How long does patent approval take for trademark in China?

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How Long Does Trademark Approval Take in China? (2025 Timeline Guide)

trademark approval (商标注册, shāngbiāo zhùcè) in China typically takes 12 to 18 months from filing to final registration, assuming no objections or oppositions arise. This timeline is managed by the China National Intellectual Property Administration (国家知识产权局, Guójiā Zhīshì Chǎnquán Jú, CNIPA). While 12-18 months is the standard estimate, roughly 35% of applications face an office action or third-party opposition, which can stretch the process to 24 months or longer. In comparison, trademark registration in the United States averages 10-14 months, and the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) completes approvals in 4-6 months. Understanding this timeline is critical for foreign businesses entering the Chinese market, as delays can impact product launches and brand protection strategies.

The Standard Trademark Registration Timeline in China

CNIPA operates a structured, multi-stage process. Below is the breakdown of each phase after filing a trademark application (商标申请, shāngbiāo shēnqǐng):

Stage Duration (months) What Happens
Filing and Formality Check 1–2 CNIPA reviews documents, classification, and fees. If incomplete, you receive a notice to rectify.
Substantive Examination 6–9 Examiners assess distinctiveness, similarity to existing marks, and compliance with Chinese law.
Preliminary Approval & Publication (初审公告, chūshěn gōnggào) 3 (publication period) Your mark is published in the Trademark Gazette. Third parties have 3 months to oppose.
Opposition Resolution (if any)  6–12 (additional) If opposed, CNIPA hears arguments. Many oppositions are resolved within 6–9 months.
Registration & Certificate Issuance** 1–2 After publication ends without opposition (or successful defense), CNIPA issues the registration certificate.

Note: Estimated total timeline without opposition is 12–18 months. With opposition, expect 18–24 months.

One reason China’s timeline is longer than the EUIPO’s is the sheer volume of applications — CNIPA received 9.5 million trademark applications in 2023 alone, compared to roughly 250,000 at the EUIPO. The examiner workload directly contributes to the examination backlog. However, the Chinese government has been investing in digitalization, and since 2021, CNIPA has reduced average examination time from 12 months to 9 months in many categories.

Factors That Speed Up or Delay Trademark Approval

Fast-Track Options: Trademark Expedited Examination (商标快速审查, shāngbiāo kuàisù shěnchá)

China does offer an expedited examination pathway, but it is not as straightforward as in some countries. To qualify, your trademark must fall into a “public interest” category, such as marks related to public health, major national events, or those with clear evidence of prior use and high commercial urgency. Approved fast-track applications can move through substantive examination in 4–5 months, cutting total time to 8–10 months if no opposition arises. However, only about 5% of applications qualify for this route. Most foreign applicants do not meet the stringent criteria — unless your brand is already widely recognized in China with documented sales data.

Why Delays Happen

The most common delay triggers are:

  • Office Actions (审查意见, shěnchá yìjiàn): CNIPA issues a trademark office action when it finds issues like lack of distinctiveness or conflicts with a prior mark. Responding within 30–60 days is required. Unresolved actions can add 3–6 months to the process.
  • Oppositions (异议, yìyì): A third party (often a competitor or trademark squatter) files an opposition during the 3-month publication period. The opposition process includes submission of evidence, hearings, and a decision by CNIPA. This adds a minimum of 6–12 months.
  • Incorrect Classification: China uses the Nice Classification system with 45 classes. If you choose the wrong class or sub-class (群组, qúnzǔ), your application may be rejected or require re-filing, adding 6–9 months to your total time.

For comparison, a straightforward trademark application in China might take 12 months, while a highly contested one (e.g., a mark similar to a famous brand or one opposed by multiple parties) can stretch beyond 24 months.

Pitfall: Relying on the 12-month average without factoring in the 3‑month opposition window. Many applicants assume approval is guaranteed if no office action is issued, but the opposition period is often the longest bottleneck. Cost: An opposition can cost RMB 30,000–80,000 in legal fees and delay your market entry by up to a full year. Fix: Conduct a comprehensive trademark search (商标检索, shāngbiāo jiǎnsuǒ) through a qualified Chinese IP law firm before filing. They can identify potential opposers and help you adjust the mark or classes to reduce conflict risk.

What Happens After Your Trademark Is Registered?

Once CNIPA issues your registration certificate (注册证, zhùcè zhèng), the trademark is valid for 10 years from the date of registration. You must renew it within the 12 months before expiry, or within a 6-month grace period after expiry (with a late fee).

However, registration does not mean your trademark is unassailable. Two critical post-registration risks exist for foreign companies:

  1. Non-Use Cancellation (连续三年不使用, liánxù sān nián bù shǐyòng): Any third party can petition CNIPA to cancel your mark if you have not used it in China for three consecutive years. Your burden is to provide evidence of genuine commercial use — such as product packaging, sales invoices, or advertising materials — showing the mark in use in China. If you cannot, the mark is revoked. This is a common tactic by local competitors.
  2. Invalidation Based on Prior Rights: A prior user of an unregistered mark (or someone with a well-known international mark) can seek invalidation of your registered mark within 5 years of its registration date. This means even after your trademark is approved, it remains vulnerable for half a decade.

To protect your investment, you should actively use the mark in China from day one, document all usage, and monitor for third-party cancellation or invalidation attempts.

Pitfall: Assuming “approval = permanent protection.” Many foreign firms register a trademark but never use it in the Chinese market, assuming the registration alone deters copycats. Cost: A non-use cancellation petition can cost RMB 20,000–50,000 in legal defense fees, plus the loss of your brand registration, which may take 12–18 months to re‑establish under a new application. Fix: Have a concrete “use it or lose it” plan within 6 months of registration. Import a small batch of products bearing the mark, run a local ad campaign, or secure a retail listing — all of which generate the use evidence needed to defend against cancellation.
Pitfall: Choosing the wrong classification and missing key goods or services. A common mistake is filing only for Class 9 (electronics) but not Class 35 (retail services) or Class 42 (software). This leaves your brand exposed in important commercial channels. Cost: Re‑filing an entirely new application for the missed class costs RMB 3,000–5,000 per class in CNIPA fees plus attorney drafting, and delays protection by 12–18 months. Fix: Work with a Chinese trademark agent to define your business model across all relevant Nice classes upfront, even if it means filing 2–3 classes initially. The extra upfront cost of RMB 6,000–15,000 saves far more in later re‑filing and litigation.

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

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