Serbia IBAN Format & Validator (RS)
Serbia IBANs are 22 characters long. Serbia is not a SEPA member — standard international wire transfer charges and timelines apply.
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Serbia
Country Code: RS
Serbia IBAN Example
RS35 2600 0560 1001 6113 79Validate a Serbia IBAN
Spaces are removed automatically. Letters converted to uppercase.
Serbia IBAN — Complete Banking Guide
The International Bank Account Number (IBAN) system is used in Serbia to uniquely identify bank accounts for domestic and international transfers. Every bank account in Serbia is assigned a 22-character IBAN that begins with the country code RS, followed by two mathematically calculated check digits, and then the local BBAN (Basic Bank Account Number) encoding 3 digits bank, 13 digits account, 2 check digits. The IBAN standard in Serbia is governed by ISO 13616 and administered through the SWIFT IBAN registry.
Unlike domestic account numbers which vary in format between banks, an IBAN provides a standardised, universally recognised account identifier. Any bank in the world that participates in the SWIFT network can process a payment to a Serbia IBAN without requiring additional routing information — the bank code and branch information is encoded directly in the IBAN itself.
International Transfers to Serbia — What You Need
Serbia is not a SEPA member, which means standard international wire transfer rules apply. When sending money to a Serbia bank account, you will need the following information:
- Serbia IBAN — 22 characters, starting with RS
- SWIFT/BIC code of the receiving Serbia bank — find it on BankZop's SWIFT Code Lookup
- Beneficiary's full name as registered with their bank
- Bank name and address — required by many sending banks for compliance
- Transfer purpose — required for RBI compliance when sending from India (family remittance, education fee, business payment, etc.)
International wire transfers to Serbia typically take 1–5 business days depending on the correspondent banking chain and any currency conversion required. Always verify the IBAN with the recipient before initiating a transfer — an incorrect IBAN will cause the payment to be rejected, and some banks charge fees for returned wires.
How to Read a Serbia IBAN — Digit by Digit
The 22-character Serbia IBAN is structured as follows: RSkk BBBC CCCC CCCC CCCC CC
- Positions 1–2 (RS): ISO 3166-1 country code for Serbia. This is always fixed and cannot change.
- Positions 3–4 (kk): Two numeric check digits calculated using the ISO 7064 modulo-97 algorithm. These verify the entire IBAN is correctly formed.
- Positions 5–22 (BBAN): The Serbia-specific BBAN (Basic Bank Account Number): 3 digits bank, 13 digits account, 2 check digits. This part encodes the bank, branch, and account number according to Serbia's national banking standards.
For example: RS35 2600 0560 1001 6113 79 is a structurally valid Serbia IBAN. When you paste any Serbia IBAN into the validator above and click Validate IBAN, BankZop instantly verifies the check digits using the modulo-97 algorithm — no internet connection required for the validation itself.
Finding Your Serbia IBAN
Your Serbia IBAN can be found in several places. The most reliable sources are:
- Mobile or online banking app: Log in and navigate to Account Details or Account Summary. The IBAN is displayed alongside your account number and sort code.
- Bank statement: Your monthly bank statement — whether paper or PDF — includes the IBAN in the account summary header, typically on the first page.
- Cheque book: Some Serbia banks print the IBAN on the front page of the cheque book or inside the cover.
- Bank counter or customer service: Call the number on the back of your debit card and ask for your full IBAN. You will need to verify your identity.
- Welcome letter: When an account is first opened, banks typically send a welcome letter containing the IBAN and account details.
Once you have your IBAN, share it with anyone who needs to send you money from abroad. Never share your full IBAN publicly, but it is safe to share it with people or businesses you trust for legitimate payment purposes — an IBAN alone cannot be used to withdraw money from your account.
Common Serbia IBAN Errors to Avoid
- Wrong character count: A Serbia IBAN must be exactly 22 characters. Count carefully — even one extra or missing character will fail validation.
- Confusing IBAN with account number: Your IBAN is different from your local account number. The account number appears inside the IBAN but the two codes are not interchangeable.
- Spaces in the IBAN: IBANs are sometimes written with spaces for readability (e.g. RS35 2600 0560 1001 6113 79), but when entering an IBAN in a bank form, always remove all spaces. BankZop's validator accepts both formats.
- Using IBAN for domestic transfers: Within Serbia, some banks still use local account numbers for domestic transfers. Check with your bank whether IBAN is required or optional for domestic payments.
- Wrong country IBAN: Never use an IBAN from one country for an account in another country. The RS prefix specifically identifies this as a Serbia account.
Banking Codes for Serbia — Quick Reference
When dealing with Serbia bank transactions, you may encounter several different banking codes depending on the payment type:
- IBAN (this page): 22-character code for international and cross-border transfers. Format:
RSkk... - SWIFT/BIC Code: 8 or 11 characters identifying the specific Serbia bank. Required for all international wires.
- Local account number: Country-specific format used for domestic payments within Serbia.
For sending money to India from Serbia, the recipient's Indian bank will need their IFSC code (for domestic India transfers) or the bank's SWIFT code (for the international leg of the transfer).
Data sourced from SWIFT IBAN Registry and ISO 13616. Last reviewed Jun 2026 by BankZop Editorial Team.

