Israel entered 2026 with a record 86,090 unsold new homes nationwide, while transaction volumes remained soft.By Shmuli Volkin, Jewish Breaking NewsIsrael’s planning system has just handed Kiryat Shmona one of the biggest development approvals seen on the northern border in years: a new “Nahalim Quarter” with 4,500 housing units, alongside commercial space, employment and industrial uses, senior housing, long-term rental stock, hotel uses, and large open public areas.The district is planned across roughly 1,176 dunams, with a 270-dunam urban park at its center linking the Nahal Iyon and Nahal Snir corridors.This is not a narrow reconstruction project but rather an attempt to remake Kiryat Shmona as a larger regional center with a higher quality of living, not just more apartments on paper.Earlier planning material around the same push tied the area directly to a future rail station and transport hub, while the government’s February “Jumpstarting the North” plan promised immediate resources for housing, transportation, academic institutions, and broader demographic growth in Kiryat Shmona, Shlomi, and Metula.But the gap between approving homes and creating a functioning market in the north is still enormous.The State Comptroller documented that 26,167 Kiryat Shmona evacuees were dispersed across 13 receiving municipalities and, in a separate review, criticized the lack of a proper full-city evacuation plan for Kiryat Shmona despite its exposure on the Lebanese border.Even after earlier returns, residents have again come under fire as Hezbollah terrorists resumed attacks during the latest escalation, underscoring the central truth of the northern property market, as the biggest variable is not zoning but security.Israel entered 2026 with a record 86,090 unsold new homes nationwide, while transaction volumes remained soft.At the same time, official data cited by market analysts showed home prices rising again after months of weakness, including a 4.8% annual increase in the northern district.In other words, supply is already heavy, financing is still difficult, and the market is selective, yet planners are choosing to add more northern inventory anyway because they see national resilience as a housing strategy, not just a security slogan.In Safed, planners recently advanced a separate scheme near the Old City with about 300 new homes, 250 hotel rooms, retail space, and public parking.Nationally, the Planning Administration said 2025 approvals ran about 80% above target, with 18,223 units approved in the Northern District and rail expansion to Kiryat Shmona included in the broader infrastructure push.That combination matters as housing, tourism, and transport are being treated as one ecosystem, especially in frontier cities that need both residents and jobs to justify long-term recovery.The real estate question now is whether Israel can turn planning volume into lived reality. Kiryat Shmona does not need another headline about future units if families still doubt they can stay, investors still price in recurring attacks, and employers still hesitate to anchor there.But if the state follows this approval with rail, protected public infrastructure, real employment engines, and a durable security envelope, the city could become one of the most consequential redevelopment stories in the country.If not, the 4,500-home approval will remain what too many Israeli projects become in wartime: a powerful map and an unfinished market.The post Israel approves massive 4,500-home expansion in Kiryat Shmona as northern real estate hinges on security appeared first on World Israel News.