Serbian Required Disclosures & Registration
Understand the legal requirements for property registration, white-card (Beli karton) police registration for foreigners, and tax obligations for landlords i...
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Renting in Serbia involves operating within a market heavily split between the formal and informal economy. While many "gray market" practices exist, strict compliance requires adherence to several administrative, tax, and police registration laws.
1. Income Tax Obligations
The most frequently evaded, yet heavily penalized, law in the Serbian rental market is the taxation of rental income.
Under the Law on Personal Income Tax (Zakon o porezu na dohodak građana), any individual earning income from leasing real estate is obligated to declare that income to the Serbian Tax Administration (Poreska uprava) and pay a flat tax.
- The Tax Rate: The statutory tax rate on rental income is 20%.
- Standardized Deductions: The tax is applied to the gross rent minus recognized standardized costs (which the law sets at 25% for unfurnished apartments). This effectively means the real tax burden on the gross rent amount comes out to around 15%.
The landlord must file a tax return within 30 days of signing the lease contract or receiving the first rent payment. Failure to file can result in severe financial penalties if the Tax Administration discovers the undeclared lease (which can easily happen if a disgruntled tenant reports the landlord, or if a foreign tenant registers their address).
2. Foreign Tenants & Police Registration ("Beli Karton")
Serbia is an incredibly popular destination for foreign expats, digital nomads, and international workers. Renting to a foreigner triggers immediate and strict legal obligations under the Law on Foreigners (Zakon o strancima).
Any foreigner entering Serbia must have their residential address registered with the local Ministry of Interior (Police) within 24 hours of arriving. If they are renting an apartment, the legal burden of this registration falls entirely upon the landlord.
The "Beli Karton" Process
- Upon the tenant's arrival and the signing of the lease, the landlord (the registered owner of the property) must physically go to the local police station, or complete the process online via the E-Uprava (e-Government) portal if they have a qualified electronic signature.
- The landlord must present their ID, proof of property ownership, and the foreigner's passport.
- The police issue a small white card—the "Beli Karton" (or an electronic equivalent)—confirming the foreigner's registered address.
Warning: The Beli Karton is crucial for the foreigner (they need it to open a bank account, apply for residency, or even exit the country without being fined). If a landlord refuses to register a foreign tenant because they fear it will alert the Tax Administration to their rental income, the landlord is violating federal law and subjecting both themselves and the tenant to steep fines.
3. Domestic Tenants & ID Cards
For Serbian citizens, registration is somewhat simpler but still governed by law. Serbian citizens are required by the Law on Residence of Citizens (Zakon o prebivalištu i boravištu građana) to officially register their residential address with the police within 8 days of moving.
In practice, to do this, the tenant needs the landlord's explicit consent. While many local tenants do not bother updating their ID card address for short-term rentals due to administrative hassle, landlords are legally required to permit and facilitate this registration if the tenant requests it.
4. Building Management Notificaton
Under the Law on Housing and Building Maintenance, landlords are required to notify the building's Professional Building Manager (Upravnik zgrade) when they rent out the unit.
- The landlord must provide the manager with the tenant's name and contact information.
- This ensures the Building Manager knows who actually resides in the apartment in case of emergencies (e.g., a burst pipe leaking into the unit below) and who to bill for monthly maintenance fees if the contract pushes that obligation to the tenant.
Manage Compliance with Landager
Legal compliance in Serbia requires juggling the Tax Administration, the local police, and building managers. Landager simplifies your portfolio by acting as a central repository for all critical documentation. Easily securely store copies of tenant passports and scanned Beli Kartons alongside the digital lease agreement, ensuring you have the exact administrative trail required to operate a fully legal, stress-free rental business in Serbia.
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