The Serbian Bank in Zagreb () was a medium-sized bank in the Kingdom of Hungary and then the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, established in 1895 and liquidated in 1945. It has been described as "the financial center of the Serbian irredentist movement".
The bank was founded on in Zagreb. The initial capital was provided by ethnic-Serbian entrepreneurs in Croatia as well as Syrmia, BaÃÂka and Banat, regions that were then all part of the Kingdom of Hungary. Among the founders were Lazar BaÃÂiÃÂ, Vladimir MatijeviÃÂ, Bogdan MedakoviÃÂ, , and , most of which were also associated with the creation of the Privrednik ethnic-Serbian business association in 1897. Kosta Tauà ¡anoviÃÂ, a political leader in the neighboring Kingdom of Serbia, was in Zagreb at the time and provided support for the bank's creation.
In 1910, as political conditions did not allow it to maintain a branch in the Kingdom of Serbia, the Serbian Bank established the "Danubian Joint-Stock Company" () as its affiliate in Belgrade. In 1914, it absorbed the Central Credit Institute (), another ethnic-Serbian bank in Novi Sad. That same year, it moved to a prominently located office building near Ban JelaÃÂiÃÂ Square.
In the interwar period, it was one of the prominent joint-stock-banks based in Zagreb which formed the core of the Yugoslav commercial banking sector, together with the First Croatian Savings Bank, Croatian Discount Bank, Jugoslavenska Banka, Slavenska Banka, and Croatian-Slavonian Land Mortgage Bank. By 1924, it had branches in Dubrovnik, Knin, Mitrovica, Ã Â ibenik, Split, Sombor, and Subotica, in addition to Zagreb and Novi Sad. That same year, the Danubian Joint-Stock Company merged with the Belgrade-based Adriatic Bank to form the Adriatic-Danubian Bank, in which the Serbian Bank was the reference shareholder. The Serbian Bank owned prestige assets such as the Imperial Hotel and Lapad Hotel in Dubrovnik.
In 1941, the Independent State of Croatia expropriated the owners of the Serbian Bank and had it renamed Commercial Industrial Bank () as a subsidiary of the newly empowered State Savings Bank (). The bank was liquidated in 1945 together with the entire Yugoslavian commercial banking sector.