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Trademark Search in The United States

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Trademark Registration in The United States

Work with a local trademark attorney to file your trademark for registration. Take advantage of our easy, fast & efficient process. No hidden fees.

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Trademark application form for The United States

Submit an online form in order to request your trademark registration in The United States. You can pay later or have your personal consultant check your form first.

Complete 4 steps in 7 minutes
  • Current Contacts info
  • Trademark info
  • Additional services
  • Complete
  • Review and Submit

Study

Check if your trademark is available for registration.

The results will resolve any doubts regarding your mark and give you confidence in the outcome of the registration process.

from
$99 €93 £80 ¥717

Monitoring

Our AI search will constantly monitor Trademark Registers for any similar marks.

We'll manually check the results and regularly deliver reports of any conflicting marks allowing you to enforce your rights.

from
$69 €65 £55 ¥499

Renewal

Request a cost-effective trademark renewal in 150+ countries, don’t let your trademark expire.

Contact us for our online renewal process.

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$699 €656 £561 ¥5060

Contact Us

Trademark Services in the US

Learn more about our services & prices in the country
1st class Extra class
Filing Request $479 439
Filing Request (Combined Mark) $479 439
Renewal $699 Ask

Filing Request (Plus) - Website Special Offer*: an Intent to use TEAS Plus application with a one-time discount for new clients. 

  • TEAS Plus is a more cost-effective option that our attorney prefers to use whenever possible, as it comes with a government fee of US$250 per class. It offers less flexibility compared to the TEAS Standard.
  • On the other hand, the TEAS Standard provides greater flexibility and allows for the filing of non-standard products and services. It is recommended for a Foreign Registration basis. The government fee for TEAS Standard is US$350 per class.

Please find the full schedule of fees below.

USA TRADEMARK FAQ


 

✅ Q: What is the price for each additional class?

A: US$419, including a government fee (special online price for new clients) for an intent-to-use application. 
US$469, including a government fee for an actual use application. 
US$489, including a government fee (a regular price, any basis for filing). Read more about the bases for filing below.


 

✅ Q: What is the Extensive Study?

A: An Extensive Study is a comprehensive report that contains crucial information for your trademark registration process. The report includes a list of similar marks, the probability of registration, and our recommendations on how you can improve the probability.


 

✅ Q: What is the price of the study?

A: US$89 per class for a wordmark, US$159 per class for a logo mark.


 

✅ Q: What are the bases for filing?

A: When filing a mark in the US, you must choose a basis for filing. There are 3 main bases for filing. Foreign Registration is used when the mark is registered in your home country. Actual use means that you use your mark (sell your products/services) in the US. Intent to use means that you don’t use your mark, but will use it in the future.


 

✅ Q: How do bases for filing affect the price?

A: Intent-to-use is the easiest basis, and our attorney spends less time when filing an intent-to-use application. That’s why we offer a discount for such marks. But when your mark is accepted to registration, you must start using it and pay for submitting a declaration of use. It costs US$369/class. An actual use application is more complex as you will need a Specimen of Use (check 3.1 “Specimen of use” on this page), but there are no other fees. Foreign registration is used when the mark is registered in your home country. Only a translation of your certificate is required.


 

✅ What is your FULL schedule of fees in the US?

 

Trademark Services in the USA
  1st class Extra class Official fee included
Filing Request (Plus) - Website Offer Available on the website bonamark.com
Filing Request (Plus) - Regular Price  549 489 Yes, 250$ per class
Filing Request (RF Form) - Regular Price  649 589 Yes, 350$ per class
Extensive Trademark Study (wordmark) 99 99 N/A
Extensive Trademark Study (combined) 179 179 N/A
Copyright Registration 549 - Yes, included
Declaration of Use for ITU 369 369 Yes, included
Assignment/Trademark Transfer 320 N/A Yes, 50$ included
Responses to non-substantial objections 150-400 N/A Yes, included
Responses to substantial objections 400-650 N/A Yes, included
Filing an opposition 2000 N/A Yes, included
Invalidation Action 2100 N/A Yes, included
Change of Address 180 N/A Yes, included
Change of Name 150 N/A Yes, included
Change of Representative 100 N/A Yes, included
Renewal 699 N/A Yes, $525 included
Design Patent Filing for a micro company N/A N/A Yes, included
Submitting a Declaration of Use (5th-6th year) 469 369 Yes, 225$ included
Declaration of Incontestability (5th-6th year) 200 - Yes, 200$ included
Extension of Time 319 319 Yes, included
Revival in the USA 350-450 N/A Yes, included

 

USA Trademark Types for Registration

We recommend choosing a wordmark as your first mark. Your scope of protection will be very broad and you will be able to use your US wordmark with ® as part of any logo, with or without any stylization. 

A logo as a first mark is recommended if the mark you are trying to register is considered weak, for example, descriptive, or if there is a similar mark and adding a logo can help to overcome the similarity. In the USA, if you get a logo, you will have to use it with ® exactly as it was filed. 

A combined mark is a solid choice in many countries. But you must use your mark as it was registered at least sometimes. You will not be able to user ® with only part of your combined mark. 

Filing Request (Plus) - Website Special Offer*: an Intent to use application with a special fast payment discount and a Black Friday Discount valid until November 30, 2023. Payment must be submitted either online on the website or within 14 days from the date of the first request.

The prices might change without prior notice, discounts may apply.

1. How to apply for a mark in the USA:

Filing plan:

1. Start with a Free TM Search. We will check if there are any obvious conflicts. You will know if it's worth moving forward with the mark.

2. Attorney's opinion (a.k.a. Study) In some cases we may recommend asking our attorney to review the case and prepare a detailed registration report. That's an optional non-obligatory service.

3. Request registration. The process is completely online and we'll request your mark within 3-5 days and you will get a filing confirmation.

USA Registration Process

2. Registration process in a nutshell

Filing a mark in the USA requires a lot of preliminary work. Some companies are willing to cut corners, but saving a few days in the beginning will result in months spent preparing responses to objections that could otherwise be avoided.

 ✅ Click here to know more about the registration process in a nutshell

2.1 Detailed process explanation (click to open

Filing a mark in the USA requires a lot of preliminary work. Some companies are willing to cut corners, but saving a few days in the beginning will result in months spent preparing responses to objections that could otherwise be avoided.

  1. Are you using the mark in the USA? If yes, it means that you can take the straightest route to registration by using an "Actual Use" basis for registration, that's the best option.
  2. If you are not using the mark in the USA there are 2 options: "Foreign Registration" and "Intent to use". (1. How to choose a basis for filing 2. How to prepare a Specimen of Use that will not be refused)
  3. Before filing the mark you should clearly describe your products/services in accordance with the rules of the USPTO. Our consultants will help you with this.
  4. Come up with a trademark name and decide if this is a wordmark, a logo or a combined mark.
  5. You should perform a basic check before filing a mark, if we spot that your mark is descriptive or generic, we'll inform you of this. We recommend ordering a trademark study to learn the probability of registration.
  6. Once we have a list of products/services, a basis for filing and a name(s) of the owner(s) we are ready to file the mark
  7. The mark will be filed within 3-5 days and you will get a filing number. 

2.2 Trademark Registration Process (once filed)

Trademark registration applies to all U.S. States as well as any territory under the United States jurisdiction and control, including the American Virgin Islands (VI), in American Samoa (AS) and Guam (GU).

 

3. US Trademark registration: Requirements

  1. Name of the applicant
  2. Address of the applicant (can't be an agent address, care-of address, must be an actual business address).
  3. Description of products/services the applicant sells
  4. Name of the trademark (1. Trademark strength)
  5. Basis for filing: "Actual Use", "Intent to Use" or "Foreign registration" (1. How to choose a basis for filing 2. How to prepare a Specimen of Use that will not be refused)
✅ Click here to see US Trademark registration: Requirements

If you have already used your mark in commerce, you may file under the "use in commerce" basis. If you have not yet used your mark, but intend to use it in the future, you must file under the "intent to use" basis. Under certain international agreements, you may file in the U.S. based on a foreign application, foreign registration, or international registration, in this case, the trademark and the description must be identical to the filed US trademark.

Trademarks are protected by registration. An unregistered trademark may be protected by the U.S trademark law if used in commerce (common law). The United States applies the first-to-use system.

3.1 Specimen of use


The specimen of use is a proof that the trademark is used in the US. For products, the specimen could be a photo of an actual product with the trademark on it, for services - promotional materials. However, there are several other options, please contact us if you have any questions.

 

4. Office Actions when Registering a Trademark in the US


Usually, more than 60% of all trademarks application receive objections (called "office actions") in the USA, this makes the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) one of the most demanding Trademark Offices. Bonamark adds value to the regular registration by running additional tests to ensure that all the conditions are met. If you hire us, the probability of getting an objection is only around 15-20%. Responding to objection are not included in our regular (basic) price.

✅ Click here to know more about office actions in the USA

4.1 The most typical issues which lead to an objection are:

  • likelihood of confusion;
  • specimen refusal;
  • identification and classification issues;
  • translation required;
  • clarifications required;

etc.

✅ 4.2 DuPont Factors (click to open)


In order to check if 2 trademarks are confusingly similar, the United States Patent and Trademark Office uses the DuPont Factors. "We determine likelihood of confusion by focusing on the question whether the purchasing public would mistakenly assume that the applicant's goods originate from the same source as, or are associated with, the goods in the cited registrations. [citation]. We make that determination on a case-by-case basis, [citation], aided by the application of the factors set out in In re E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 476 F.2d 1357, 177 USPQ 563 (CCPA 1973). Those factors are:

  1. The similarity or dissimilarity of the marks in their entireties as to appearance, sound, connotation, and commercial impression.
  2. The similarity or dissimilarity and nature of the goods . . . described in an application or registration or in connection with which a prior mark is in use.
  3. The similarity or dissimilarity of established, likely-to-continue trade channels.
  4. The conditions under which and buyers to whom sales are made, i.e. "impulse" vs. careful, sophisticated purchasing.
  5. The fame of the prior mark.
  6. The number and nature of similar marks in use on similar goods. 
  7. The nature and extent of any actual confusion.
  8. The length of time during and the conditions under which there has been concurrent use without evidence of actual confusion.
  9. The variety of goods on which a mark is or is not used.
  10. The market interface between the applicant and the owner of a prior mark.
  11. The extent to which applicant has a right to exclude others from use of its mark on its goods.
  12. The extent of potential confusion.
  13.  Any other established fact probative of the effect of use."

 

5. Trademark Renewal and Declaration of Use in the USA

Renewing a trademark in the USA means filing 2 forms: a Declaration of Use (§8 declaration) and a registration renewal application (§9 application). The government fee for filing these 2 declarations is $525 per class.

✅ Click here to know more about Trademark Renewal and Declaration of Use in the USA

Content:

5.1 Renewal in the USA

5.2 Grace period

5.3 Renewal between the 5th and 6th year

5.4 Grace period (the 5th and 6th year renewal)

5.5 Declaration of Incontestability

5.6 Specimen of Use for a renewal

 

5.1 Renewal in the USA and the fees for renewing a trademark in the USA.

When to renew a trademark in the US

 

Renewing a trademark in the USA means filing 2 forms: a Declaration of Use (§8 declaration) and a registration renewal application (§9 application). The government fee for filing these 2 declarations is $525 per class.

In the USA a trademark registration is valid for a full term of 10 years from date of registration. However, after the registration you should file the Declaration of use and specimen of use between the 5h and 6th year after the registration date. If the declaration is accepted, the registration will continue in force for the remainder of the ten-year period, calculated from the registration date.

When renewing a trademark you can limit the products or services you have associated with your trademark. You MUST remove the services/products you no longer sell. The USPTO may audit your declaration of use and ask you to submit Specimens of Use for EACH product/service you have in your description. 

If the USPTO finds out that you have products/services you no longer sell, they will ask you to remove them. 💰 Deleting goods/services/classes from registration, after filing the declaration and before acceptance will lead to an extra fee of US$225 per class.

5.2 Renewal grace period in the USA and the extra fee.

💰 Six months after the expiration date, the government fee for filing a renewal within the grace period is US$100/class for renewing the registration (§9 registration) and US$100/class for the declaration of use (§8 declaration). Therefore, you will pay at least US$200 in government fees for renewing a trademark within the grace period in the USA.

5.3 The 5th-6th year renewal in the USA, declaration of use and its price.

A trademark owner must file a Declaration of Use between the fifth and sixth year of registration along with a specimen of use. Note that even if your trademark registration is based on a foreign registration or international registration, you still will have to file the Declaration of Use in the USA and actually use your trademark in the US.

If the declaration is not submitted, the mark will become abandoned (cancelled).

When submitting a renewal you have 2 options: to submit a new declaration of use (DoU) with a specimen of use OR to submit the declaration of use, the specimen, and the declaration of incontestability. For the second options, there is an extra GOVERNMENT fee. A Specimen of Use must be submitted in any case.

When filing a declaration of use you must remove the services/productsyou did not sell within the last 3 years before filing the declaration of use. The USPTO may audit your declaration of use and ask you to submit Specimens of Use for EACH product/service you have in your description. 

If the USPTO finds out that you have products/services you no longer sell, they will ask you to remove them. Deleting goods/services/classes from registration, after filing §8 declaration and before acceptance will cost US$225 per class.

5.4 Grace period in the USA for the renewal between the 5th and 6th year.

If you missed the deadline for submitting the declaration of use between the 5th and 6th year, you can still do this within the six months after the expiration date. There will be an extra government fee of US$100/class for this. 

There is no extra fee for submitting a Declaration of Incontestability with the Declaration of Use within the grace period. Only the extra fee for the Declaration of Use ($100/class) is to be paid.

5.5 Declaration of Incontestability (DoI), the cost of the DoI.

A Declaration of Incontestability (a.k.a. Section 15)  costs $200 per class in government fees. Once a trademark is incontestable, the registration cannot be challenged by third parties based on its descriptiveness and based on some other reasons.However, it still can be cancelled based on one of the following (that's not a complete list):

  1. Non-use of the mark during 3 consecutive years
  2. Genericization of a trademark
  3. Fraud when submitting the declaration

An incontestable mark DOES NOT become TRULY and COMPLETELY incontestable. Actually, we think that this term is somehow misleading as it does not protect against a trademark with prior use or registration, which are the most common grounds for cancellations. 

This might become useful in the long run if your trademark is challenged based on its alleged descriptiveness but otherwise it will not help in many other cases.

It’s not obligatory to file the declaration of incontestability as it is not required to renew your mark between the 5th and the 6th year. If your budget is limited you may ignore this option. 

You can submit the Declaration of Incontestability only once between the 5th and 6th year after registration of your trademark. 

5.6 Specimen of Use for a renewal and for submitting between the 5th and 6th year.

There is no rule forbidding the use of the same Specimen of Use you used when registering or applying for your trademark. At the same time, the requirements to Specimens of Use in the last 5 years became more stringent and some old Specimens of use might be refused under the new regulations.

A specimen for goods could show the trademark either on the label attached to the goods themselves or on the packaging for the goods. For example, your specimen could be a photograph of your product. The specimen may not be a digitally altered image or photograph, computer illustration, artist’s rendering, or similar mock-up of these items. It must be a photograph of the actual product or packaging that is being sold to customers.

Your web page can also be a proper specimen if it shows your trademark directly associated with your goods and is of a point-of-sale nature. In this case, the specimen would need to show:

  • The trademark displayed near a picture or textual description of the goods (trademark directly associated with the goods)
  • Purchasing information to allow customers to buy the goods from the site (point-of-sale nature)
  • The prices should be in USD

For all web page specimens, you must provide an actual screenshot of the web page, the URL, and the date the web page was accessed and/or printed. Merely providing a web page address where the goods may be purchased is not an acceptable specimen.

6. Cancellation of trademarks in the US


An opponent may file a cancellation against the trademark at any time. If the trademark was in use during last 3 years, the opponent will have to prove that the trademark was abandoned with no intention to use it in the future. A trademark which was not used for more than 3 years is deemed abandoned.

✅ Click here to know more about Cancellation of trademarks in the US

Cancelation Action or Petition for Cancellation is a legal case similar to a civil lawsuit. This is a specialized proceeding that allows challenging the registration of a trademark. The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB) of the USPTO functions like a court and hears Petitions for Cancelation of a trademark registration.

Any party may consider filing a cancelation, if the trademark(s) or business(es) owned by such a party are affected by the current registration; or the registered mark interferes the ability to fairly compete or hurts reputation or operation of the business.

There are two main requirements to maintain a cancelation proceeding against a registered US trademark:

  • the current registration damages the rights of a petitioner;
  • there are valid grounds why the registration should be terminated.

The grounds for the trademark cancellation can be divided into two categories:

  • the grounds that fall under the first category, can be used within the first 5 years of trademark registration;
  • the grounds for the second category can be used indefinitely.

The following are among the most common grounds for trademark cancellation within the statutory five-year window:

  • 1.    The trademark is not in use for at least 3 years: it was either abandoned or has never been in use as alleged in the application; there was no bona fide intention to use the trademark in commerce;
  • 2.    Likelihood of confusion. Likelihood of confusion exists between trademarks when the marks are so similar and the goods and/or services for which they are used are so related that consumers would mistakenly believe they come from the same source. 
  • 3.    Dilution of a famous trademark exists.
  • 4.    The trademark is a surname, merely geographically descriptive mark or merely descriptive. Such trademarks are non-registrable.
  • 5.    The trademark has become generic (e.g. escalator or aspirin).
  • 6.    Fraud have been committed during the trademark registration process.
  • 7.    Trademark is either deceptive, scandalous or immoral.

After the 5-year frame has passed a petitioner may have more limited grounds to request cancellation. The filing a cancelation action on the ground of likelihood of confusion is no longer available after the 5th anniversary of the trademark registration. The dispute can be started if the mark has become generic; has been abandoned or is not under the control of the registrant; is fraudulent, immoral, scandalous or deceptive.

If the settlement agreement can’t be reached upon the submitting a Petition for cancelation, the two next major phases in the cancellation proceedings are: (1) the discovery phase; and (2) the trial phase. The discovery/trial phases include the following major events:

  • Time to Answer
  • Deadline for Discovery Conference
  • Discovery Opens
  • Initial Disclosures Due
  • Expert Disclosure Due
  • Discovery Closes
  • Plaintiff's Pretrial Disclosures
  • Plaintiff's 30-day Trial Period Ends
  • Defendant's Pretrial Disclosures
  • Defendant's 30-day Trial Period Ends
  • Plaintiff's Rebuttal Disclosures
  • Plaintiff's 15-day Rebuttal Period Ends

Cancelation proceedings may take up to several years and cost thousands of the US dollars.


There are generally no official fees that need to be paid to the USPTO in a cancellation (other than the $600 filing fee/class). The discovery phase fees start from US$10000 and the trial phase fees start at US$20000. These prices are mostly comprised of the legal fees and may not include any costs for travel (e.g., depositions, hearings, trial, etc.), deposition services (e.g., court reporters and transcript costs), expert services (e.g., consumer survey evidence), etc.      
 

7. US Trademark Application Official Fees

✅Click here to see the Official Fees


The official fee for filing a trademark application in paper in United States is USD 600 per class.

The filing fee is USD 350 per class when using TEAS Reduced Fee (TEAS RF) and USD 250 per class when using TEAS Plus.

This filing option applies to simplified applications using predetermined goods and services. Our listed fee is for a TEAS Plus application with a limited number of goods (up to 10 items per class). We'll help you pick a list of items accepted by the USPTO, this will allow you to avoid objections and get your mark registered faster. For a list including more than 10 items we recommend using a TEAS RF form.

Contact us for more details.      
 

 

8. Trademark Assignment in the United States (click to open)

✅ Click here to read about assigning a mark in the US

When you wish to sell your trademark or if there is a change of ownership for any other reason, such as if your old company is closing down and you are starting a new one, the procedure you will need to complete is a trademark transfer, also known as "trademark assignment" or "change of ownership".

This process is not very different from changing ownership of any piece of property and your representative must inform the Trademark Office of the change of ownership. You will need to provide us with a Deed of Assignment (Assignment Agreement). A simple scan of the document is sufficient. The document must be signed by the Assignor and the Assignee (the Seller and the Buyer).

A simply signed power of attorney will be required.

Assignment Process takes around 2 months and the USPTO may refuse to change the owner if the agreement is not in accordance with their requirements. We will provide you with the agreement drafted according to the standards of the USPTO.

It’s forbidden to transfer Intent-to-use applications until they are registered.

 

9. USA Trademark Office


Address: P.O. Box 1450, Alexandria, VA 22313-1450      
Telephone: (1 571) 272 8600

We offer the following services in the United States (USA):

  • Trademark Search
  • Trademark Registration
  • Trademark renewal
  • Trademark oppositions
  • Defenses in case of oppositions or objections/office actions in the United States
  • Trademark assignment
  • Change of name/Change of Address
  • If you are interested in any of these services, please do not hesitate to contact us.

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