The aim of this study was to identify the HIV types and subtypes prevalent in Israel among different populations in terms of risk or geographic origin of the HIV infection. A total of 149 blood samples were collected from HIV-positive persons from different risk groups for HIV infection who were living in Israel. HIV subtyping was performed by a V3-based peptide enzyme immunoassay, supplemented by direct sequencing of polymerase chain reaction products from the V3 region. Multiple HIV-1 subtypes were shown to circulate in Israel; whereas most of the infections among Israelis and Palestinians were of subtype B, infections among the large Ethiopian population in Israel were caused by HIV-1 subtype C. Occasionally, we found HIV-1 subtypes A and D and a putative B/C recombinant. No HIV-2 infection was identified. Sequence comparisons and phylogenetic tree analyses point at multiple introductions of HIV into the country. The presence of mainly two different HIV-1 subtypes, B and C, in two separated populations in Israel may result in two distinct epidemiologic patterns among HIV-infected individuals in Israel. Subtype C infection among the Ethiopians in Israel opens new research avenues toward better understanding the natural history of infection with HIV-1 subtype C in Ethiopians living in a Western society compared with those living in Ethiopia.