China Trademark Filing for Foreign Applicants: Official Route and Evidence Checklist

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Executive Summary

Foreign companies should treat China trademark filing as an early market-entry control. The first questions are whether the applicant has a business domicile in China, whether a Chinese trademark agency is required, which marks and classes need protection, and whether the application documents match the official requirements. CNIPA’s current guidance states that a foreign company with no business domicile in China shall entrust a legally established trademark agency for China trademark matters. A company with a China entity should still verify the applicant identity, authorization, mark drawing, classes, goods or services and evidence before filing.

Who This Guide Is For

This guide is for an overseas brand, manufacturer, software business, distributor or investor preparing to sell, license, manufacture or market in China. It is not a substitute for a clearance search or legal advice on a particular mark.

Route Selection

Applicant situation Official route to check Immediate action
Foreign company with no business domicile in China Entrust a trademark agency established in accordance with law Verify the agency through the official CNIPA agency information channel
Foreign national with habitual residence in China CNIPA guidance describes direct filing channels subject to the stated document requirements Confirm identity and residence evidence before choosing direct filing
Company using a China subsidiary or WFOE The China entity may be treated as the applicant business entity Confirm the legal applicant and authorization chain
International portfolio using Madrid Check the Madrid System route and China designation requirements Compare the international route with a domestic China filing plan

Evidence Checklist

  • Applicant legal name, address and jurisdiction.
  • Trademark drawing in the format required by the official application guidance.
  • Goods and services descriptions mapped to the correct classes.
  • Power of attorney and agency information where an agency is required.
  • Priority documents and dates if priority is claimed.
  • Evidence of ownership, use or authorization where the risk profile requires it.
  • A watch and renewal owner inside the business.

Step-by-Step Filing Workflow

  1. Define the commercial mark, product names, Chinese-language marks and logo variants.
  2. Search for conflicting marks before committing to packaging, domains or launch spend.
  3. Decide whether the applicant is the overseas company, a China entity or another authorized owner.
  4. Select the filing route and verify the agent or online channel against the current CNIPA guidance.
  5. Prepare the application form, mark drawing, classes, goods or services and authorization documents.
  6. Submit and preserve the filing receipt, application number and source documents.
  7. Track examination, opposition, review, renewal and use evidence in one IP register.
  8. Align the trademark plan with customs protection, distributor contracts and platform enforcement where relevant.

Common Mistakes

  • Waiting until after a China launch to check the brand.
  • Filing only the English mark and ignoring the Chinese-language brand used by customers.
  • Choosing classes only from a foreign registration without mapping the China goods and services list.
  • Using a local office or representative office as if it were automatically the foreign company’s business domicile for filing.
  • Treating an agent’s recommendation as a substitute for the official application requirements.
  • Failing to maintain evidence and renewal ownership after registration.

Decision Rule

The filing should proceed when the applicant, route, mark portfolio, classes and evidence are documented. If any of those five items is unclear, pause the commercial launch decision and resolve the IP ownership and filing route first.

Sources and Review Date

Last reviewed: 2026-07-14

中国门户360编辑部
中国门户360编辑部
Editorial team covering European ecommerce policy, compliance, products, logistics, platform entry, and seller operations.

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