Less than a quarter felt an economic boycott would increase Israel's willingness to negotiate.
Israel supporters hope the figures will answer the concerns of those who believe attitudes have turned heavily against the country in the past year.
The polling of 2,000 people was conducted online a fortnight ago by Populus on behalf of the We Believe in Israel advocacy group and the Jewish Leadership Council.
It showed 62 per cent of people believe Israel and the Palestinians were equally at fault for the ongoing dispute.
Asked whether they supported Israel's right to exist as a majority Jewish state, 44 per cent said yes, but only as part of a two-state solution.
The phrases people most associate with Israel are "Jewish" and "under threat", but also "aggressive" or "bullying".