Israel’s national pavilion at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show pulled in thousands of visitors and generated hundreds of business meetings, according to the Israel Export Institute. The showing suggests international appetite for Israeli innovation remains strong despite a turbulent geopolitical climate.
CES 2026 ran from January 6 to 9 in Las Vegas, bringing together the usual mix of tech executives, startup founders, and investors hunting for the next big thing. Israeli companies came prepared, showcasing products across AI, digital health, semiconductors, augmented reality, sensors, and edge computing.
What Israeli Firms Brought to the Table
The Israel Export Institute organized the main pavilion alongside the Ministry of Economy and Industry’s Foreign Trade Administration. They also set up a dedicated Vehicle Tech and Smart Mobility pavilion in the convention’s West Hall, targeting one of the show’s hottest categories.
The products on display weren’t just concept demos—these were market-ready technologies. Think real-time video enhancement tools, ultra-low-power AI chips designed for edge computing, at-home medical testing systems, AR platforms built specifically for sports broadcasting, noninvasive early detection tech for health conditions, and advanced manufacturing solutions.
Avi Balashnikov, chairman of the Israel Export Institute, framed the strong turnout as proof of economic resilience. Despite everything Israel’s tech sector has weathered recently, international demand for Israeli technology hasn’t disappeared. If anything, the foot traffic and meeting volume suggest buyers are still paying attention.
Signs of Renewed Partnership Interest
Yigal Haccoun, vice president at the Export Institute, noted that the meetings themselves indicated something shifting. After what he called “a challenging period,” there seems to be renewed interest in partnering with Israeli firms.
Is this just polite post-show optimism, or are we seeing genuine momentum? The Export Institute says several exhibitors reported real progress toward commercial agreements following their CES exposure. Those kinds of deals don’t happen overnight at trade shows—they usually start with initial conversations that build over months. But getting in the room is half the battle, and Israeli companies apparently got plenty of face time with potential partners.
The fact that thousands of attendees made their way to the Israeli pavilion matters more than it might seem. CES is massive, sprawling across multiple convention halls with competing attractions at every turn. Drawing consistent traffic means your booth has something people actually want to see, not just flashy marketing.
What This Says About Israeli Tech’s Position
Trade show attendance is one of those metrics that’s easy to inflate or dismiss, but the combination of visitor numbers and reported business meetings paints a clearer picture. Israeli tech companies aren’t just showing up—they’re generating actual business interest in competitive categories like AI chips and health tech where margins are tight and buyers are selective.
The semiconductor and edge computing products deserve special attention. These aren’t consumer gadgets that go viral on social media. They’re infrastructure technologies that require serious technical evaluation and long sales cycles. If Israeli firms are getting traction there, it signals confidence from buyers who’ve done their homework.
Whether this translates into a strong year for Israeli tech exports remains to be seen. CES meetings often take months to convert into signed contracts, and global economic headwinds haven’t disappeared. But based on what happened in Las Vegas this January, Israeli innovation still has an audience willing to listen—and potentially write checks.

