talmudjerusalem.app is a free online Jerusalem Talmud (Talmud Yerushalmi, also called the Palestinian Talmud), the earlier companion to the Babylonian Talmud, compiled in the Land of Israel around 400 CE, Read the complete Yerushalmi in its original Aramaic and Hebrew with pre-recorded audio for every daf, word-by-word interlinear English translation, and classical commentary from Korban HaEdah, Pnei Moshe, and other classical commentators. Follow the Yerushalmi Daf Yomi, the Jerusalem Talmud parallel daily-page cycle that completes the Yerushalmi in about 4 years, Study tractates from Berakhot and Shabbat to Sanhedrin and Horayot, covering Seder Zeraim, Moed, Nashim, and Nezikin in the shorter but earlier Talmud. Ask Rabbi AI, four AI rabbi personalities (Rabbi Ari, Moses Rabbeinu, Rashi, Rambam) grounded in classical Jewish sources. No signup required.
Continue Learning
Thanks to our Premium members, we're able to support those in need, improve the app for all learners, and spread Jewish learning around the world. Join us 🙏
rating
100,000+learners
Hebrew Calendar Highlights
Follow the Jewish calendar with daily study schedules updated automatically.
All Tractates of the Jerusalem Talmud (Yerushalmi)
Rabbi AI
Get instant answers from 4 AI rabbis: Rabbi Ari (general guidance), Moses Rabbeinu (Torah & prophecy), Rashi (commentary expert), and Rambam (philosophy & halakha). Responses grounded in classical Jewish sources.
Study by Chapters
Frequently asked questions
What is the Jerusalem Talmud (Talmud Yerushalmi)?
The Jerusalem Talmud: also called Talmud Yerushalmi or the Palestinian Talmud: is the earlier of the two Talmudim, compiled in the Land of Israel around 400 CE. Despite the name, much of it was composed in the Galilee (Tiberias and Caesarea). It contains rabbinic discussions on the Mishnah for the first four orders (Zeraim, Moed, Nashim, Nezikin), written mostly in Galilean Aramaic and Hebrew.
How does the Jerusalem Talmud differ from the Babylonian Talmud?
Three main differences: (1) The Yerushalmi was compiled ~100–150 years earlier than the Bavli (400 CE vs. 500–600 CE); (2) it's significantly shorter and covers fewer orders (no Kodashim or Tohorot); (3) Jewish law (halakha) is traditionally decided according to the Bavli when the two conflict. The Yerushalmi is essential for Seder Zeraim (agricultural laws in the Land of Israel) since the Bavli doesn't cover it.
Does the Yerushalmi have Rashi and Tosafot?
No: Rashi and Tosafot commented only on the Babylonian Talmud. The classical commentaries on the Yerushalmi are Korban HaEdah and Pnei Moshe (both 18th-century), which serve the same foundational explanatory role as Rashi and Tosafot do for the Bavli. Our app includes both alongside every daf.
Is there a Daf Yomi cycle for the Yerushalmi?
Yes. Yerushalmi Daf Yomi runs parallel to Bavli Daf Yomi, popularized by the Vizhnitzer Rebbe in the mid-20th century. It uses the Vilna edition daf numbering and completes the Jerusalem Talmud in about 4 years. Our home calendar shows today's Yerushalmi daf.
Is this site free to use?
Yes. Reading the Jerusalem Talmud in the original, listening to the audio, using the English interlinear, and browsing Korban HaEdah, Pnei Moshe, and other classical commentators is completely free. Premium removes ads in peripheral features and unlocks extended AI rabbi answers.
Does it have audio of the Yerushalmi?
Yes. Pre-recorded professional audio for every daf. Available on every daf page and in the mobile apps (iOS and Android).
Is there an English translation?
Yes. Word-by-word interlinear English alignment on the original Aramaic and Hebrew text, designed to make the Yerushalmi accessible to learners with limited Aramaic. The classical text is always shown primary; English appears inline beneath each word.
How is this different from Sefaria or Artscroll?
Three unique features: pre-recorded professional audio for every daf, word-by-word English interlinear on the original Aramaic-Hebrew text, and four AI rabbi personalities (Rabbi Ari, Moses Rabbeinu, Rashi, Rambam) grounded in classical sources: all in a single free web + mobile app.
Does the app have a community?
Yes. Chat with Yerushalmi learners worldwide in topic-focused community channels inside the mobile app (iOS, Android). Discuss Yerushalmi-specific passages, tractate-by-tractate comparisons with the Bavli, and Korban HaEdah / Pnei Moshe commentary.
