10 Types of Lizards Found in Serbia (2025)

Do you want to learn about the different lizards in Serbia?

Types of lizards in Serbia

If so, you’ve come to the right place! In the article below, I have listed the lizards you can expect to see. For each species, you’ll find out how to identify that lizard correctly, along with pictures, interesting facts, and RANGE MAPS!

10 Lizards IN Serbia:


#1. Green Lizard

  • Lacerta viridis

Types of lizards in Serbia

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults are about 15 cm (6 in) long with tails that reach 25.5 cm (10 in).
  • They are green with small black spots all over, especially on their backs, and they have a bluish throat.
  • Males have a larger head and a more pronounced blue throat.

Green Lizards in Serbia are shockingly bright.

They look like an animal you might find in the jungle, but they prefer dense vegetation, hedgerows, open woodland, and bramble thickets. You can often spot them near embankments, basking in the late afternoon sun.

The Green Lizard feeds on small mice, invertebrates, insects, and bird eggs. They also eat some fruit, including berries and tree fruit.

By Christian Fischer via Wikipedia

Like some other lizards, this species will sever its tail to escape predators. However, this cagey lizard has another interesting defensive strategy. If a predator pursues it, it will run away in a zig-zag pattern to confuse its attacker. Once there is enough distance, it will suddenly stop, turn around, slowly creep back toward the predator, and hide. As the predator rushes to catch it, thinking it is ahead, it darts straight past the lizard hiding in a bush or under a rock!


#2. Eastern Slowworm

  • Anguis colchica

Types of lizards in Serbia

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults grow up to 50 cm (20 in) long.
  • Their coloring is brown on the body with darker brown flanks.
  • Males have noticeable blue spots on the back during mating season.

Eastern Slowworms are a type of legless lizard in Serbia.

Despite their confusing name, these creatures aren’t worms at all! In fact, you might get them confused with a snake because of their lack of legs and the way they slither around on their bellies. Here are the differences to help you identify an Eastern Slowworm:

  • Slowworms have eyelids and ear openings, which snakes lack.
  • Snakes have wide jaws that can be unhinged to consume large prey, while slowworms’ jaws are fixed.
  • Slowworms have unforked or notched tongues, whereas snakes’ tongues are completely forked.

You can find Eastern Slowworms in forest clearings and along trail paths basking in the sun. This species likes to occupy the burrows of small rodents but also feels at home under stone piles and wood debris. They often venture into suburban gardens, especially to catch a meal.

Although this reptile loves basking in the sun, it is most active at night and after rain. As its name suggests, it’s not one of the fastest lizards out there and prefers slower prey like earthworms, insect larvae, and slugs.


#3. Balkan Wall Lizard

  • Podarcis tauricus

Types of lizards in Serbia

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults are about 8 cm (3 in) long.
  • They are bright green in spring and olive green to brown in summer.
  • Their backs are brownish with black spots.

Balkan Wall Lizards can thrive in nearly any habitat in Serbia.

This sturdy reptile is a generalist, meaning the climate and conditions of its habitat don’t matter much. However, they prefer dry, open grassland areas like meadows, rural gardens, and dunes. They love any spot with sparse vegetation where they can roam and search for food.

When mating season arrives, male Balkan Wall Lizards waste no time to secure a suitable female. There is great competition among males, who assert dominance and fight for the right to mate. Females lay between two and ten eggs twice yearly, from mid-April until mid-July.


#4. European Copper Skink

  • Ablepharus kitaibelii

Types of lizards in Serbia

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults grow up to 15 cm (6 in) long.
  • They are bronze with dark brownish-black sides.
  • Females are slightly longer and heavier than males.

The European Copper Skink is often called the European Snake-eye because its eyelids are fixed, like snakes. In contrast, most lizards have movable eyelids. These skinks also move similarly to snakes because of their small and weak limbs.

By IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, CC BY-SA 3.0, Via Wikipedia

This small, slim lizard has a plain diet consisting mostly of small snails and insects they find at night. They spend most of their time on the ground in meadows and fields.

In most other lizard species, the males are larger to defend their territory against other males. However, females have the size advantage in the case of the European Copper Skink. This size difference is thought to offer an advantage in attracting males during the mating season. They’re extremely shy and prefer to hide under leaves and rocks during the day.


#5. Erhard’s Wall Lizard

  • Podarcis erhardii

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults are about 7 cm (3 in) long.
  • Their coloring is solid gray or brown and occasionally green.
  • Females have spotty lines or two white stripes bordering two dark striped lines on their backs.
  • Males have a net-like pattern with a white, orange, yellow, or red throat.

The Erhard’s Wall Lizard is also known as the Aegean Wall Lizard because of its abundance in the Aegean archipelago. This island chain’s plant-covered dunes and open spaces allow the Erhard’s Wall Lizard to roam and flourish. They prefer a dry, densely vegetated habitat with low bushes or rocky areas.

These lizards mainly feed on insects and arthropods, and they use excellent camouflage to hide and ambush their prey. This camouflage also comes in handy for new hatchlings, which are vulnerable to being scooped up by birds. Luckily for young Erhard’s Wall Lizards, they’re born with the ability to change color and blend in with their habitat.

Mating season starts in the spring, and the female lays her eggs in early summer, eventually producing hatchlings that are about 3 cm (1.2 in) long. Once they hatch, the young lizards fend for themselves, finding food and hiding from predators immediately.


#6. Mediterranean House Gecko

  • Hemidactylus turcicus

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults are 3.8-6.3 cm (1.5-2.5 in) long.
  • The pupils are vertical, and the eyes are large and round with immovable eyelids.
  • This species has two color phases for camouflage.
    • Pale phase: the coloring is light pink to pale yellow or white with brown or gray blotches.
    • Dark phase: the coloring darkens to gray or brown, obscuring the blotches on the back.

This lizard is one of the most commonly seen in Serbia.

Mediterranean House Geckos are nocturnal, but this won’t stop you from being able to find them. They’re considered an “urbanized” species, which means they’re just as happy to live inside your house as they are in the wild!

By Osado – Own work, Public Domain, Via Wikipedia

They eat insects attracted to lights and are commonly found on walls, ceilings, and window screens in homes. Outside, look for them in rock crevices or cracked tree trunks.

In addition to being comfortable around humans, Mediterranean House Geckos are a vocal species. The mating call of males is a series of clicks, and they make a squeaking noise if threatened.


#7. Common Wall Lizard

  • Podarcis muralis

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults are up to 20 cm (8 in) long.
  • The pupils are round, and the eyes are large with immovable eyelids.
  • Their coloring varies from shades of brown and gold to green and black.

European Wall Lizards are commonly found in urban areas and rocky outcroppings. They’re unafraid of people. You might find one scurrying across a sidewalk on a warm day!

These lizards are so comfortable around people that it’s just as likely to see them in a building as in the wild. They often prefer humid climates in the southern part of their range, but in the north, you can find them in dry habitats.


#8. Common Slow Worm

  • Anguis fragilis

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults are 40-45 cm (15-18 in) long.
  • They are smooth, scaled, and legless, with heads that are the same width as their bodies.
  • Often these lizards have stripes that run the length of their bodies, but some are solid in color. Common coloring is olive, brown, tan, and black.

Despite their name, Slow Worms are not worms at all but rather legless lizards. And if you’re wondering whether a legless lizard is just a snake, the answer is no! The reptile world can get confusing but no less fascinating when it comes to creatures like these.

Slow Worms spend most of their time buried in sand or underneath rocks and debris. They can be hard to find unless you’re willing to upend some stones in your search!

One of the most interesting behaviors of Slow Worms and many other lizards is the ability to sever their tail to escape a predator. This skill is called Caudal Autotomy. If a predator is chasing a Slow Worm or grabs its tail, the lizard simply breaks it off and continues to escape.


#9. Viviparous Lizard

  • Zootoca vivipara

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults are 5-7 cm (2-3 in) long.
  • Their skin is mottled brown, tan, and black.
  • They have long tails compared to their body; however, if their tails are lost to predators, only a short stub grows back.

These tiny lizards are tough when it comes to cool weather in Serbia, and they will hibernate through the worst of winter, from October to March. They must bask in the sun to maintain their body temperature in the summer, so you’re likely to see them during the day.

Viviparous Lizards are named for their method of reproduction. Instead of laying eggs like most other reptiles, these lizards give birth to live young! It’s thought that this gives their offspring a better chance of survival because they don’t have to survive through a helpless stage of egg development. Interestingly, in some regions, this lizard does lay eggs, which may have to do with a lack of predators in the area.


#10. Sand Lizard

  • Lacerta agilis

Identifying Characteristics:

  • Adults are 18-20 cm (7-8 in) long.
  • Males are green with a brown stripe on the back and brown hind legs.
  • Females are light brown with darker brown mottling.

As its name suggests, this lizard prefers dry habitats in Serbia.

Look for sand lizards in rock gardens, beaches, dunes, or rocky outcrops. They spend most of the day in the open, basking in the sun to retain as much heat as possible. You’re likely only to see one at a time because these territorial lizards rarely bask together.

While basking, Sand Lizards need to remain alert to the many predators that view them as a tasty snack. Birds of prey, foxes, and cats appear to be some of the most common dangers for these lizards. However, they’re also hunted by snakes and badgers. When confronted by danger, they use their exceptional speed to flee. They can also separate their tail from the rest of their body to get away!


Do you want to learn about MORE animals in Serbia?

Check out these ID Guides!


Which of these lizards in Serbia have you seen?

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