* reuters://realtime/verb=Open/url=cpurl://apps.cp./Apps/fx-polls?RIC=EURCZK= euro/koruna poll data

* reuters://realtime/verb=Open/url=cpurl://apps.cp./Apps/fx-polls?RIC=EURPLN= euro/zloty poll data

* reuters://realtime/verb=Open/url=cpurl://apps.cp./Apps/fx-polls?RIC=EURHUF= euro/forint poll data

* reuters://realtime/verb=Open/url=cpurl://apps.cp./Apps/fx-polls?RIC=EURRON= euro/leu poll data

* reuters://realtime/verb=Open/url=cpurl://apps.cp./Apps/fx-polls?RIC=EURRSD= euro/Serbian dinar poll data

PRAGUE, Sept 7 (Reuters) - The Czech crown has further room to drop in the coming 12 months as analysts adjust forecasts to weaker levels with interest rate cuts coming down the line, while Hungary's forint is likely to buck the softening trend, a Reuters poll showed on Thursday.

In the Sept. 1-6 poll, the median forecast was for the crown to weaken 0.7% from Tuesday's closing levels to 24.367 to the euro in a year, well beyond a previous 12-month forecast of 23.685 in a poll a month ago.

The poll also forecast the Polish zloty to trade at 4.50 to the euro in a year's time. Poll data was collected before the Polish central bank cut its main interest rate by 75 basis points to 6.00% on Wednesday, pushing the zloty down more than 1% to a four-month low beyond 4.57.

Central Europe's currencies have depreciated since the summer months as a stronger U.S. dollar and depressed global sentiment weighs. Prospects of interest rate cuts are also a factor, although still-high rates have mostly kept demand for assets up in the region until now.

The Czech central bank has yet to begin cutting interest rates but debate could start by the end of the year.

"It is probably the case that easing will start (in the Czech Republic) earlier than in the euro zone," said Pavel Sobisek, a chief economist at UniCredit in Prague.

"So the interest rate differential will be narrowing and that will put some slight pressure on the crown."

Romania's leu was also forecast to lose more than 1% to 5.02 to the euro.

The forint, though, should find some stability as it gets pulled between weaker global market conditions and chances of Budapest unlocking European Union funds frozen in a dispute with Brussels over rule-of-law issues.

It has swung in a wide range in recent weeks. The poll forecast it to gain 0.6% during the next 12 months, to 385 per euro.

Peter Virovacz of ING said a reversal in the euro-dollar and the highest interest rate levels in the EU - despite Hungary's central bank already in easing mode - was a draw for investors.

"Over the longer term, continuous dollar weakening, improving external balance, and the highest positive real interest rate will push the forint to stronger levels," he said.

(For other stories from the September Reuters foreign exchange poll:)

(Reporting by Jason Hovet; additional polling by Sujith Pai, Devayani Sathyan and Pranoy Krishna; Editing by Sharon Singleton)