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Saturday, Jun 14, 2025

Record High Prices for Livestock in Serbia: Cattle, Pigs, and Lambs See Unprecedented Increases

The latest reports indicate significant rises in purchasing prices for various livestock categories across multiple regions in Serbia.
The purchasing price of fattened bulls of the Simmental breed, particularly those exceeding 500 kilograms, has reached a record level of 440 dinars per kilogram in slaughterhouses located in the Jablanica region.

Concurrently, a general increase in the purchasing price of fattened pigs has also been observed.

In Uzice, the market for live cattle has reported a rise in the price of Simmental calves weighing up to 160 kilograms, with buyers paying an average of 700 dinars per kilogram.

Conversely, the price for cows intended for slaughter in the same category has remained at 300 dinars per kilogram, according to the latest reports from livestock markets and slaughterhouses.

In the Zlatibor region, an increase in the purchasing price of calves was recorded at 680 dinars per kilogram.

However, the slaughterhouses noted a decline in the purchasing price for fattened bulls of the Simmental breed that weigh more than 500 kilograms, where the dominant price was 390 dinars, and for cows intended for slaughter, it also held steady at 300 dinars per kilogram.

Additionally, cows were purchased at a dominant price of 240 dinars per kilogram.

In the Šumadija region, slaughterhouses paid higher prices for fattened calves weighing over 480 kilograms, with a dominant price of 400 dinars per kilogram.

In contrast, the purchasing price for fattened cattle in the southern Bačka region averaged 390 dinars per kilogram, reflecting a typical supply.

The prices for fattened pigs showed an upward trend in the southern Bačka region, where for pigs weighing between 80 and 120 kilograms, farmers received approximately 220 dinars, whereas for those exceeding 120 kilograms, the dominant price fell to 210 dinars per kilogram.

An increase in the purchasing price of fattened pigs weighing between 80 and 120 kilograms was notable in the Southern Banat region, with the price reaching 230 dinars per kilogram.

Simultaneously, a decline in the selling price of piglets weighing between 16 and 25 kilograms was reported at the livestock market in Loznica, with the average price settling at 350 dinars per kilogram.

Additionally, the Podrinje region saw the purchasing price for piglets at 350 dinars and fattened pigs weighing between 80 to 120 kilograms at 230 dinars per kilogram.

A decrease in the purchasing prices of piglets was also recorded in the Šumadija region, where farmers received a dominant price of 400 dinars per kilogram.

Meanwhile, at the livestock market in Čačak, piglets of up to 15 kilograms were sold at a price of 350 dinars, while those weighing between 16 and 25 kilograms were priced at 320 dinars per kilogram.

In Užice, a recent surge in the selling price of lambs has been documented, with the price reaching an average of 480 dinars per kilogram.

There was also an increase in selling prices for both goats and sheep recorded at the live livestock market in Kragujevac, where buyers paid approximately 190 dinars for goats and 180 dinars for sheep per kilogram.

However, a decline in the purchasing prices for lambs and sheep was noted in the Šumadija region, where farmers received approximately 450 dinars for lambs and 170 dinars for sheep per kilogram.

In the Podrinje region, the purchasing price for lambs commonly settled at 480 dinars.

At the livestock market in Požarevac during the first week of June, lambs were available for sale at a dominant price of 530 dinars per kilogram, while piglets fetched prices of 240 dinars and sheep 220 dinars per kilogram.

In the northern Bačka region, the dominant price for lambs was reported at 450 dinars, with both supply and purchase volumes being average.
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