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BAM to RSD Converter

Enter an amount to convert Bosnian convertible marks (BAM, written KM) to Serbian dinars, or swap to go the other way. It uses the official National Bank of Serbia (NBS) middle rate — useful for cross-border trade, travel and shopping between Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Converted to
6,001.29RSD

1 BAM = 60.0129 RSD

NBS middle rate · as of July 17, 2026 · Source: National Bank of Serbia

The middle rate is a reference value. Banks and exchange offices trade at their own buy/sell rates, so the amount you actually get will differ.

How it works

Your amount is multiplied by the NBS official middle rate for the convertible mark, about 60 dinars per mark. There’s a neat reason it’s so steady: the mark is pegged to the euro at a fixed 1.95583 KM = €1, and the dinar is managed against the euro too — so one mark is almost exactly half a euro, and BAM/RSD barely moves.

The figure shown is the middle (reference) rate for the published date, baked into the page and flagged when over a week old. Exchange offices near the border apply their own buy/sell spread, so a real exchange gives a little less than the middle rate.

Practical examples

Shopping across the border

A 50 KM purchase in Bosnia is about 3,001 RSD at a middle rate of 60.01. Enter 50 with BAM selected to see the dinar figure.

One mark ≈ half a euro

Because BAM is pegged at 1.95583 to the euro, 100 KM is about €51 — or roughly 6,000 RSD. A quick way to sanity-check a mark price.

Dinars to marks

Swap direction and enter 10,000 RSD to read it as about 167 KM.

Frequently asked questions

How many dinars is one convertible mark?

About 60 RSD. Because both the mark and the dinar are tied to the euro (the mark by a hard peg, the dinar by a managed float), this rate is one of the most stable — a mark is essentially half a euro.

What rate is used?

The official National Bank of Serbia middle rate (zvanični srednji kurs) for the Bosnian mark, shown with its publication date. It’s a reference rate, not an exchange-office quote.

What is the convertible mark?

BAM (marka, written KM) is the currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It’s pegged to the euro at exactly 1.95583 KM = €1 — a peg inherited from the German mark — which is why it’s so stable against euro-linked currencies like the dinar.

Why is BAM/RSD steadier than USD or GBP rates?

Both currencies track the euro, so they move together. The dollar, pound and franc float freely against the euro, so their dinar rates swing much more than the mark’s.

Is the rate live?

No. The site is static, so the rate is the NBS value from the date shown, refreshed periodically rather than in real time. For an exact quote at the moment of exchange, check with your bank or exchange office.

Can I convert dinars to marks here?

Yes — use the swap button or set RSD as the “from” currency. The reverse uses the same middle rate, so a round trip returns your original amount.

Does it handle the decimal comma and thousands?

Yes. Type 50 or 1.000,00 and both are read correctly; the dinar result is shown to two decimals.

Should I use this for official purposes?

For a contract, invoice or customs value, use the NBS rate for the exact required date and confirm it on the National Bank’s site. This tool is for quick, everyday conversions.

Is my amount sent anywhere?

No. The rate is bundled with the page and the conversion runs in your browser. Nothing you type is uploaded and analytics never receives it.

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