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JRM Hotels
Prima Palace — Badatz Agudat Yisrael

Badatz Agudat Yisrael

Prima Palace

Stay where the kehillah lives. Pines Street — near Geulah and Mea Shearim.

Reserve at the guaranteed rate

The hotel

Why it’s in our collection

The frum heart of the city. Daily minyanim and Daf Yomi in the on-site shul, a men’s mikveh downstairs, and Geulah’s bakeries around the corner.

Prima Palace is located at 2a Pines Street in Jerusalem — near Geulah, Mea Shearim, and Davidka Square, in the frum heart of the city. The hotel is close to the Kotel, Geulah, the light rail, and the center of town (Jaffa Street). The hotel's kashrus is under Badatz Agudat Yisrael Mehadrin supervision, recognized across the chareidi world.

This is one of Jerusalem's veteran frum hotels: founded in the late 1960s by the Porush family as Malon HaMerkaz, it has served chareidi guests from its first day, joined the Prima chain in 2015, and has been undergoing a phased room-by-room renovation in recent years. The 77 rooms come in four categories — Comfort (11 m²), Superior (13 m², fits a couple plus a child), Deluxe (18 m², sleeps three), and Deluxe with balcony — with renovated "New" variants of each, and netilas-yadayim sinks in the rooms.

Want the complete profile — Shabbos infrastructure, mikveh, parking, neighborhood? Read the full Prima Palace guide →

Rooms & guaranteed rates

One price. In dollars. Yours.

The price you see is the price you pay — locked when you reserve, charged only when your room is confirmed.

Classic Room

$345 / night

Sleeps 2

Warm, comfortable, and steps from Geulah.

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Family Room

$465 / night

Sleeps 4

Room for the children without splitting up.

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Connecting Family Rooms

$645 / night

Sleeps 6

Two rooms, one door between them — everyone together, everyone rested.

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Larger party, longer stay, or a Yom Tov plan? Write to us — we quote it personally, same guarantee.

Speak with us

Questions about Prima Palace?

Kashrus specifics, room layouts, what it’s like on Shabbos — ask someone who has stood in the lobby.

Friday 2pm ET through Motzei Shabbos — and on Yom Tov — we are offline.