The vending market in Israel is expected to regain stability, once the war-related disruptions subside. However, ongoing security threats continue to pose risks, with heightened concerns leading to reduced movement and lower consumer spending in public spaces.
The Ministry of Health is considering a proposal to allow OTC medications to be sold via vending machines. If approved, these machines would be placed in strategic locations such as assisted living facilities, health centres, and universities.
The competitive landscape for vending is unlikely to experience significant shifts over the forecast period. High barriers to entry - such as securing access to popular beverage and snack brands and establishing reliable logistics networks - discourage new entrants.
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Understand the latest market trends and future growth opportunities for the Vending industry in Israel with research from Euromonitor International's team of in-country analysts – experts by industry and geographic specialisation.
Key trends are clearly and succinctly summarised alongside the most current research data available. Understand and assess competitive threats and plan corporate strategy with our qualitative analysis, insight and confident growth projections.
If you're in the Vending industry in Israel, our research will help you to make informed, intelligent decisions; to recognise and profit from opportunity, or to offer resilience amidst market uncertainty.
Vending (automatic merchandising) is the sale of products at an unattended point of sale through a machine operated by introducing coins, bank notes, payment cards, tokens or other means of cashless payment. Sales figures cover vended products only (i.e. food, drink and other consumable goods such as vended tobacco, sanitary products and condoms). Services such as the public telephone, launderette facilities, travel tickets, stamps, passport photographs, domestic energy supplies and business card creation are excluded. Coverage includes vending systems installed in public and semi-captive environments only. Hotels, transport networks, recreational centres, shopping centres/malls are included. Factories, offices, hospitals, prisons, schools and other captive environments are excluded.
See all of our definitionsThis report originates from Passport, our Vending research and analysis database.
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