Chronological list by year of establishment. •
Rishon LeZion (1882) •
Rosh Pinna (1882, taking over and renaming the colony of Gei Oni established in 1878 and down to three families by 1882) •
Zikhron Ya'akov (1882) •
Petah Tikva (1882; reestablished after first attempt in 1878) •
Mazkeret Batya (1883 established as "Ekron") •
Ness Ziona (1883; began as "Nahalat Reuven") •
Yesud HaMa'ala (1883) •
Gedera (1884) •
Bat Shlomo (1889) •
Meir Shfeya (1889) •
Rehovot (1890) •
Mishmar HaYarden (1890) •
Hadera (1891) •
Ein Zeitim (1892) •
Motza (1894) •
Hartuv (1895) •
Metula (1896) •
Be'er Tuvia (1896 reestablished and renamed by
Hovevei Zion; first settled in 1887 as Castina for nearby
Qastina) • Bnei Yehuda (1898; not identical with the new
Bnei Yehuda) •
Mahanayim (1898–1912) •
Sejera (1899–1902), now Moshav Ilaniya • Mas'ha (1901), renamed
Kfar Tavor in 1903 •
Yavne'el (1901) •
Menahemia (1901) •
Beit Gan (1903; next to
Yavne'el) •
Atlit (1903) •
Giv'at Ada (1903) •
Kfar Saba (1904) Colonies were also established in the
Hauran on lands bought by Baron
Edmond de Rothschild in the area of the villages of Sahem al-Jawlan,
Jileen and Nafa’a, by immigrants of the
First Aliyah in a total of nine outposts, but the main five colonies, founded in 1895, had to be abandoned within a short while: •
Tiferet Binyamin (1895) • Zichron Menachem (1895) • Nahalat Moshe (1895) • Achvat Yisrael (1895) • Beit Ikar (1895). ==Second and Third Aliyah moshavot ==