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Since the new Law on the Central Register of Ultimate Beneficial Owners began applying on 1 October 2025, ultimate beneficial owner registration in Serbia has moved from a largely declaratory exercise to a document-intensive, electronically enforced compliance obligation. The Serbian Business Registers Agency (SBRA, known domestically as APR) now requires every registered entity to upload supporting documentary evidence through its e-submission portal, a step that was not mandatory under the predecessor regime. Entities that were already on the register faced a 60-day transitional deadline (30 November 2025) to upload their evidence packs, and those that missed it now face escalating enforcement risk heading into 2026.
This guide walks corporate officers, compliance teams and foreign counsel through every stage of the process: who qualifies as a UBO, which documents must be gathered, how the SBRA portal works, and what penalties apply for non-compliance.
Serbia’s beneficial ownership law was overhauled by the new Law on the Central Register of Ultimate Beneficial Owners, published in the Official Gazette of the Republic of Serbia (Sl. glasnik RS, nos. 19/2025, 51/2025 and 60/2025). The Law entered into force in early 2025 and began applying on 1 October 2025, replacing the previous 2018 framework with substantially stricter requirements.
The three changes that matter most for 2026 compliance are:
Industry observers expect enforcement activity to intensify through 2026 as the SBRA cross-references uploaded evidence against company registration files and as the Administration for the Prevention of Money Laundering (APML) begins using the enhanced register data in its supervisory work.
The beneficial ownership law Serbia 2025 framework rests on the Law itself (published across three Official Gazette issues) and its implementing regulation, the Pravilnik o sadržini Centralne evidencije stvarnih vlasnika (the “Pravilnik”), which specifies the technical content of register entries and the categories of acceptable documentary evidence. Together, these instruments define the scope of the central register of beneficial owners Serbia maintains through the SBRA.
The Law applies to all legal entities registered with the SBRA, including limited liability companies (d.o.o.), joint-stock companies (a.d.), partnerships, cooperatives, branches of foreign companies, foundations, endowments, associations and other organisational forms established by registration. Certain categories, primarily listed companies whose beneficial ownership is already disclosed through securities regulation, benefit from narrower obligations, but they are not fully exempt from the register.
| Key Legal Provision | Subject | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Definition of UBO (Law, Art. 3) | Natural person who ultimately owns or controls a registered entity | Establishes the 25% ownership threshold and alternative control tests |
| Obligation to register (Law, Art. 7) | Duty of the authorised representative to record and update UBO data | Places personal responsibility on directors / legal representatives |
| Documentary evidence requirement (Law, Art. 10) | Mandatory upload of supporting documentation to the SBRA portal | Eliminates the previous “declaration-only” option |
| Transitional provisions (Law, Art. 35) | 60-day deadline for existing entities to upload evidence after application date | Deadline expired 30 November 2025; non-compliant entities are in breach |
| Penalties (Law, Arts. 30–33) | Administrative fines and criminal liability for false or missing data | Fines for entities and responsible persons; imprisonment for deliberate concealment |
| Pravilnik (implementing regulation) | Technical fields, document types, file formats and portal specifications | Defines exactly what must be uploaded and in which format |
The APML has published supplementary guidance reinforcing that obliged entities (banks, financial institutions, auditors and other reporting bodies) must cross-check their customer due diligence records against the data in the Central Register and report any discrepancies. The National Bank of Serbia (NBS) has similarly issued supervisory notes requiring financial institutions to flag data mismatches between the register and their own KYC files.
Understanding how to identify beneficial owner Serbia-registered entities must disclose is the foundation of every UBO filing. The Law defines a UBO as any natural person who ultimately owns or controls a registered entity, either directly or indirectly. No legal person, trust or other arrangement can itself be recorded as the UBO, the chain must always terminate at a natural person.
A natural person who holds 25% or more of the ownership interest (shares, capital participation or voting rights) in a registered entity is presumed to be a UBO and must be registered. This is the most straightforward test. Where a single person holds 100% of the capital, as is common in single-member d.o.o. structures, that person is the sole UBO and the filing is uncomplicated.
Where ownership is held through one or more intermediary legal entities, the obligation is to trace the chain upward until a natural person holding 25% or more is identified. Multiplication of ownership percentages through multiple tiers determines whether the threshold is met. For example, if Company A holds 60% of Company B and Natural Person X holds 50% of Company A, then X’s effective interest in Company B is 30% (above the threshold) and X must be registered as a UBO of Company B.
If no natural person meets the 25% threshold after tracing through all layers, the Law requires that the natural person who exercises control over the entity through other means, such as management agreements, shareholder agreements, financing arrangements, or de facto control, be identified and registered. If even this test yields no result, the senior managing official (typically the director or CEO) must be entered as the UBO by default.
For trusts, foundations and similar legal arrangements, the Law requires the registration of the settlor, the trustee, the protector (if any), any named beneficiary, and any other natural person exercising ultimate effective control. This is a broader net than the corporate ownership test and can result in multiple natural persons being registered for a single arrangement.
| Entity Type | Who Registers UBO Data | Typical UBO Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Limited liability company (d.o.o.) | Legal representative (director) | Founder(s) holding ≥ 25% capital; indirect owners through parent entities |
| Joint-stock company (a.d.) | Legal representative / company secretary | Shareholders with ≥ 25% voting rights; de facto controllers |
| Branch of foreign company | Authorised representative of the branch | UBO(s) of the foreign parent company |
| Foundation / endowment | Legal representative | Founder, beneficiaries, members of the managing board exercising control |
| Trust-like arrangement | Trustee or authorised person | Settlor, trustee, protector, beneficiaries with defined interests |
The shift to mandatory documentary evidence UBO Serbia compliance has created the single largest operational burden under the new Law. The Pravilnik specifies the categories of documents that must accompany every UBO filing, and the SBRA portal will reject submissions that lack mandatory uploads.
The table below sets out the complete UBO registration Serbia requirements for documentary evidence, including acceptable formats and practical notes.
| Document Type | When Required | Acceptable Formats / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Identity document of the UBO (passport or national ID) | Every filing (initial, change, confirmation) | Scanned colour copy (PDF or JPEG); must be valid at the time of upload; foreign documents accepted if legible |
| Founding act / articles of association of the registered entity | Initial registration; changes to corporate structure | Certified copy (PDF); SBRA may already hold this, upload the current version if amended |
| Ownership / share structure documentation | Every filing | Shareholder register extract, share certificates, capital contribution agreements (PDF); must show current percentages |
| Excerpt from foreign company register (for branches / indirect owners) | When UBO chain passes through a foreign entity | Apostilled or legalised original with certified Serbian translation; not older than 3 months at time of filing |
| Shareholder agreements / voting agreements | When control is exercised through contractual arrangements | Certified copy (PDF); relevant clauses should be highlighted or extracted |
| Trust instrument / deed of foundation | When a trust or trust-like arrangement is in the ownership chain | Certified copy with Serbian translation; must identify settlor, trustee, protector and beneficiaries |
| Board / management resolution confirming UBO identification | Recommended for every filing (serves as internal audit trail) | Signed PDF; confirms that the entity has conducted its own UBO identification exercise |
| Power of attorney (if filed by a proxy) | When the authorised representative delegates the filing | Certified original (PDF); must specifically authorise UBO registration actions |
| Certified translation into Serbian | Every foreign-language document | Performed by a sworn court interpreter; must accompany the original-language document |
Practical tip: Organise documents into a single “UBO evidence pack” folder before starting the SBRA portal upload. Use a clear file naming convention, for example, UBO_PassportCopy_SmithJ_2026.pdf and UBO_ShareRegister_CompanyXdoo_2026.pdf, so that any future audit can quickly match uploads to specific UBO entries.
All SBRA beneficial owner registration filings are now processed exclusively through the APR’s electronic portal. Paper submissions are no longer accepted for UBO-related entries. The sections below outline the step-by-step SBRA electronic submission UBO workflow.
To access the SBRA portal, the authorised representative (or their delegated proxy) must hold a qualified electronic certificate issued by a certification authority recognised in Serbia. This is the same type of certificate used for other APR electronic filings (e.g., annual financial statements). The representative logs in to the APR portal at apr.gov.rs, selects the Central Records module, and authenticates using their certificate.
The electronic form requires the following data fields for each UBO:
After completing the form fields, the system prompts the user to upload the supporting documentary evidence. The table below summarises the SBRA portal’s current technical specifications.
| Technical Parameter | SBRA Requirement |
|---|---|
| Accepted file types | PDF (primary), JPEG, PNG (for identity documents) |
| Maximum file size per document | Specified by the portal at the time of upload (typically several MB per file) |
| Electronic signature | Qualified electronic certificate (issued by a recognised Serbian CA) |
| Language of documents | Serbian; foreign documents must include certified translations |
| Number of documents per filing | No stated maximum; all required evidence categories must be covered |
Each uploaded file can be tagged with a short note explaining its relevance (e.g., “Share register extract showing 40% holding by UBO”). Using these note fields improves the clarity of the filing and reduces the likelihood of SBRA rejection or follow-up queries.
Once the form is submitted and documents uploaded, the SBRA portal generates an electronic receipt with a unique filing reference number and a timestamp. This receipt should be saved internally as proof of timely compliance. The SBRA reviews the filing and, if the submission is complete, records the data in the Central Register. If documents are missing or the form contains errors, the SBRA will issue a rejection notice through the portal, and the entity must resubmit within the timeframe specified in the notice.
Meeting the deadlines under the new Law is critical. The table below consolidates the key statutory deadlines alongside recommended internal compliance milestones.
| Event | Legal Deadline | Recommended Internal Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Law application date | 1 October 2025 | N/A, already in effect |
| Transitional evidence upload (existing entities) | 30 November 2025 (60 days from application) | Already expired, remediate immediately if missed |
| Initial UBO registration (newly incorporated entities) | Within 15 days of SBRA registration | File within 10 days to allow for portal errors |
| Change in UBO data (ownership transfer, new controller, etc.) | Within 15 days of the change | Trigger internal notification within 5 days of change; file by day 12 |
| Annual confirmation (if no changes occurred) | As prescribed by the Law (typically annually) | Calendar a recurring reminder 30 days before the annual confirmation window |
For newly formed LLCs, a frequent query from foreign investors asking how to open an LLC in Serbia, the UBO filing is effectively a post-incorporation compliance step that must be completed within 15 days of SBRA company registration. Early indications suggest that the SBRA is monitoring this deadline actively and issuing compliance reminders to newly registered entities through the portal.
The penalties for non-compliance Serbia UBO law provisions impose are substantially higher than under the previous framework and now include explicit criminal liability for certain violations. The penalty matrix below summarises the key enforcement provisions.
| Offence | Legal Sanction (Law, Arts. 30–33) | Practical Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Failure to register UBO data within the prescribed deadline | Administrative fine for the entity (up to RSD 2,000,000) and the responsible person (up to RSD 150,000) | File immediately; document the delay and its cause for any defence |
| Failure to upload documentary evidence | Administrative fine (same scale as failure to register); potential SBRA-initiated erasure of incomplete entries | Prioritise evidence-pack assembly; engage external counsel if foreign documents require apostille or translation |
| Registering false or misleading UBO data | Criminal liability: imprisonment for the responsible person (up to three years) for intentional concealment or falsification of UBO information | Conduct independent UBO identification; retain audit trail of the methodology and sources used |
| Failure to update data after a change in UBO | Administrative fine for the entity and the responsible person; continuing breach until corrected | Implement internal triggers (board minute reviews, share transfer monitoring) to capture changes in real time |
The criminal liability provisions represent the sharpest teeth in the new regime. Deliberate concealment of a UBO, for example, using nominee structures to obscure the true controller, can result in imprisonment for the responsible person. The likely practical effect will be to push companies toward more conservative, transparent UBO identification methodologies, particularly where complex or cross-border structures are involved.
The APML’s published guidance confirms that obliged entities (banks and other financial institutions) are now required to report any discrepancies they discover between the Central Register and their own customer due diligence files. The NBS has issued parallel supervisory expectations for the financial sector. This means that a UBO entry that does not match the information a company’s bank holds on file can trigger a discrepancy report and, ultimately, an APML investigation, adding a further layer of enforcement pressure beyond the SBRA’s own powers.
For compliance teams managing ultimate beneficial owner registration in Serbia across one or more entities, the following checklist provides a standard operating procedure framework:
Ultimate beneficial owner registration in Serbia is no longer a one-off administrative task, it is a continuing compliance obligation that demands up-to-date documentation, timely portal submissions and an internal control framework that can respond to ownership changes in real time. Entities that have not yet uploaded their documentary evidence to the SBRA portal should treat remediation as an immediate priority, given that the transitional deadline expired on 30 November 2025 and enforcement activity is expected to intensify.
For companies with complex cross-border ownership structures, trust arrangements or multiple tiers of indirect holding, a detailed UBO identification exercise, supported by legal analysis and properly certified foreign documents, is essential before any filing is made. Engaging experienced Serbia-based corporate counsel early in the process reduces the risk of errors that could trigger administrative fines or, in serious cases, criminal liability. Practitioners listed in the Global Law Experts lawyer directory can assist with UBO audits, evidence-pack preparation, SBRA portal submissions and ongoing compliance monitoring.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nemanja Curcic at NCR lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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