Budgeting for a trademark in China in 2026 requires a clear understanding of official CNIPA fees, agency service costs, translation and notarization expenses, and long-term portfolio maintenance — and for most foreign applicants, the total starting budget is between RMB 3,000 and RMB 12,000 per class, with a comprehensive first-year budget for a 3-class portfolio averaging RMB 25,000 to RMB 55,000 including search, filing, monitoring, and contingencies.
Understanding the China Trademark Budget Landscape
China operates a “first-to-file” trademark system under the Zhonghua Renmin Gongheguo Shangbiao Fa (中华人民共和国商标法, Trademark Law of the People’s Republic of China). Foreign companies that do not have a business address in mainland China are required by Trademark Law Article 18 to file through a CNIPA-registered agency. This single rule shapes the entire budgeting picture: you cannot file directly, so agency fees are not optional — they are a statutory requirement. The China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA), formerly known as the Trademark Office (TMO) and now under the broader CNIPA umbrella, sets the official fee schedule, while agencies add their own service layers. Understanding both is essential to building a realistic budget.
China acceded to the Hague Agreement Concerning the International Registration of Industrial Designs in 2022, and since November 2023, the Hague Apostille Convention applies to document legalization — a major cost reduction for foreign applicants that we cover in detail below. The trademark budget for 2026 also reflects CNIPA’s continued digital transformation, with most filings now conducted through the online CNIPA system, though agents typically bundle this into their service fees rather than offering a discount for e-filing.
Official CNIPA Fee Schedule (2026)
The following table breaks down the official fees set by CNIPA as of 2026. All amounts are in RMB (Renminbi, 人民币). These fees are non-negotiable and apply uniformly regardless of whether you file through a Beijing-based IP firm or a smaller agency in a tier-2 city.
| Service | CNIPA Official Fee (RMB) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Application (first 10 goods/services per class) | 270 / class | Base filing fee per class; includes up to 10 items |
| Additional item (beyond 10 per class) | 27 / item / class | Per additional good or service specification |
| Registration fee | 500 / class | Due upon preliminary approval; includes certificate issuance |
| Renewal (10-year term) | 500 / class | Payable every 10 years; grace period of 6 months applies |
| Opposition filing | 1,500 / case | Filing an opposition against a published application |
| Invalidation request | 500 / class | Request to invalidate a registered mark |
| Cancellation (non-use, 连续三年不使用撤销) | 500 / class | Petition to cancel a mark for non-use after 3 years |
| Trademark assignment | 500 / class | Per-class fee for recording an assignment |
| License recordal | 150 / class | Per-class recordal of a trademark license |
It is important to note that the application fee of RMB 270 per class covers the first 10 goods or services in the specification. If your specification includes more than 10 items, each additional item costs RMB 27 per class. Most agencies recommend keeping the specification focused to avoid excessive additional-item fees, while still covering all commercially relevant goods to prevent third parties from filing “blocking” applications in closely related items. A well-drafted specification typically includes 10 to 15 items per class.
Agency Fees: The Mandatory Middle Layer
Because foreign applicants without a Chinese business address must use a CNIPA-registered agent, agency fees are a fixed line item in any trademark budget. Agency fees vary significantly based on the firm’s location, reputation, and the complexity of your mark.
| Agency Service | Fee Range (RMB) | Typical Inclusions |
|---|---|---|
| Basic filing (per class) | 800 – 2,000 | Drafting specification, submitting application, responding to formalities |
| Availability / search (per class) | 300 – 500 | CNIPA database search and preliminary opinion letter |
| Opposition defense (per case) | 3,000 – 8,000 | Drafting defense arguments, evidence submission, hearing representation |
| Renewal agency fee (per class) | 500 – 1,000 | Processing renewal application, monitoring deadline |
| Assignment recordal (per class) | 500 – 1,200 | Drafting assignment agreement, filing with CNIPA |
| Customs recordal | 3,000 – 5,000 | Filing with China Customs (official fee: free) |
| Watch / monitoring (per mark per year) | 500 – 1,500 | Class-level monitoring of new applications and publications |
City-specific cost variation: Agency fees are notably higher in Beijing and Shanghai, where specialized IP firms with English-speaking attorneys charge RMB 1,500 to 2,500 per class for basic filing. In tier-2 cities such as Chengdu, Hangzhou, or Guangzhou, the same service may cost RMB 800 to 1,500 per class. However, quality varies considerably. For critical marks — your core brand, flagship product names, or marks with high commercial value — we recommend engaging a specialized IP firm in Beijing or Shenzhen, even at a premium. The difference in quality of specification drafting, examination response strategy, and ongoing monitoring can be the deciding factor between a granted mark and a rejected or cancelled one.
Total Budget Per Class: Combining Official and Agency Fees
When you combine official CNIPA fees with agency charges, the realistic budget per class breaks down as follows:
| Budget Scenario | Cost Per Class (RMB) | What Is Included |
|---|---|---|
| Basic registration (one class) | 3,000 – 8,000 | Official application fee (270), registration fee (500), basic agency (800–2,000), plus contingencies |
| Comprehensive (search + filing + monitoring) | 5,000 – 12,000 | Pre-filing search (300–500), filing + registration (1,070 + agency), first-year monitoring (500–1,500) |
| Full protection (search, filing, monitoring, opposition reserve) | 8,000 – 18,000 | Everything above plus an allocation for potential opposition defense |
For a typical 3-class portfolio (e.g., Class 35 for advertising/retail, Class 25 for clothing, Class 9 for software), the first-year budget using the comprehensive scenario ranges from RMB 15,000 to RMB 36,000. This does not include translation, notarization, or apostille costs, which we cover next.
Multi-Class vs. Single-Class Filing Strategy
China permits multi-class applications, meaning you can file one application covering multiple international classes under a single application number. The advantage is cost efficiency: you pay only one agency filing fee instead of three separate ones, and the official fees are simply the per-class totals added together. For a 3-class application, the agency overhead savings can be RMB 500 to 1,500.
However, there is a significant risk: if the CNIPA examiner raises an objection or issues a refusal for any one class, the entire application is affected. You may need to file a divisional application for the accepted classes, which delays registration and adds cost. CNIPA ultimately issues separate registration certificates for each class regardless of whether you file a single multi-class application or separate single-class applications. For this reason, many experienced practitioners recommend filing separate single-class applications for high-value marks, accepting the higher upfront agency cost in exchange for procedural independence. For lower-risk marks or budget-constrained filings, multi-class applications remain a practical option.
Translation Costs
All foreign-language trademark documents submitted to CNIPA must include a certified Chinese translation (Zhongwen Fanyi, 中文翻译). This includes:
- Trademark specimen descriptions — the list of goods and services must be translated from English (or any foreign language) into Chinese. Agencies typically prepare this translation in-house. Cost: included in the basic filing fee or charged at RMB 200–500 per page if outsourced.
- Power of Attorney — a simple, standardized document that agencies translate as part of their service. Cost: typically included in the filing fee.
- Evidence documents — for oppositions, invalidations, or cancellations, supporting evidence (invoices, advertising materials, market reports) must be translated. Cost: RMB 200–500 per page, depending on document complexity and volume.
- Company certificates — business registration certificates, articles of incorporation, and other corporate documents. Cost: RMB 200–500 per page.
Budget at least RMB 1,000 to RMB 3,000 for translation in your first year if you need to submit multiple supporting documents. For ongoing maintenance and renewals, translation costs are minimal because most core documents are already on file with your agent.
Notarization and Apostille: Post–November 2023 Savings
Before November 2023, foreign companies had to go through the full consular legalization process for documents such as the Power of Attorney, certificate of incorporation, and notarized statements. This typically cost RMB 1,500 to RMB 3,000 per document and involved multiple embassy steps. Since China acceded to the Hague Apostille Convention, documents certified by an apostille (Haiya Renzheng, 海牙认证) are accepted directly.
The current cost structure is:
- Apostille fee: approximately RMB 300 to 500 per document, depending on the issuing authority in your home country
- Notarization (pre-apostille): generally included in the apostille process or charged at RMB 100–300 per document locally
- Consular legalization (legacy, no longer needed): RMB 1,500–3,000 per document — now obsolete for most countries
This represents a cost reduction of roughly 70% to 80% per document. For a standard trademark filing requiring 2 to 3 notarized/apostilled documents, the savings amount to RMB 2,000 to RMB 5,000. Budget approximately RMB 500 to RMB 1,000 per document for the apostille process in 2026.
Trademark Monitoring Costs
Ongoing monitoring is essential in China’s first-to-file system, where bad-faith applications by trademark squatters (Shangbiao Zhuce Qiangzhu, 商标注册抢注) are common. Monitoring costs include:
| Monitoring Method | Cost (RMB) | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Professional watch service (per mark, per class) | 500 – 1,500 / year | Ongoing — weekly or monthly reports |
| CNIPA official gazette monitoring (manual) | Free | Published every 10 days; labor-intensive |
| Comprehensive portfolio watch (3–5 marks) | 2,000 – 6,000 / year | Includes class-level monitoring across all marks |
While it is technically possible to monitor CNIPA’s official gazette yourself at no cost, the gazette publishes new applications every 10 days (36 issues per year), and manually reviewing each issue across relevant classes is impractical for most businesses. A paid professional watch service is strongly recommended for any mark you consider commercially important.
Enforcement Budget
If your trademark is infringed, enforcement options range from administrative action to civil litigation. The costs vary dramatically depending on the route you choose:
| Enforcement Method | Cost Range (RMB) | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| CNIPO invalidation / cancellation | 20,000 – 50,000 | 6–12 months |
| AMR administrative raid (行政查处) | 30,000 – 100,000 | 1–3 months (with AMR cooperation) |
| Civil litigation (first instance) | 50,000 – 300,000 | 6–18 months |
| Civil litigation (with appeal) | 100,000 – 500,000+ | 12–36 months |
| Customs seizure (recordal + bond) | 3,000 – 5,000 (agency) + variable bond | Ongoing upon recordal |
| Cease-and-desist letter (via agent) | 2,000 – 5,000 | 1–2 weeks |
Customs recordal itself is free (no official fee), but the agency fee of RMB 3,000 to RMB 5,000 covers preparing and filing the application. If Customs detains goods, you may need to post a bond or provide a guarantee, the amount of which varies by case. Including an enforcement contingency in your annual trademark budget — typically 20% to 30% of your total filing budget — is prudent practice for any company with valuable brand assets in China.
Portfolio Maintenance Over 10-Year Cycles
China trademark registrations are valid for 10 years from the registration date and are renewable indefinitely in 10-year increments. A sound maintenance budget accounts for:
- Renewal reserve: RMB 1,000 to 1,500 per class (RMB 500 official fee + RMB 500–1,000 agency fee), set aside annually on a pro-rata basis
- Monitoring costs: RMB 500 to 1,500 per mark per year (ongoing)
- Opposition / dispute reserve: RMB 5,000 to 20,000 per unexpected event
- Specification updates: if your product line changes, you may need to file new applications for additional goods or services
For a 5-class portfolio, the annual maintenance budget breaks down as follows:
| Maintenance Item | Annual Cost (RMB) |
|---|---|
| Renewal reserve (5 classes, amortized over 10 years) | 500 – 1,000 |
| Professional monitoring (5 classes, all marks) | 2,500 – 7,500 |
| Contingency / opposition reserve | 5,000 – 15,000 |
| Legal updates and agent retainer | 2,000 – 5,000 |
| Total annual maintenance | 10,000 – 28,500 |
This does not include new filings for additional marks or expansion into new classes. The figure above is purely for maintaining an existing 5-class portfolio. Year-to-year variation can be significant if an opposition materializes or if you need to renew several marks in the same year.
Hidden Costs You Should Budget For
Experienced China trademark practitioners know that several costs are frequently overlooked in initial budgets:
- Opposition defense: If a third party opposes your application — a common tactic by squatters — defending it can cost RMB 5,000 to RMB 20,000 per case, and there is no guarantee of recovering these costs even if you win
- Third-party cancellation: Squatters or competitors may file non-use cancellation actions against your registered marks after 3 years of registration, forcing you to prove use with evidence; defense costs RMB 5,000 to RMB 15,000 per case
- Customs seizure bond: If Customs detains suspected infringing goods, you may need to post a bond; amounts vary widely but can reach RMB 50,000 or more for large shipments
- Civil litigation costs for defense: If you are sued for trademark infringement (even on weak grounds), defending yourself in court costs RMB 50,000 to RMB 200,000
- Division application fees: If your multi-class application encounters an objection in one class, filing a divisional application for the remaining classes costs approximately RMB 500 to RMB 1,000 per divisional in agency fees, plus official fees
- Re-examination fees: If CNIPA rejects your application, requesting re-examination before the Trademark Review and Adjudication Board (TRAB) costs RMB 500 per class (official) plus agency fees of RMB 2,000 to RMB 5,000
A prudent trademark budget adds a 25% to 40% contingency buffer on top of your base filing and monitoring costs to absorb these hidden expenses when they arise.
Tax Treatment of Trademark Costs
Trademark filing fees, agency fees, monitoring costs, and enforcement expenses are generally deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses under China’s Enterprise Income Tax Law. However, there is an important distinction: the Research and Development (R&D) super-deduction (Yanfa Feiyong Jiaji Kouchu, 研发费用加计扣除), which allows qualified companies to deduct 100% of eligible R&D expenses (200% deduction starting from 2023), applies to patent costs but does not apply to trademark costs. Trademarks are considered brand assets, not R&D outputs, under Chinese tax rules.
Value Added Tax (VAT) on agency services is charged at either 6% (for small-scale taxpayers) or the general taxpayer rate. Your agency should provide a VAT invoice (Zengzhishui Fapiao, 增值税发票), which you can use as a deductible input VAT credit if you are a general VAT taxpayer in China. If you are filing from outside China and do not have a Chinese VAT registration, the VAT is simply a non-recoverable cost.
Budget Scenarios by Company Stage
Your trademark budget should reflect your company’s stage of China market entry. Below are three realistic budget scenarios for 2026:
| Company Stage | Typical Filing Scope | Annual Budget (RMB) |
|---|---|---|
| Startup | 1–2 core classes, basic filing with search, no monitoring | 5,000 – 12,000 |
| Growth | 3–5 classes, with professional monitoring, search, and renewal reserve | 20,000 – 50,000 |
| Enterprise | 10+ classes, multi-country coordination, active enforcement capability, full portfolio management | 100,000 – 300,000 |
Startups should prioritize securing their core brand in the most commercially relevant classes first (typically the class covering the actual product or service, plus Class 35 for retail/advertising services). Growth-stage companies should expand into adjacent classes, add monitoring, and begin filing defensive marks. Enterprises should implement full portfolio management with dedicated IP counsel, active enforcement, and multi-country coordination strategies — often with IP budgets exceeding RMB 300,000 annually.
Budget Planning Checklist
Use the following checklist to build your China trademark budget for 2026. Each item represents a real cost line that you should estimate and include:
- Identify core marks and classes — Determine which trademarks and which international classes (Nice Classification) you need. Start with the class covering your actual product or service.
- Pre-filing availability search — Budget RMB 300–500 per class for a professional search and preliminary opinion from a CNIPA-registered agent.
- Calculate official fees — RMB 270 per class (application) + RMB 500 per class (registration) = RMB 770 per class in official fees. Add RMB 27 per additional good item beyond 10 per class.
- Estimate agency filing fees — RMB 800–2,000 per class for basic filing. Higher for Beijing/Shanghai firms.
- Include translation and apostille — Budget RMB 500–1,000 per document for apostille. Translation at RMB 200–500 per page for supporting documents.
- Add first-year monitoring — RMB 500–1,500 per mark per class for professional watch services.
- Set up renewal reserve — Amortize the 10-year renewal cost (RMB 500 official + RMB 500–1,000 agency) annually: roughly RMB 100–150 per class per year.
- Allocate contingency buffer — Add 25–40% on top of base costs for unexpected oppositions, cancellations, or re-examinations.
- Consider multi-class vs. single-class decision — Weigh the cost savings of multi-class filing against the procedural risk. Budget for potential divisionals if using multi-class.
- Plan for enforcement — Set aside 20–30% of your total filing budget as an enforcement reserve for administrative or legal actions.
- Review annually — Trademark budgets should be reviewed each calendar year, factoring in CNIPA fee changes, agency rate adjustments, and portfolio expansion needs.
- Engage a CNIPA-registered agent — Verify your agency is registered with CNIPA. Do not engage unregistered intermediaries — your application will be rejected.
Where to Go From Here
Based on what you just read:
- Ready to act? Read [guide: SLUG-TO-BE-FILLED]
- Still comparing? See [comparison: SLUG-TO-BE-FILLED]
- Need numbers? Try [tool: SLUG-TO-BE-FILLED]
— China Gateway 360 —
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