List of banks in Serbia

Central banks

Commercial banks

As of 08 October 2016, there are 29 licensed commercial banks in Serbia.[1] For each of them, there is a balance sheet total made on December 31, 2013.

Column Explanation
Bank Bank's name in a simplified form
Capital Major owner nationality
Headquarters Location of bank's headquarters in Serbia
Assets Amount of total assets of bank in million euros in last fiscal year
Revenue Amount of revenue of bank in million euros in last fiscal year
Employees Number of people working for the bank
Bank Capital Headquarters Assets
(EUR millions)
Revenue
(EUR millions)
Employees
1 Addiko Bank Austria Belgrade 1,093 150 648
2 AIK Banka Serbia Belgrade 1,329 135 610
3 Alpha Bank Greece Belgrade 723 129 893
4 Banca Intesa Italy Belgrade 3,727 445 3,082
5 Banka Poštanska štedionica Serbia Belgrade 868 121 1,827
6 Crédit Agricole France Novi Sad 539 71 922
7 Direktna Banka Serbia Kragujevac 248 14 430
8 Erste Bank Austria Novi Sad 854 110 1,011
9 Eurobank Greece Belgrade 1,379 421 1,457
10 Halkbank Turkey Belgrade 295 32 402
11 JUBMES banka Serbia Belgrade 129 11 130
12 Jugobanka Jugbanka Serbia K. Mitrovica 11 2 112
13 Komercijalna banka Serbia Belgrade 3,172 307 2,916
14 Expobank Greece Belgrade 213 21 287
15 Mirabank United Arab Emirates Belgrade - - 41
16 MTS Banka Serbia Belgrade 64 7 187
17 NLB banka Slovenia Belgrade 341 34 450
18 Opportunity banka United States Novi Sad 77 14 300
19 OTP banka Hungary Novi Sad 278 41 684
20 Piraeus Bank Greece Belgrade 512 60 440
21 ProCredit Bank Germany Belgrade 606 98 580
22 Raiffeisen Banka Austria Belgrade 1,792 290 1,594
23 Sberbank Srbija Russia Belgrade 867 66 669
24 Société Générale France Belgrade 1,927 216 1,343
25 Srpska banka Serbia Belgrade 245 31 436
26 Telenor banka Norway Belgrade 46 21 175
27 UniCredit Bank Serbia Italy Belgrade 2,198 384 1,201
28 Vojvođanska banka Greece Novi Sad 950 93 1,452
29 VTB Banka Russia Belgrade 90 9 76
Total 24,573 3,353 26,676

Defunct banks

These are banks that either lost their licence due to the accumulated debts and insolvency, or went into bankruptcy:[2]

  • BB Slavija banka (October 2001)
  • Beogradska banka (January 2002)
  • Beobanka (January 2002)
  • Jugobanka (January 2002)
  • Investbanka (January 2002)
  • 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)

Representative offices of foreign banks

These are the registered representative offices of foreign banks within the National Bank of Serbia:[3]

References

  1. "List of Banks". nbs.rs. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  2. "Banke u stečaju". aod.rs (in Serbian). Agencija za osiguranje depozita. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  3. "Predstavništva stranih banaka". nbs.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 21 March 2015.
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