Finn's Take· TL;DRSerbian President Aleksandar Vučić arrived in Beijing on Sunday for a five-day state visit to China , marking what he described as "the most significant visit in my political career." The visit comes at a politically sensitive moment as Serbia attempts to balance its European aspirations with deeper ties to Beijing, raising questions about the country's geopolitical alignment.
President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang will respectively meet with Vucic during the visit, which runs from Sunday to Thursday, to exchange views on bilateral relations, as well as international and regional issues of mutual interest. This year marks the 10th anniversary of a comprehensive strategic partnership between China and Serbia, with the visit expected to advance practical cooperation between the two countries and deepen the China-Serbia comprehensive strategic partnership.
Ahead of his state visit to China, Vucic said Serbia expects to sign around 30 cooperation agreements with Chinese companies, covering sectors such as chip manufacturing and robotics. In May 2026, the Serbian government signed a new agreement with China's Shandong Hi-Speed Group to build a 125-km expressway linking central and eastern Serbia, further deepening bilateral connectivity cooperation.
In 2025, bilateral trade between China and Serbia reached $6.49 billion, marking a 13% year-on-year increase, according to China's Foreign Ministry. With the China-Serbia Free Trade Agreement, China signed its first free trade pact with a Central and Eastern European country, and bilateral trade has grown rapidly since the agreement took effect.
Vucic once said that Serbia's rapid infrastructure development has been driven in large part by successful cooperation with Chinese companies. Chinese companies are already involved in major railway infrastructure projects, highways, energy facilities and industrial investments, while Beijing is leveraging Serbia's geographic position as a gateway to Central European markets.
In May 2024, China and Serbia announced the building of a "community with a shared future," making Serbia the first European country to agree to such a format with China. Beijing also describes Serbia as China's first comprehensive strategic partner in Central and Eastern Europe.
The visit comes at a politically sensitive moment for Serbia, which is trying to preserve its European path while deepening cooperation with China and maintaining room for maneuver between competing centers of power. Serbia is trying to prove that even a relatively small state can pursue an independent line if it knows how to use competition among global centers of power.
Vucic published an opinion piece in the South China Morning Post stating that "In Europe, discussions about China are too often clouded by suspicion and strategic anxiety. I understand that every major political community must guard its future, but I believe Europe should approach China not with fear and suspicion but with confidence and a serious, open-eyed willingness to cooperate."
The deeper Serbia becomes integrated into Chinese economic projects, the more questions arise in Brussels and Washington. The European Union and the United States have long viewed China's growing presence in the Balkans with caution, especially in infrastructure, energy, telecommunications and other strategic sectors.
Other European countries are likely to reflect on why ties between China and Serbia have remained stable while cooperation continues to expand across various fields. Especially at a time when China's relations with some European countries, particularly EU member states, are facing difficulties in economic, trade and political areas, Serbia has, to some extent, become a point of reference.
Serbia's approach represents a new model for smaller European nations seeking to diversify their partnerships in an increasingly multipolar world. While the immediate economic benefits are substantial, the long-term political implications remain uncertain. As Serbia continues to navigate between East and West, its success in maintaining strategic autonomy while pursuing EU membership will likely influence other Balkan nations facing similar choices between competing global powers.