Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

List of banks in Serbia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

This is a list of banks in Serbia.

Central bank

Commercial banks

Summarize
Perspective

As of 31 March 2025, there are 19 licensed commercial banks in Serbia.[1] Below is a balance sheet total and number of employees from 30 December 2022 which does not include the merger of Eurobank Direktna with AikBank that happened on 31 March 2025.[2]

More information Column, Explanation ...
More information Bank, Capital ...

Recent name changes

This is a list of recent (in last five years) name changes of currently active banks due to change of ownership structure:

  • On 30 April 2021, Vojvođanska banka a.d. Novi Sad changed its name into OTP Banka Srbija a.d. Novi Sad
  • On 19 November 2021, Opportunity banka a.d. Novi Sad changed its name to 3 banka a.d. Beograd
  • On 29 April 2022, Komercijalna banka a.d. Beograd changed its name to NLB Komercijalna banka a.d. Beograd
  • On 24 May 2024, Mobi Banka AD Beograd changed its name to Yettel bank AD Beograd
  • On 28 March 2025, Agroindustrijsko Komercijalna Banka "AIK Banka" a.d. Beograd changed its name to AikBank a.d. Beograd
Remove ads

Defunct banks

Summarize
Perspective

These are banks that either lost their licence due to the accumulated debts and insolvency, or went into bankruptcy, or merged into another bank:[3]

  • Dafiment banka (May 1993)
  • Jugoskandik (July 1993)
  • BB Slavija banka (October 2001)
  • Beogradska banka (January 2002)[4]
  • Beobanka (January 2002)[4]
  • Jugobanka (January 2002)[4]
  • Investbanka (January 2002)[4]
  • Borska banka (February 2004)
  • Valjevska banka (November 2004)
  • JIK banka (April 2005)
  • Srpska komercijalna banka (December 2005)
  • Control banka (January 2007)
  • Medifarm banka (January 2007)
  • Zepter banka (May 2007)
  • KOMBANKA (June 2007)
  • MONTEX banka (July 2007)
  • Raj banka (November 2007)
  • AIK Banka Senta (January 2008)
  • BC BANK CREDIT (May 2008)
  • GOLD INTERNACIONAL BANK (October 2008)
  • Astra banka (October 2008)
  • YUEKIBANKA (January 2009)
  • Razvojna banka Vojvodine (2010)
  • Agrobanka (May 2012)
  • Nova Agrobanka (October 2012)
  • Privredna banka (October 2013)
  • Univerzal banka (February 2014)
  • Findomestic Bank Serbia (November 2016)
  • Jubanka (December 2017)
  • Jugobanka Jugbanka (April 2018)
  • Piraeus Bank Beograd (October 2018)
  • Vojvođanska banka (April 2019)
  • OTP banka Srbija a.d. (April 2021)
  • mts banka (July 2021)
  • Direktna Banka (December 2021)
  • NLB banka a.d. (April 2022)
  • Naša AIK Banka (December 2022)
  • Eurobank Direktna (March 2025)

Representative offices of foreign banks

As of August 2024, these are the registered representative offices of foreign banks within the National Bank of Serbia:[5]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads