A small number of municipalities in Serbia held local elections in 2010. These were not part of the country's regular cycle of local elections but were instead held in certain jurisdictions where either the local government had fallen or the last local elections for four-year terms had taken place in 2006.
All local elections in 2010 were held under proportional representation. The Mayors were not directly elected but were instead chosen by elected members of the local assemblies. Parties were required to cross a five percent electoral threshold (of all votes, not only of valid votes), although this requirement was waived for parties representing national minority communities.
Local elections were held in Odà ¾aci on 24 January 2010. The local assembly had become dysfunctional in the previous sitting, after the Socialist Party of Serbia withdrew its support from an administration led by the Serbian Radical Party. Veroljub Markoviàof the Democratic Party led a provisional administration prior to the vote.
Predrag CvetanoviÃÂ of the Democratic Party was chosen as mayor after the election. He stood down in 2012 after being elected to the Assembly of Vojvodina and was replaced by Izabela SeriÃÂ from the same party.
Elections were held in AranÃÂelovac on 25 April 2010, with repeat voting in some communities on 2 May 2010. The municipality's previous mayor, Radosav à  vabiàof the Serbian Radical Party, had been arrested in June 2009, and the assembly had not sat for several months before the local government was dissolved in November. Vlada Gajiàof the Democratic Party led a provisional administration prior to the vote.
Vlada GajiÃÂ of the Democratic Party was confirmed as mayor after the election. He was replaced by Bojan RadoviÃÂ of the Progressive Party in August 2012.
The leader of the "AranÃÂelovac in BelgradeâÂÂMovement for the Development of Serbia" list was Zoran ZeÃÂeviÃÂ, who would later be elected to the national assembly as a member of the far-right Serbian Party Oathkeepers.