerusalem and Israel’s peripheral regions, with Jerusalem alone drawing 1,097—again underscoring how the capital remains the gravitational center for many English-speaking immigrants.

Other top destinations include Tel Aviv–Jaffa, Beit Shemesh, Ra’anana, Modi’in–Maccabim–Re’ut, Netanya, Herzliya, and Haifa.

This influx also hits Israel where it needs reinforcement most: skilled manpower.

Nefesh B’Nefesh reports 93 physicians arrived from North America as part of the International Medical Aliyah effort, and 541 physicians worldwide made Aliyah through the broader initiative this year—exactly the kind of talent Israel has been pushing to attract and absorb faster.

Zooming out, the North American bump stands out even more against Israel’s wider immigration picture.

The Immigration and Absorption Ministry reported about 21,900 new immigrants in 2025—down sharply overall as arrivals from Russia fell—but immigration from Western countries rose notably amid intensifying antisemitism abroad, with North American figures among the most closely watched.

For Nefesh B’Nefesh, the message is blunt: this is not just personal reinvention—it’s national impact.

“Aliyah is not solely a personal milestone, but a national and historic endeavor,” co-founder Rabbi Yehoshua Fass said, describing the decision to build lives in Israel now as part of strengthening the country’s future.

The post North American aliyah surges in 2025 as post–Oct. 7 solidarity drives thousands to Israel appeared first on World Israel News.

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