Sheba Medical Center at Tel HaShomer is the largest hospital in Israel and the Middle East and consistently ranked among the top ten hospitals in the world by Newsweek, internationally recognised for cancer, cardiac surgery, and rare disease treatment. Sheba is also Israel's ARC — an innovation hub combining clinical care with healthcare technology startups — and attracts patients from across the Middle East, Africa, and beyond for cutting-edge treatments. Hotels in Tel Aviv's vibrant city centre and the Ramat Gan area near Sheba offer families the extraordinary cultural energy of Israel's most cosmopolitan city.
The finest boutique hotel in the White City, the Norman occupies two beautifully restored Eclectic-style buildings on Rothschild Boulevard with a rooftop pool, the city's best-stocked library bar, and a restaurant that reflects the best of modern Israeli cuisine. The aesthetic — raw concrete and vintage leather — perfectly captures Tel Aviv's industrial-bohemian soul.
A 19th-century French hospital converted into the most dramatic luxury hotel in Israel, set among the ancient alleys of Jaffa's flea market and port with rooms that juxtapose original sandstone walls and arches with glass and steel. The rooftop pool with its Tel Aviv skyline panorama is extraordinary, and the food hall is the best in the region.
The Setai brand's Israeli outpost occupies a complex of Ottoman-era and British Mandate buildings in the bohemian Neve Tzedek neighbourhood with pools at multiple levels, a celebrated Yakimono restaurant, and the most dramatic contrast of ancient stone and contemporary design in Tel Aviv. Walking distance to both the beach and the Carmel Market.
The most beloved design hotel on the Tel Aviv beach strip, Brown Beach House has the playful, effortlessly cool aesthetic of the local Brown Hotels group applied to a beachfront location. The rooftop with sea views, the excellent breakfast spread of Israeli salads and shakshuka, and the social lobby bar are all exceptional.
A Tel Aviv institution on the beach at Independence Park, the Hilton has maintained its position as the city's most popular large beach hotel for decades. The pool facing the sea is always busy, the beach access is direct, and the service is reliably good. The kosher restaurant is one of the better hotel dining rooms in the city.
In the city's former diamond exchange district, this IHG boutique has themed its rooms around the gem trade with crystal elements, faceted design motifs, and rooms that express Tel Aviv's commercial glamour. The pool terrace and the restaurant on the exchange floor are both distinctive.