
Israel ranks 11th happiest country
For the fourth year in a row, Israel holds its place on the United Nations’ 2017 World Happiness Report.

For the fourth year in a row, Israel holds its place on the United Nations’ 2017 World Happiness Report.

The ‘warm-heartedness’ of Israelis shines in Haifa as strangers answer social-media call to fill up a sparse wedding reception.

Facebook post in real-time called on strangers to fill a depressing wedding reception – and 2,000 people showed up to celebrate.

Better Life Index rates highest life satisfaction score of 36 countries.

We took a camera to the streets of Tel Aviv to film our own version of Pharrell Williams’ song ‘Happy.’ The successful result led to an invitation from the United Nations.

Denmark, Norway and Switzerland have the biggest smiles according to the World Happiness Report.

OECD study finds that Israelis are among most content in Western world despite low ranking on income and education.

An Israeli online video channel hopes to create an international laughing reservoir.

Positive psychology expert Tal Ben-Shahar taught the most popular course at Harvard, but decided he’d be happiest back home.

We’re happy and we know it. Israel ranked 14th in the first ever World Happiness Report commissioned for the United Nations.

Israel came in eighth, on a Gallup World Poll of the world’s happiest countries, ahead of the US, and the UK. But what do the Israelis think?
To determine just who are the happiest people in the world, researchers at the Gallup World Poll surveyed thousands of respondents in 155 countries between