Serbia has established itself as a prime destination for Swiss companies seeking technical reinforcement. Facing a persistent IT talent shortage in Switzerland and pressure on deadlines and budgets, this country offers an attractive compromise between quality and competitiveness.
Thanks to an education system focused on STEM, a dynamic startup ecosystem, and an IT export boom exceeding €2.4 billion in 2024, recruiting in Serbia goes far beyond mere financial arbitrage. Serbian developers are trained in agile methodologies, fluent in English, and work with modern technologies, which enables rapid integration into distributed teams and accelerates project delivery.
Why Serbia attracts Swiss companies
Serbia combines a solid STEM tradition with a booming technology ecosystem. Its geographic and cultural positioning makes collaboration with Switzerland seamless.
Macroeconomic assets and STEM education
Serbia boasts a well-established university network, notably in Belgrade, Novi Sad, and Niš, where engineering and computer science programs attract thousands of students each year. These programs emphasize the fundamentals of algorithms, distributed systems, and cybersecurity.
The country regularly invests in modernizing its universities and supporting research, resulting in a steady increase in the number of qualified graduates. Partnerships between universities and local companies strengthen curriculum relevance.
As a result, junior profiles emerging from the academic system combine scientific rigor with a keen interest in emerging technologies, ensuring a solid baseline of expertise.
Startup ecosystem and IT exports
Serbia has seen significant growth in tech startups, incubated within organizations such as Startit and ICT Hub. These players drive local innovation and foster rapid adoption of agile methodologies.
IT service exports surpassed €2.4 billion in 2024, with an annual growth rate exceeding 8%. This dynamism reflects the capacity of Serbian companies to meet international standards for quality and delivery timelines.
The local R&D centers of multinational corporations also help disseminate high standards in both technical practices and project management.
Example of rapid adoption
A Swiss SME in the financial sector assembled a hybrid team including three developers based in Serbia to accelerate the migration of its core application. This collaboration demonstrated that cultural and language differences can be overcome through close management and aligned workflows.
The project gained three months in development time compared to an exclusively local team, while maintaining an end-user satisfaction rate above 90%. This success illustrates Serbia’s added value in a capacity ramp-up context.
It also shows that clear governance and a shared business vision are essential to fully leverage this talent pool.
Dominant skills and technologies of Serbian developers
The Serbian talent pool covers a broad technological spectrum, from back-end to cloud solutions. Developers naturally integrate AI tools and modern best practices.
Front-end, back-end, and cloud technologies
Experienced developers regularly work with Java (Spring), .NET Core, and Python (Django, FastAPI) for robust and maintainable applications. Node.js remains popular for lightweight services and APIs.
On the front end, React, Angular, and Vue.js dominate, offering dynamic and modular interfaces. Frameworks are chosen based on the product roadmap and scalability requirements.
On the infrastructure side, AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud are widely adopted, complemented by DevOps tools like Docker, Kubernetes, and Terraform, ensuring automation and resilience.
AI tool adoption and best practices
Serbian teams incorporate GitHub Copilot, ChatGPT, and other assistants into their daily workflows to speed up prototyping and boost productivity. This AI-driven culture enhances code quality while shortening timelines.
Test-Driven Development (TDD), pair programming, and MLOps are widespread, ensuring reliable deliveries and surprise-free deployments. CI/CD pipelines often include security checks from the earliest stages.
The result is more robust code and increased responsiveness to evolving requirements, while minimizing regression risks.
English proficiency and asynchronous communication
Over 85% of Serbian engineers demonstrate operational English skills, often validated by international certifications. They actively participate in code reviews and technical discussions without language barriers.
Teams master asynchronous communication tools (JIRA tickets, Confluence, Slack) and structure their exchanges to limit real-time meetings to critical decision points.
An e-commerce company set up a shared channel with its four Serbian developers. Thanks to a well-structured backlog and 15-minute daily stand-ups, the project met its deadlines despite a two-hour time difference.
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Costs, engagement models, and governance
Understanding the full budget for recruiting in Serbia is crucial to avoid surprises. The choice of engagement model directly impacts quality and risk control.
Detailed breakdown of total costs
Annual salaries range from USD 25,000 for a junior to USD 60,000 for a senior, and can reach USD 80,000 for DevOps, data science, or cybersecurity specialists.
In addition to salaries, there are social security contributions of 17.9%, USD 2,000–3,000 in equipment per position, and USD 1,000–3,000 in legal fees (compliance, payroll). These costs converge to a daily rate comparable to a classic offshore model, while offering stricter oversight.
Transparency of these budget elements allows for accurate budgeting and objective comparisons between various outsourcing models.
Overview of engagement models
Direct local employment ensures integration and commitment, but requires establishing a legal entity and full HR management, including leave and turnover.
Outsourcing through a service company offers speed and administrative handling, at the cost of reduced control and potential project prioritization conflicts.
Staff augmentation provides a direct link to developers without ancillary services (QA, project manager), while freelancers and short-term contracts are suited to temporary needs but come with instability risks.
Governance and quality best practices
A rigorous selection process combines real coding tests, architectural scenarios, and AI tool usage evaluations. The goal is to assess the candidate’s critical approach to generated code.
Structured onboarding relies on clear business documentation, mentoring by a Swiss reference, and a formalized skill development plan. These steps promote rapid assimilation of project requirements.
Ongoing monitoring through KPIs (coverage, bug rate, SLA compliance) and periodic audits helps anticipate deviations and maintain quality standards throughout the project.
Comparing approaches and the value of a managed dedicated team model
Isolated resources pass hidden management and replacement costs to the client. A managed dedicated team ensures technical consistency, continuous supervision, and service continuity.
Limitations of isolated and unmanaged teams
Freelancers or standalone profiles require the client to manage the contract, billing, leave, and replacements in case of unavailability, adding internal overhead.
Unmanaged teams, even multi-developer groups, remain exposed to turnover risks and a lack of business oversight, affecting roadmap coherence and documentation.
These indirect costs (management, QA, HR) can represent up to 25% of the total budget and complicate medium-term planning.
Advantages of Edana’s managed dedicated team
The model is based on capacity reservation: 100% of a developer, 30% of a project manager, 30% of QA, and 10% of a technical lead. This structure optimizes supervision and business alignment.
The Swiss head office ensures governance, business analysis, and close client relations, while the Georgian subsidiary provides a controlled talent pool and optimized delivery environment.
Result: unified management, consistent deliverables, and the transfer of administrative and HR complexity to the service provider.
Criteria for choosing a reliable partner
Transparency in the selection process is measured by screening rates and test details. A high rejection rate indicates high standards.
Infrastructure (dedicated offices vs. co-working) and continuous HR support ensure team stability and legal compliance. ISO 9001 and ISO 27001 certifications build trust.
Performance tracking via customer satisfaction indicators and quarterly reviews allows the setup to be adjusted and service levels to be maintained.
Optimize your recruitment strategy in Serbia with a managed model
Hiring in Serbia offers agility, expertise, and cost savings, but the real challenge lies in delivery structuring and project governance. A managed dedicated team model ensures continuous oversight, proven technical coherence, and full transfer of administrative obligations.
Our experts combine rigorous Swiss governance, in-depth business analysis, and direct control of an Eastern European talent pool. They are at your disposal to define the best strategy based on your challenges, budget, and delivery schedule.
















