No rivers in Israel meet the strict criteria for this complete list.
Define the list tightly and it becomes empty. Require rivers that are perennial, fully inside the State of Israel, meet a fixed length, and have consistent official data. Many watercourses fail one or more of those rules. Mark each requirement and no single stream fits them all.
Understand the technical reasons. Israel is a small, dry country with many seasonal streams called nahal (wadis). Many larger flows are shared with or start in neighboring lands (for example, the Jordan River is perennial but crosses borders). Human works — dams, diversions, and drainage projects — change flows and names. Mapping and legal borders also split catchments, so no single river meets every strict data point you asked for.
Explore close alternatives that do exist. Look at named wadis and streams (Nahal HaBesor, Nahal Alexander, Nahal Taninim). Look at larger shared rivers and spring-fed streams in the Golan and Hula (Jordan River, Banias, Dan, Yarkon, Kishon) as near matches. Or study categories instead: Mediterranean-basin streams, Jordan/Dead Sea basin rivers, Negev wadis, and perennial springs. Use official sources like the Israel Water Authority or Israel Nature and Parks Authority for maps and data.


