 Hey guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rosel here. For today's video, it's going to be a super quick one for my living in Israel playlist and tended to help new karmarists or long karmarists to be successful in life in Israel. So if you're making a domestic bank transfer in Israel or transferring to an account in Israel, you will commonly be asked or you will actually pretty much always be asked for something called the bank code. In Hebrew, it's code habank like I put up on the screen. And there's a few online resources that will help you to find these. You can firstly just type into Google code habank and you'll find actually a bunch of different resources from different websites. So I'm not going to link to the one I've used here because, you know, in the internet, sometimes things disappear. But this link, for instance, says the numbers of the banks in Israel. So basically when you're transferring to an account in Israel, you have the code habank. And I just jumped down the line here. You also have mispar sniff. You have the branch number. That's what mispar sniff means. And you have the mispar hash bone. And commonly it's done like this. So let's say your branch number is 123. And your account number is 123456. So you'll commonly see on letterheaded transfer documentation 123 hyphen 123456. And if your bank number is let's say one, then sometimes you'll see it appearing like this, one hyphen 123 hyphen 123456. So that's just a common kind of format used in Israel. Firstly, the bank number, then the sniff identifier, that's a three-digit number usually for the branch. And finally, your bank account number. Now I'll see the actual numbers of the banks in Israel. All these lookups should give you the same information. And I hope you can see this, but you can see Leomid is Khoda Bank 10. Bank of Holim is 12. Mizrachi Tafakhot is 20. This is actually a number ordered according to the large size of the bank, if I'm not mistaken, because I know that Mizrachi Tafakhot is the third biggest bank in Israel. And Leomid is the first, I think. Discount's 11. Merkantil is 17. Now we're getting to the smaller ones. Bank Merkantil Discount is 68. Ben Leomid is 31. Masad is 46. Otorachayal is 14. Look how many banks are in Israel. You bank. Bank of Ben Leomid is 26. There's two Bank of Ben Leomid. I'm not sure. Let's not get into the whole murky world of how many banks there are in Israel. 52. Bank Igud, which I think has been subsumed into Mizrachi Tafakhot, was 13. Bank Yahav is 4. Bank Ador is 9. Bank Yerushalayim, another one of the small banks, is 54. This is an interesting one. 1-0, the digital bank. It's the first fully digital or online Israeli bank. That is 18. City Bank 22. HSBC, which is used by some overseas financial services in Israel, like when you fund Interactive Brokers accounts, it's through City Bank, sorry, 22. These are the kinds of clients often you'll find in these banks. HSBC, 23. State Bank of India, interesting, 39. Bank Leomid, 34. Bank of Jordan, 37. PCB, 38. Jordan Ahli Bank, 43. Arab Bank, so these are ones used in the Palestinian territories, Palestinian investing banks, so the list goes on and on and on. Finally Bank Israel, which is Israel's central bank, has assigned its bank code of 99, but really the common ones you're going to be using and encountering are probably at the top of this list. Leomid, 10, Apolim, 12, Mizrachi Tafakhot, 20, etc. I will put a link to this page in the description, but if you have trouble finding this, just search Google for Kudai Bank or Mizparai Bank and you'll find your bank number and again this is required typically when you are making transfers, domestic transfers within Israel and sometimes even overseas financial providers that are used to depositing funds in Israeli accounts will have baked into their systems a field for the bank number to assist with the smooth and orderly transfer of money into and out of and between accounts in Israel. Hope this video is useful, thank you guys for watching. More videos from me are coming soon.