The minimum voting age in Israel is eighteen, but younger teens do have a chance to voice their opinion through mock elections held in high schools across the country. Knesset members from various parties and party officials often visit these schools and explain their party's campaign issues, and sometimes schools are visited by the candidates themselves.

Almost 1,000 students participated in a mock election at Blich High School in the Ramat Gan area of Israel, and many consider it an indicator of how the public will vote on election day. When the voting was completed, dozens of media cameramen and reporters were there to report the results, much like an American presidential primary in the United States. Teens have been electing Barak over Sharon overwhelmingly during the past two weeks of elections.