Kibbutz Almog ![]()
Kibbutz Almog Show on map
Studying at the Hebrew University? Studying in Jerusalem?
Almog is a thriving kibbutz descending to the Judean Desert, located a short distance from the shores of the northern Dead Sea and only 25 minutes from Jerusalem. The village in the locality is home to 30 male and female students, religious and secular, who live in a cooperative kibbutz atmosphere, set up projects for the benefit of the kibbutz community and admire the 'Kamel' - the social pub in the kibbutz.
Educational institutions near the village:
Social action
Each student leads a social project in the community. The project is initiated and designed together with one of the Kibbutz's residents, after an in-depth evaluation of the local needs and is specifically tailored to channel the energies of these idealistic and driven young adults to strengthen and empower the local community.
A young and kicking community
The real and most significant fun in a student village is the family atmosphere. A student in the village enjoys a social life that can not be found anywhere else: spontaneous sunrise trips, cool jams, bonfires, a community pub, communal meals and especially a cohesive group that will always be there for you ...
Discounted accommodation
Students participating in the program are entitled to discounted accommodation in a magical landscape, a scholarship of 10,000 NIS, and ... a wonderful quality of life.
There is room for everyone
The program is suitable for male and female students, married and single, studying for a bachelor’s or master’s degree.

About Kibbutz Almog
Almog is a kibbutz in the northern Dead Sea, near the city of Jericho, within the Megillot Regional Council. The kibbutz is named after Yehuda Almog, who was one of the first Zionist settlers in the Dead Sea and was one of the founders of the potash factory in the south of the Dead Sea, where he descended in 1934. The kibbutz earns its living from a palm grove, field crops, a barn, a breeding coop, an 81-room holiday village, tourist services at the Almog junction and a gas station, and the work of some of the members in the area and in Jerusalem.
