Showing 25 attractions
8
6 reviews
Israeli restaurants and wineries set up booths in Hayarkan Park to showcase delicacies in the annual Taste of Tel Aviv festival. — Travel + Leisure
8
2 reviews
8
3 reviews
The first section of Carmel Market (commonly referred to as the shuk) consists of cheap clothing, but continue farther down to the fruit and vegetable section, where the real show begins. — Fodor's
8
3 reviews
This museum's eight pavilions span 3,000 years of Israeli life. — Fodor's
8
3 reviews
Once a cluster of decrepit warehouses, the port is buzzing with cafés and restaurants. — Fodor's
8
3 reviews
The charming two-story home of Chaim Nachman Bialik (1873–1934), considered the father of Hebrew poetry. — Fodor's
8
3 reviews
7
2 reviews
Presented here are 2,500 years of the diaspora (Jews who settled outside Israel). — Fodor's
7
2 reviews
7
2 reviews
Tel Aviv has three beautiful ports. The Jaffa port scenery includes fishermen and their boats, hidden coffee shops and few stores. A line of warehouses turned into seafood restaurants, art galleries. — Afar Magazine
7
2 reviews
An innovative, multi-media complex that looks at the myriad of ways Jewish culture morphed in each part of the world. — Frommer's
7
2 reviews
It was in this historic house that the independence of Israel was declared on May 14, 1948. — Frommer's
7
2 reviews
One of Israel's major painters, Reuven Rubin (1893–1974) bequeathed his house to Tel Aviv along with 45 of his works. — Fodor's
7
3 reviews
A modern-day cabinet of curiosities housed in a 300-year-old inn. — Atlas Obscura
7
2 reviews
A pair of whitewashed buildings—one built in 1892, the other in 1908—make up this attractive complex. — Fodor's
7
2 reviews
This museum makes you feel as if you were back in the days of the Palmach, the pre-State underground, with a group of young defenders. — Fodor's
7
2 reviews
It's a small market, yet full of different people from different backgrounds: Turkish, Persian, Moroccan, Bulgarian and more. — Afar Magazine
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