Selemli (Macedonian: Селемли, Serbian: Селемлија/Selemlija) is a village in the municipality of Bogdanci, North Macedonia at the border with Greece.
Selemli is located south from the village of Stojakovo, with which it is connected by an asphalt road.
In the southern part of the village there is the small artificial lake Selemlija, built in the 1970s to irrigate the vineyards.
The population of Selemli is mainly engaged in the cultivation of agricultural products (mostly early vegetables) primarily due to the favorable warm climate and strong Mediterranean influences that penetrate into this region.
According to the statistics of the Bulgarian ethnographer Vasil Kanchov from 1900, the village of Selemli had 250 inhabitants, all Turks.