How to Enter the China Trademark Market: 2026 Guide
In 2025, China received over 7.4 million trademark registration applications, making it the world’s largest and most competitive trademark market for the seventh consecutive year. Entering this system is a mandatory step for any foreign brand selling products, licensing IP, or manufacturing in China — and doing it wrong can cost your company between RMB 50,000 and RMB 200,000 in lost priority, counterfeit recovery, and re-filing fees.
Why Registering a 商标 (Trademark, shāngbiāo) in China Is Different
Unlike the United States or the European Union, China operates a “first-to-file” system, not “first-to-use.” This means the entity that files first with the 国家知识产权局 (CNIPA, guójiā zhīshì chǎnquán jú) — regardless of who used the mark first globally — owns the rights. Over 12,000 foreign companies discovered this the hard way in 2024 when their brands were pre-registered by local squatters, forcing them to pay RMB 300,000 to RMB 1.5 million in buyouts or legal cancellations.
A Chinese trademark registration takes approximately 9 to 14 months from filing to certificate issuance if no objections or oppositions occur. However, that timeline can stretch to 24 months or more if a 商标异议 (trademark opposition, shāngbiāo yìyì) is triggered. The CNIPA examines applications within 3–4 months, publishes for opposition for 3 months, and then issues certificates within 1–2 months after publication ends.
The Three Filing Routes for Foreign Applicants
Foreign entities face three distinct pathways for 商标注册 (trademark registration, shāngbiāo zhùcè) in China. Your choice depends on your existing international portfolio, timeline, and budget.
Route 1: Direct National Filing via CNIPA
You file directly with the CNIPA, either by using a local Chinese law firm as your agent or by working through a licensed trademark agency. This is the most common route for brands entering China for the first time. Filing fees for one class of goods or services range from RMB 270 to RMB 500 per class (official fee) plus agent fees of RMB 1,500 to RMB 4,000 per class.
Route 2: Madrid Protocol International Registration
If you already have a home-country registration or application, you can extend protection to China via the Madrid System. The official cost is about CHF 653 (RMB 5,200) for one class, plus China’s individual fee of CHF 100. This route centralizes management but makes it harder to amend or enforce your mark locally because the Chinese designation depends on the basic mark’s validity for five years.
Route 3: Paris Convention Priority Claim
If you have filed in your home country within the last six months, you can claim priority in China. This gives your Chinese filing the same effective date as your home filing — critical in a first-to-file system. No extra official fees, but your agent must include the priority document and a Chinese translation.
Decision Framework: Which Filing Route Should You Choose?
| If your situation is… | Choose this route… | Because… |
|---|---|---|
| You need fast, localized protection for a single brand entering China | Direct National Filing | You can tailor the specification to Chinese classification practice and respond quickly to office actions |
| You manage 10+ trademarks globally and want centralized renewal and recordal | Madrid Protocol | One filing, one currency, and one renewal date for up to 90+ countries |
| You filed in your home country less than six months ago | Paris Convention Priority | You lock in the earlier filing date in China, defeating any squatter who files after that date |
Decision Framework: If your product launches in China within 12 months, choose Direct National Filing for speed and localization. If you have a large international portfolio and can wait 18–24 months for China protection, choose Madrid Protocol. If you filed at home less than six months ago, choose Paris Convention Priority to secure your date — regardless of your long-term strategy.
Classification and Specification: The Most Common Rejection Trap
China uses the 12th Edition of the Nice Classification, but the CNIPA applies its own unique sub-classifications and goods descriptions. Over 35% of first-time foreign applications receive an office action because the specification does not match Chinese acceptable terms. For example, “software as a service (SaaS)” is not a pre-approved term in Class 42; you must use “platform as a service (PaaS)” or “software rental” as listed in the CNIPA manual.
Working with a local Chinese trademark agent who knows the accepted terms is not optional — it saves an average of 4–6 months of office-action back-and-forth. The cost of correcting a specification after filing is RMB 500–800 per class per amendment, plus agent fees.
Three Critical Pitfalls to Avoid
Timeline and Cost Summary: What to Expect in 2026
Here is a realistic timeline-budget table for a single-class direct national filing in 2026:
| Phase | Time (months) | Cost (RMB) per class | Key notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-filing search + agent engagement | 0.5 – 1 | 1,000 – 3,000 | Includes Chinese character and phonetic search |
| Filing and formal examination | 1 – 4 | 270 – 500 (official) + 1,500 – 4,000 (agent) | CNIPA issues filing receipt within 7–15 days |
| Substantive examination | 3 – 9 | Included in official fee | 85% of office actions come in this phase |
| Publication for opposition | 3 | No fee — but agent may charge for opposition monitoring | Anyone can oppose within the 3-month window |
| Registration certificate issuance | 1 – 2 | 0 (included) | Digital certificate and physical copy mailed |
| Total | 9 – 14 | 2,770 – 7,500 | Add RMB 5,000–10,000 if an opposition occurs |
Enforcing Your Trademark in China
Once registered, your 商标 is valid for 10 years from the filing date, renewable indefinitely. Enforcement is available through three channels: administrative complaint to the local Administration for Market Regulation (free but slow, 3–6 months), civil litigation in the Beijing Intellectual Property Court or other specialized courts (RMB 50,000–300,000 in legal fees, 6–12 months), and customs recordal (RMB 50–100 per recording, blocks counterfeit goods at ports).
In 2024, foreign brand owners won 89% of trademark infringement cases in Chinese courts, with average damages of RMB 480,000 — up from RMB 270,000 in 2020. The new 2021 Judicial Interpretation increased statutory damages from RMB 3 million to RMB 5 million for willful infringement.
NEXT STEPS
- Run a Comprehensive China Trademark Search — Before filing anything, conduct a full availability search in Chinese characters, pinyin, and English. Our China Trademark Search Guide walks you through CNIPA’s database and phonetic traps.
- Choose Your Filing Route and Agent — Based on the Decision Framework above, select direct, Madrid, or Paris Convention. We recommend working with an agent listed on the CNIPA-accredited agent directory.
- Record Your Trademark with China Customs — Once your certificate issues, customs recordal costs under RMB 100 but can block millions of RMB in counterfeit imports. Use our Customs Recordal Checklist to prepare the filing in one hour.
— China Gateway 360 —
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