Corridor · Spain → Israel
Buy from Spain. Delivered to Israel.
Spain is the global hub for padel — it's how the sport scaled in the first place. The Adidas Metalbone, the Bullpadel Vertex, the Nox AT10 — they sit on shelves in Madrid and Valencia at prices that are routinely 30–40% lower than what you'll find in Tel Aviv. Bringos puts you on the buying side of that gap.
Why this corridor
What sits cheaper in Spain than at home.
Padel
Adidas Metalbone, Bullpadel, Nox, Babolat. The Spanish padel market has supply Israel doesn't.
Leather goods + footwear
Camper, Pikolinos, Hispanitas, Mango leather. Hand-made small-batch product that doesn't cross borders through retail.
Spanish skincare + pharmacy
Babé, ISDIN, Heliocare. Brands EU pharmacies stock at retail that arrive at Israeli specialty stores at 2× markup.
Specialty food
Iberian olive oils, vermouth, single-origin saffron — the things that survive customs as "personal use" and don't carry a duty hit at the standard sizes.
How customs and shipping work
Spain ships out under standard EU export rules — your seller fills a CN22 or CN23 customs declaration honestly with the real product description and value, and the package leaves the EU zero-rated for VAT. On the Israel side, the December 2025 reform applies the same way as it does to U.S. shipments: under $150 is fully tax-free, $150–$500 is customs-duty-free with 17% VAT on the full value, and above $500 is a full customs entry. A padel racket from Adidas's Spanish line typically sits in the $130–$170 range at Spanish retail, which lets a seller structure either a clean under-$150 shipment or a single shipment with VAT priced into the listing. Transit time Madrid → Tel Aviv via Correos / DHL Express: 4–8 business days.
How it works
Post, claim, deliver.
Step 1
Post the request
Tell us what you want and what you'll pay. Bringos shows it to sellers near the source.
Step 2
A seller claims it
They source the product locally — from a store, their own stock, or a brand they have access to.
Step 3
Pay on delivery
Funds sit in escrow. They release when you confirm the package arrived.
Questions buyers ask
Spain → Israel, the small print.
Why are padel rackets so much cheaper from Spain?
Spain is the largest padel market in the world. Brands like Adidas Padel, Bullpadel, and Nox are headquartered or primarily distributed in Spain. Spanish retailers stock the full range at standard retail margins, while Israeli specialty stores import at distributor markup. The price gap on a top-tier racket is routinely $80–$120.
How does customs work on a Spain-to-Israel order?
Spain ships zero-rated for VAT on export under standard EU rules. On the Israel side, orders up to $150 are fully tax-free under the December 2025 reform; $150 to $500 is customs-duty-free with 17% VAT on the full value; above $500 is a full customs entry. Most padel rackets fall in the $130 to $170 retail range — your seller will structure the shipment accordingly.
Can I get the right size and grip?
Yes. When you post a request, you specify the exact model, weight, balance, and grip size. The seller confirms availability before claiming. Bringos's escrow holds payment until you confirm the racket you received matches what you asked for.
How long does Spain to Israel shipping take?
Four to eight business days through tracked international shipping (Correos with DHL handoff, DHL Express direct, or UPS). Your seller picks the carrier when they claim the request.
What about Spanish skincare brands like ISDIN or Babé?
Spanish skincare from EU pharmacies is one of the most price-disrupted categories on Bringos. Brands like ISDIN, Babé, and Heliocare are stocked at standard pharmacy retail in Spain and frequently appear at 2x or higher markup at Israeli specialty stores. Sellers in Barcelona and Madrid source these directly from local farmacias.
Ready to source?
Browse open requests in this corridor or post your own.
Customs and tax information on this page is general guidance, not legal advice. Israel updated its personal-import thresholds in late 2025 and figures here reflect public sources current as of April 2026. The Israel Tax Authority's official guide is the authoritative reference. Verify any specific shipment's classification with a customs broker before relying on the figures here.