Skip to content

How much does a private guide in Israel cost?

What a private guide really costs, and what a day rate quietly leaves out.

Contents(3)
  1. Why I’d rather not just give you a day rate
  2. Do you drive, or is a car extra?
  3. A few things I do differently
The short answer

A private licensed guide in Israel costs anything from about $350 to $1,000 or more a day, depending on experience, the itinerary and whether transport is included. I’d rather understand your trip and give you one honest all-in figure than lead with a day rate.

$350–1,000+a day for a licensed guide
+$200–300a day if I drive you myself
$400–800a day for a professional driver

One of the first things people ask me, often before anything else, is what I charge. It’s a fair question, and a hard one to answer honestly in a single number, so rather than leave you guessing I thought I’d explain how it actually works.

The short version is that a private licensed guide in Israel costs anything from about $350 to $1,000 or more a day. It’s a wide range, the cheapest rates tend to come from guides who’ve only recently qualified, and it climbs from there with experience, specific qualifications, the itinerary and whether transport is included.

Why I’d rather not just give you a day rate

Honestly, a day rate on its own can be a little misleading, which is why I’m wary of leading with one.

It quietly leaves out the things that add up. Entry fees to the sites aren’t usually included. It’s normal to cover meals while we’re out together. And on the longer trips up north or down south, there’s a night’s accommodation for me (and for a driver, if we have one).

There’s VAT too, though as an overseas visitor you’re exempt. So when someone asks my price, I’d rather understand the trip first and then give you a single, honest figure with everything in it. I don’t much like surprises landing on a bill later, and I don’t imagine you do either.

What I do commit to is giving you a rough estimate as early as possible in the process so you’re not wasting your time. I just need some initial information to be able to do that.

Illustration of Jerusalem's Old City, with the Dome of the Rock and a minaret, viewed through stone arches at sunset.

Do you drive, or is a car extra?

It depends how you’d like to travel. If you’re happy to walk or arrange your own transport, that’s the simplest and the cheapest.

If I drive you in my own car it’s a bit more, usually around $200 to $300 a day, and that covers the fuel, parking and a comfortable car.

Honestly though, I prefer not to do the driving as I don’t think it gives you the best experience. I’d rather bring in a professional driver with the right vehicle (anything from a saloon car up to a minibus), which tends to run from $400 to $800 a day depending on the vehicle and the distances.

This comes with a lot of advantages. The biggest is that we make the most of our time. We don’t have to tour to and from parking lots, but can be dropped off and picked up wherever we like, without having to go back on ourselves. We can also safely leave things in the car as they’ll always be watched.

Another advantage is I can more safely use the drives to give you extra context and point things out as we go (driving in Israel can be an adventure so if I’m behind the wheel I need to be fully focused on the road!). And on hot days I call ahead to make sure the air-conditioning is working perfectly by the time we get to the car.

I’ll always tell you which option genuinely suits your trip rather than the one that costs the most.

A few things I do differently

Two things people are often relieved to hear. It’s common industry practice to put a clock on the day; plenty of guides cap it at eight or nine hours and charge for anything over, and also charge extra for weekends or for Shabbat. I don’t. The price is the price, I don’t want you to feel you’re under time pressure, and that gives us full flexibility to fit the schedule to your needs.

Since October 7th I’ve also kept booking deliberately flexible, because I know plans are fragile at the moment (flights get cancelled, situations change): a 10% deposit holds your dates, you settle the rest the day before, and it’s fully refundable unless you cancel on the day itself.

So if you’re trying to put a budget together, the most honest thing I can do is this: tell me what you’ve got in mind, and I’ll come back with a real, all-in price you can actually rely on.

What guests say

If you are going to Israel, you would be mad not to give him a call.

Amol Rajan, BBC presenter and broadcaster

Having been on trips in Israel with seven different tour guides, Samuel stood above all the rest.

Seasoned Israel traveller

Samuel is one part walking encyclopedia, one part storyteller, one part stand-up comedian.

Berkeley Haas Business School student
Read 400+ reviews