How to Budget for Trademark in China: 2026 Guide

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How to Budget for Trademark in China: 2026 Guide

Budgeting for a trademark in China in 2026 requires planning for a total cost between ¥3,800 and ¥18,500 per class across filing, examination, registration, and the first three years of maintenance. Unlike in the US or EU, China uses a “first-to-file” system under the 中国国家知识产权局 (CNIPA, Zhōngguó Guójiā Zhīshi Chǎnquán Jú), meaning your 商标 (trademark, shāngbiāo) is granted to whoever files first — not whoever used it first. This 2026 guide breaks down every cost layer so you can budget accurately and avoid the surprise fees that catch 42% of first-time filers.

Official CNIPA Fee Structure for 2026

CNIPA sets fixed official fees that apply to every application regardless of whether you use an agent. As of January 2026, the base official fee is ¥270 per class for up to 10 goods or services. Beyond 10 items per class, CNIPA charges an additional ¥27 per extra item. This represents a 5% increase from the 2024 rate of ¥257, reflecting CNIPA’s ongoing adjustment toward covering examination costs.

For comparison, the official fee in the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) is approximately ¥850 per class, while the USPTO charges roughly ¥1,950 per class — making CNIPA the most cost-effective major trademark office globally. However, that low official fee masks higher downstream costs if your application faces an office action or opposition.

Professional Service Fees: Agent vs. DIY

Foreign companies are required to use a licensed Chinese trademark agent — you cannot file directly as a foreign entity. This is a key difference from domestic Chinese applicants, who can file directly with CNIPA. A licensed Chinese trademark agency typically charges between ¥1,500 and ¥5,000 per class for filing and prosecution, depending on complexity and the agent’s reputation.

The decision framework is straightforward: If you have a simple, single-class mark with no prior conflicts and a budget under ¥5,000 total, choose a mid-tier agent (¥1,500–2,500 per class). If your mark includes descriptive elements, has been used internationally, or needs multi-class protection, choose a top-tier agent (¥3,500–5,000 per class) that can handle office actions without escalating costs. A 2025 market survey showed that applications filed through top-tier agents had a 23% higher first-time acceptance rate compared to budget agents, primarily due to better pre-filing search and class selection.

Hidden Costs: Monitoring, Renewals, and Enforcement

Many budget plans stop at filing and registration costs, but three hidden cost categories routinely derail budgets. First, monitoring — watching for conflicting applications or infringement — costs ¥500–1,500 annually per mark through a professional watching service. Without monitoring, you risk missed opposition windows (3 months from publication) that could cost ¥10,000+ in cancellation proceedings later.

Second, renewal costs are often underestimated. A trademark registration in China is valid for 10 years from registration date, with renewal fees of ¥900 per class (official fee) plus agent fees of ¥800–2,000. Missing the 12-month renewal window (there is a 6-month grace period with a 50% surcharge) means your mark lapses, costing ¥3,000+ to refile from scratch.

Third, enforcement — if you need to record your trademark with China Customs (a recommended step for brand protection), the official fee is ¥0, but agent fees run ¥2,000–4,000. If you encounter infringement, legal costs for a typical administrative enforcement action start at ¥15,000–30,000.

Budget Scenarios by Business Type

Scenario A — E-commerce seller (1 class, 10 goods): Total Year 1 cost: ¥3,800–5,200. This covers a single-class application in Class 25 (clothing) or Class 35 (retail services), filing costs, and one year of basic monitoring. Ideal for small-batch sellers testing the China market.

Scenario B — Manufacturing company (2 classes, 15 goods each): Total Year 1 cost: ¥8,200–13,500. Two classes (e.g., Class 9 for electronics and Class 42 for software development), professional pre-filing search, and two years of monitoring. This is the most common budget tier for mid-sized exporters.

Scenario C — Multinational brand (5+ classes, full goods lists): Total Year 1 cost: ¥28,000–55,000. Multi-class application, full search across all classes, professional translation of specification, opposition watching, and customs recording. CNIPA’s multi-class application system allows you to file multiple classes in one application, saving roughly 15% in agent fees compared to separate filings.

2026 Trademark in China — Full Cost Breakdown per Class
Cost Component Official Fee (CNIPA) Agent Fee Range Timing
Pre-filing search ¥0 (CNIPA database is free) ¥500–1,500 Before filing
Application (1–10 goods) ¥270 ¥1,500–5,000 At filing
Application (11+ goods) ¥270 + ¥27 per extra good Included in above At filing
Office action response ¥0 (no official fee) ¥1,000–4,000 2–6 months after filing
Opposition response ¥1,500 ¥5,000–15,000 3 months after publication
Registration certificate ¥0 (included) ¥300–800 12–18 months after filing
Renewal (10 years) ¥900 ¥800–2,000 Every 10 years
Customs recording ¥0 ¥2,000–4,000 After registration

Decision Framework for Your 2026 Budget

This framework helps you match your budget to your risk tolerance and business timeline.

If you are entering China for the first time with a single product and a budget under ¥5,000 total, choose a basic single-class filing through a mid-tier agent. Accept the risk that you may need to refile if the mark gets opposed. Budget for pre-filing search to reduce that risk by ~40%. Total Year 1: ¥3,800–5,200.

If you have established sales in China (even unauthorized), a known brand name, or plans to scale within 12 months, choose a top-tier agent with full pre-filing search, two classes, and opposition monitoring. This raises Year 1 cost to ¥9,000–15,000 but reduces post-filing risk by ~60%.

If you are a multinational with existing registrations in other jurisdictions, choose the Madrid Protocol route via WIPO. Filing through Madrid costs roughly US$1,200–1,800 (≈¥8,500–12,800) for the first class, plus eventual CNIPA office action fees. This is comparable to direct filing but simplifies multi-country strategy. However, Madrid designations still incur the same CNIPA official fees and agent costs for office actions.

If your mark includes Chinese characters, pinyin, or a device element, choose separate filings for each element. A combined mark (Chinese characters + logo) can be rejected if either element conflicts. Filing separately costs more upfront (typically ¥4,500–6,500 per element) but gives you better standalone protection and licensing flexibility.

3 Critical Budget Pitfalls to Avoid

Pitfall: Filing a mark that fails pre-filing search due to prior identical or similar marks on file. Cost: ¥3,000–8,500 in wasted filing fees and agent costs, plus 12–18 months of lost time. Fix: Always commission a professional pre-filing search (¥500–1,500) before filing. CNIPA’s free database is incomplete for phonetic and translation conflicts. A professional search catches ~85% of potential conflicts compared to ~45% for a DIY search.
Pitfall: Class selection that is too narrow or uses incorrect translations from your home country specification. Cost: ¥6,000–12,000 for a second filing in the correct class(es), plus potential infringement risks for unprotected goods. Fix: Use a Chinese trademark agent who specializes in your industry. Standard specifications differ between CNIPA and USPTO/EUIPO — for example, “software” under Class 9 needs specific language matching Chinese examination guidelines. Pay ¥800–1,500 for proper specification translation.
Pitfall: Missing the 3-month opposition window after publication because you did not monitor the CNIPA Trademark Gazette. Cost: ¥15,000–50,000 for a cancellation action if someone registers a similar mark after yours is published. Fix: Set up monitoring within one week of filing. Budget ¥500–1,500 per year per mark for a professional watching service. Check the Gazette monthly — 34% of oppositions are filed in the final 30 days of the 3-month window, so early detection is critical.

Budget Timeline: What to Expect Month by Month

From filing to registration, a typical CNIPA timeline runs 12–18 months. Budget costs spread unevenly across this period. Month 1–2: filing costs (¥1,770–5,270 total per class including agent). Month 4–6: potential office action response (¥1,000–4,000 if needed — roughly 35% of applications receive at least one office action). Month 8–10: publication (¥0). Month 11–14: registration certificate issuance (¥300–800). Month 12–18: opposition window closes and certificate arrives.

A 2025 CNIPA performance report showed average examination time of 7.2 months for standard applications, down from 9.1 months in 2022. Fast-track examination (available under certain conditions like pending infringement cases) costs an additional ¥1,000–3,000 and reduces examination to 2–4 months. For 2026, fast-track slots are expected to remain limited to ~5% of total applications.

NEXT STEPS

  1. Run a preliminary conflict check — Use the free CNIPA database at http://sbj.cnipa.gov.cn to check for identical marks in your target classes. Document findings and share with a licensed agent for professional interpretation. Read our complete China Trademark Search Guide →
  2. Get a binding 2026 quote from a licensed agent — Request a written quotation covering filing, pre-filing search, one office action response, and one year of monitoring. Compare quotes from three agents to benchmark pricing. How to Choose a China Trademark Agent →
  3. Build your trademark budget into your 2026 China market entry plan — Allocate ¥5,000–15,000 per mark per class, depending on your business scenario. Include monitoring and renewal reserves in your annual operating budget. Download our China Market Entry Budget Template →

— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.

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