How Much Does a Website Cost in Serbia 2026 — Real Pricing Without Marketing Tricks
Analysis of 8 public packages from 4 Serbian agencies: one-time builds run €50–€750+, with hosting and maintenance adding another €170–€432 in the first year.
Change history (1)
- — Direct-answer lede, content map, fixed external links (SuperSajtovi, Stack Overflow Survey), added original hero diagram instead of stock photo.
A website in Serbia 2026 costs between €50 and €750+ as a one-time build, with a median around €280, while a typical standard package sits around €340. Those numbers come from 8 public packages across 4 Serbian agencies analyzed in March. Hosting, domain, and minor edits add another €170–€432 in the first year. A monthly bundle of €30–€80 folds that risk into one predictable line item (SuperSajtovi, 2026).
Business owners in Niš, Belgrade, and Novi Sad ask this question daily. Agencies rarely publish prices. Ask for a quote and you get “from X euros,” almost always 2–3x below the real cost. This article is the price guide to read before you sign, with links to sources.
To see how this looks in practice, what ZeroToSite does covers step by step what’s included in the €59/month bundle.
How much does a website actually cost in Serbia 2026?
Per analysis of 8 public packages from 4 Serbian agencies (March 2026), a one-time website build runs from €50 to €750+, with a median around €280 and a typical standard package around €340. SuperSajtovi’s Standard package is 40,000 RSD (SuperSajtovi, 2026), and EUPROWEB CMS START is €295 (EUPROWEB, 2026). NBS exchange rate in April 2026: 1 EUR ≈ 117.5 RSD.
| Package | Agency | Price | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| BASIC | EUPROWEB | €149 | euproweb.com |
| HTML from | KompArt | from €50 | kompart.rs |
| Start WordPress | Izrada Sajtova NS | 18,000 RSD (~€155) | izradasajtovans.com |
| STARTER | SuperSajtovi | 26,000 RSD (~€220) | supersajtovi.rs |
| STANDARD | SuperSajtovi | 40,000 RSD (~€340) | supersajtovi.rs |
| CMS BUSINESS | EUPROWEB | €495 | euproweb.com |
| PROFI | SuperSajtovi | 65,000 RSD (~€555) | supersajtovi.rs |
| PROFI+ | SuperSajtovi | €750+ | supersajtovi.rs |
The average hides a 5x range. “A website costs €500” tells you nothing until you ask what’s actually included.
Why is the range so wide — from €50 to €750+?
The 15x gap between the cheapest and most expensive offer reflects three concrete factors: who does the work, what technology they use, and how many pages the site has. Per the Stack Overflow Developer Survey 2024, the average Serbian developer earns €24,000 per year, 60–75% below Western Europe. The price baseline is lower. Margins vary drastically.
Freelancer or agency?
The average Serbian developer hourly rate in 2024 ran €25–€35/h, among the lowest in Europe per the Stack Overflow Developer Survey. That rate underlies offers like KompArt’s “from €50”. An agency carries an office, VAT registration, and a team of 3–5 people, which puts the same scope at €495+. Clutch.co confirms Serbian developers charge $25–$49/h, 60–75% below the US rate.
Technology — WordPress, HTML, or custom?
KompArt HTML from €50 is a static site with no CMS: you cannot change the text yourself. Izrada Sajtova NS Start WordPress 18,000 RSD (~€155) bundles a basic WP install with a free theme like Astra or OceanWP. Custom Astro or React sites start at €700+, because you’re paying for design, not only code.
Page count and language count
A standard package covers up to 5 pages. Extra pages, a second language, or reservation integration push the price up. SuperSajtovi PROFI+ (€750+) starts there.
Owners in Niš and Belgrade ask for a “cheap website.” Most of them actually need a reservation system, a bilingual menu, and Google Maps integration. KompArt’s “from €50” covers none of those.
What hidden costs exist that agencies don’t mention?
The realistic add-on above the initial price is €170–€432 in year one, per public price lists from Serbian hosting providers and standard licenses. mCloud’s mHosting 1 runs 20,000 RSD/year (~€170) for 15GB SSD with free Let’s Encrypt SSL (mCloud, 2026). Monthly maintenance at €30 rarely appears in the initial quote.
Hosting — from 3,290 to 20,000 RSD per year
BeotelNet (Telekom Srbija) offers cPanel from 3,290 RSD/year (BeotelNet, 2026). Unlimited.rs starts from 5,490 RSD/year (Unlimited, 2026). Unless the agency states hosting is included, assume it isn’t.
Domain
A .rs domain costs 1,500–2,500 RSD per year retail. The RNIDS wholesale price is 1,700 RSD. The .co.rs variant runs €6–€10 per year. Confirm the domain is registered in your name; overlooking this creates problems later.
Plugin licenses (if WordPress)
Elementor Pro ~€59/year. Yoast SEO Premium ~€99/year. WP Rocket ~€49/year. Total: ~€207/year for plugins alone, if you want a professional level.
Monthly maintenance
EUPROWEB charges from €35/month (EUPROWEB, 2026). Happy Media from €30/month (Happy Media, 2026). Mindstorming from €36/month (Mindstorming, 2026). Annually: €360–€432.
How much does a website cost for a restaurant, salon, or clinic?
Prices vary by business category because functional scope varies. A restaurant needs a menu and reservations. A salon needs a gallery and booking. A clinic needs GDPR-compliant forms. EUPROWEB CMS BUSINESS at €495 covers most SMB scenarios. SuperSajtovi PROFI from 65,000 RSD handles more advanced extensions.
Restaurants — €220 to €555
SuperSajtovi STARTER (26,000 RSD) covers a one-page site with a menu. STANDARD (40,000 RSD) adds reservations. PROFI (65,000 RSD) handles a multi-language menu. A kafana in Niš or a pizzeria in Novi Sad that needs a serious online presence lands at the STANDARD tier.
Salons and beauty — €155 to €340
Izrada Sajtova NS Start WordPress 18,000 RSD is a common choice. A salon needs a portfolio gallery and a booking form. The Pro package at 22,000 RSD (~€188) covers both.
Clinics and medical offices — €340 to €700
A dental practice in Belgrade pays more because of GDPR. Patient forms require proper data processing, a privacy policy, and a cookie banner. SuperSajtovi STANDARD or EUPROWEB CMS BUSINESS are realistic entry points.
E-commerce — €700+
Izrada Sajtova NS E-com advanced 82,000 RSD (~€700) covers basic WooCommerce. Payment integration (NestPay via Banca Intesa) adds a process that rarely appears in the initial offer.
Is a monthly bundle worth it instead of a one-time build?
SuperSajtovi STANDARD (40,000 RSD ≈ €340) plus the first year of hosting and maintenance (~€340) reaches €680 in year one. A €59/month bundle totals €708 per year, nearly identical but without surprise invoices. Per our analysis of public price lists, the bundled model suits owners who don’t want to track plugins, SSL renewals, or updates.
What a bundle typically includes
naKlik’s subscription model at 2,825 RSD/month (~€24) covers the website only (naKlik, 2026). Bundles in the €30–€80/month range include hosting, SSL, monthly edits, and backup. Our package at €59/month adds social media, reservations, and SEO.
Our package runs on Astro and Cloudflare Pages rather than classic WordPress hosting, which is part of why the monthly price sits below typical agency maintenance fees.
When a one-time build DOES make sense
A technical owner, a fixed budget, and a site that won’t change for 2–3 years? KompArt HTML from €50 or Izrada Sajtova NS Start 18,000 RSD is a valid choice. A site that never changes rarely brings in business.
The “developer disappeared” risk
This scenario is common. You pay €300 to a Belgrade freelancer, receive the site, then six months later the plugins break and the freelancer doesn’t pick up. A fix through another developer costs €100–€300 per incident (estimate from industry conversations, not measurement). A bundle shifts that risk to the provider’s side.
How to spot an overpriced or under-cut offer?
Three warning signs: the offer says “from X euros” without clear scope, doesn’t name the CMS, and doesn’t mention responsive testing or accessibility. Per our analysis of 8 public packages from 4 Serbian agencies, fixed prices like SuperSajtovi’s “40,000 RSD for STANDARD” compare more cleanly than KompArt-style “from €50” variants.
A worthwhile offer must list:
- Exact page count (not “up to 10”, but “7 pages: Home, About, Services, Gallery, Blog, Contact, Privacy”)
- CMS and tech stack (WordPress, Astro, custom)
- Whether hosting is included and for how many months
- SSL (Let’s Encrypt is free; premium is €50–€150/year)
- Responsive testing (mobile, tablet, desktop)
- GDPR documents (privacy policy, cookie banner, DPA)
- Scope of edits after launch
From our prospect database in Niš, Belgrade, and Novi Sad, the most common complaint between February and April 2026 was: “I paid a fixed price, but domain and hosting came later as a separate item.” Ask before you sign.
When is a freelancer enough, and when do you need an agency?
A freelancer in Serbia charges about 44% less than an agency, per the gap between KompArt’s “from €50” and EUPROWEB’s €495 for similar scopes. A freelancer works alone, with no backup if they fall sick or stop working. An agency provides an SLA and a team. Clutch.co shows US SMB websites cost $3,000–$9,000 on average, 10x the Serbian average.
A freelancer is OK if:
- You have fewer than 5 pages
- No reservations or payments
- No multi-language requirement
- You know someone technical who can step in
An agency or managed service if:
- There’s a reservation system, online payment, or GDPR forms
- More than 5 pages, or two languages
- You want a predictable budget without surprises
- The site has to run 24/7 (a restaurant in season)
Conclusion — what this means for you
A website in Serbia 2026 runs €50 to €750+ as a one-time build, with a median around €280 and a typical standard package around €340, plus €170–€432 for hosting and maintenance in the first year. For a predictable monthly cost without surprise invoices, a €30–€80 bundle covers most hidden line items.
Bezsajta is a new agency from Niš, launched in 2026, with pilot clients. Our €59/month package includes website, social media, reservations, and SEO in one line item. It’s not the right fit for enterprise systems, an e-shop with 500+ products, or fully custom art direction. For those, find specialized agencies. For a café, restaurant, salon, or small clinic in Niš, Belgrade, or Novi Sad: send your Instagram URL and get a concrete quote in 5 minutes.
Schedule a free consultation or check other articles in the blog if you’re not ready to talk yet.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a restaurant website cost in Serbia?
The range for a one-time build is €220–€700. SuperSajtovi’s Standard package runs 40,000 RSD (~€340) (SuperSajtovi, 2026), while EUPROWEB CMS Business is €495. Monthly bundles run €30–€80 and include hosting, SSL, and minor edits.
Is WordPress cheaper than a custom build?
WordPress is cheaper up front: Izrada Sajtova NS Start WordPress runs 18,000 RSD (~€155), while KompArt HTML starts at €50. But hosting plus plugin licenses (Elementor Pro €59, Yoast €99, WP Rocket €49) add €190–€600 annually, so the gap closes by year two.
How long does building a website take?
A serious agency in Belgrade or Niš delivers a site in 2–6 weeks. The difference comes from content scope and revision count. Always ask for a fixed scope before signing; otherwise “from 2 weeks” easily becomes 2 months.
Is hosting included in the price?
Often it isn’t. mCloud’s mHosting 1 runs 20,000 RSD/year (~€170) for 15GB SSD with free Let’s Encrypt SSL (mCloud, 2026). BeotelNet cPanel starts at 3,290 RSD/year (BeotelNet, 2026). A .rs domain runs 1,500–2,500 RSD per year. Ask explicitly.
What does monthly maintenance cost?
Public price lists: EUPROWEB from €35/month (EUPROWEB, 2026), Happy Media from €30/month (Happy Media, 2026), Mindstorming from €36/month (Mindstorming, 2026). naKlik offers a subscription model at 2,825 RSD/month (~€24). All-inclusive bundles like bezsajta €59/month cover website + social + reservations + SEO in one line item.