Israel’s birth rate is still the highest among OECD countries, at about 2.9 births per woman in the most recent source I found. Israel’s overall fertility rate has been described as declining in all sectors, and one report said population growth fell under 1% for the first time since the state’s founding.

Quick context

  • A birth rate can mean either births per 1,000 people or the total fertility rate; the sources I found mainly use fertility rate, not crude birth rate.
  • The most specific recent figure available here is roughly 2.9 children per woman.
  • That level is well above replacement level and remains unusually high for a developed country.

Why it matters

Israel’s birth pattern is often discussed in demographic and policy debates because it affects future population growth, labor force size, and age structure. Recent commentary also notes that fertility is changing differently across communities, including the ultra-Orthodox population.

Mini table

[6] [10]
MeasureRecent figureWhat it means
Fertility rateAbout 2.9 births per womanHighest in the OECD, based on the source found
Population growthUnder 1%Reported as the lowest since the state’s founding

Important note

If you meant birth rate per 1,000 people rather than fertility rate, I can give that specific measure too.