The cost of genocide: Israel’s war on Gaza by the numbers
Billions of dollars have been spent, directly and
indirectly, by Israel since it started its war on Gaza in October 2023
Published On 19 Feb 2026
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/2/19/the-cost-of-genocide-israels-war-on-gaza-by-the-numbers
Since its genocidal war on Gaza began in October 2023,
Israel has expended vast amounts of money and manpower on levelling the
Palestinian territory and destroying its institutions.
It has killed more than 72,000 people in achieving this end, including tens of
thousands of children and women — with some independent researchers suggesting
that the death toll is higher than 75,000.
Of those who are still alive, many have suffered the
effects of deliberately imposed starvation: first during Israel’s siege of
northern Gaza in late 2024, which United Nations officials described as “apocalyptic”, and later during the man-made famine Israeli
policies created in August 2025, when images of malnourished and starving children
became commonplace on news bulletins around the world.
None of this has come cheaply. Israel – backed by its
principal ally, the United States – has poured billions of dollars into waging
its war on Gaza. So, how much does the killing of more than 72,000 Palestinians
cost? How much do you need to spend on munitions to commit a genocide? And what
is the impact of industrialised mass killing on an economy?
Here’s what we know.
How much money has Israel spent on the Gaza war?
The Bank of Israel put the overall economic toll of
the war at about 352 billion shekels ($112bn). That total includes roughly
243 billion shekels ($77bn) in direct defence costs, 33 billion shekels
($10.5bn) for the property tax compensation fund, civilian outlays of
57 billion shekels ($18bn) and interest payments of 19 billion shekels ($6bn).
In early 2025, taking the Gaza war in isolation,
Israel’s former chief military economic adviser, Gil Pinchas, estimated that
the cost to Israel had been 150 billion shekels ($48bn), running at an average
cost of 300 million shekels ($96m) per day. On average, 100 Palestinians were
killed in Gaza every day, according to Philippe Lazzarini, commissioner-general
of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA).
“Every item the [Israeli army] uses in combat has a
price tag in shekels, detailed in a special, highly specific price book,”
Pinchas told journalists, referring to the price paid by the Israeli army, and
not Palestinians, for every combat ration, litre of fuel, vehicle, bullet and
missile launched against Gaza. “The book is updated constantly, including
during the war … We keep our finger on the pulse.”
How much of the war’s expenditure was spent on
munitions?
We don’t know for sure.
Pinchas did say that Israel had spent 340 billion
shekels ($108bn) on munitions since the war began, but nowhere near all of that
has been used. A significant proportion of that money has also been spent on
purchasing arms from Israeli manufacturers, which has helped to offset the
wider impact of the war on the Israeli economy.
Line-by-line details for most military budgets are
rarely available. But some insights can be gleaned from Israel’s other wars in
the region.
According to an estimate midway through the war by The
Wall Street Journal, Israel’s war on Iran was costing it $200m per day, with
the missiles used to intercept Iranian rockets, sometimes reaching 400 a day,
estimated at anywhere between $700,000 and $4m each.
In addition, Israel’s September 2024 attack on the Lebanese group Hezbollah’s
communication devices, which relied on a plan that had been set into motion
years earlier, is reported to have set the Israeli treasury back some one
billion shekels ($318m).
What has been the overall cost to the wider Israeli
economy?
Considerable, and much of that is down to manpower.
Of Israel’s 465,000 military reservists, upwards of
300,000 were deployed to Gaza during the first year of the war. This is in
addition to 170,000 active-duty personnel. The cost of maintaining that number
of active soldiers, as well as the impact on the wider economy due to the loss
of workers called up as reservists, is astronomical.
According to Israel’s treasury, some 70 billion
shekels ($22.3bn) has been spent on its reserve forces alone during the course
of the war, while the cost of maintaining its standing army in 2025 was
estimated to be 15.37 billion shekels ($4.9bn).
The Bank of Israel estimates that the cost of one
month of service for a military reservist is about 38,000 shekels ($12,100) in
lost production.
With military budgets unlikely to recede in the wake
of the genocide and other wars that Israel has engaged in over the past two
years, a column in the Israeli liberal daily Haaretz suggested that over the
next decade, the cost of the war could run to, at a minimum, 500 billion
shekels ($159bn).
How much has Israel’s genocide cost the US?
More than many US voters might suppose.
According to Brown University’s 2025 Costs of War report, since October 7, 2023, the US has provided Israel
with some $21.7bn in military aid.
In addition to that, the American taxpayer has funded
US operations in support of Israel in Yemen, Iran and the wider Middle East at
a cost of $9.65bn to $12.07bn, meaning a total US investment of somewhere
between $31.35bn and $33.77bn on Israel’s wars since 2023.
How much will it cost to rebuild Gaza?
According to the United Nations, rebuilding Gaza –
where Israel has destroyed the majority of buildings – would take decades and
cost somewhere in the region of $70bn.
In a report, the UN noted that Israel’s military
operations had “significantly undermined every pillar of survival” within the
enclave and that the entire population of 2.3 million people faced “extreme,
multidimensional impoverishment” – the term for poverty extending beyond
financial duress, in areas such as a lack of clean water, proper sanitation and
education.
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