Ami Luttwak, one of the four founders of Israeli cybersecurity firm Wiz, has purchased about 3.5 dunams (nearly an acre) of land in the town of Binyamina for an estimated 28 million shekels.
The land, located on HaGadna Street near the Binyamina winery, was acquired in two separate transactions from two longtime local families who had lived in the town for decades. In the first deal, Luttwak bought the northern portion of the property, about 2.5 dunams bordering the winery, which currently includes two older houses. In a second transaction, he purchased an adjacent plot of about one dunam with an additional house.
Binyamina is a town with a rural character and a mixed population. The property is located on a small street west of the railway line, where many residents have yet to fully exercise their building rights. Due to the size of the street and the relatively large plots, the parcels acquired by Luttwak make up roughly half of the street, according to the report.
Luttwak, 42, has been involved in two major exits in Israel’s high-tech sector. In 2015, Adallom, a company he co-founded, was sold to Microsoft for $320 million. At the time, estimates said each founder earned about $25 million before tax.
His second and far larger exit came in 2025, when Wiz agreed to be acquired by Google in a cash deal valued at $32 billion, a transaction that would rank as one of the largest in Israeli tech history. The deal has not yet been completed, but estimates suggest that if finalized, each of Wiz’s founders could receive about $3 billion.
Luttwak did not respond to a request for comment.


