The Registration
Process
Filing Date - Filing Receipt
Examination
Publication for Opposition
Issuance
of Certificate of Registration or Notice of Allowance
Filing Date
- Filing Receipt
The PTO is responsible for the federal registration of trademarks.
When an application is received, the PTO reviews it to determine if it
meets the minimum requirements for receiving a filing date. If the application
meets the filing requirements, the PTO assigns it a serial number and sends
the applicant a receipt about two months after filing. If the minimum requirements
are not met, the entire mailing, including the filing fee, is returned
to the applicant.
Back to Top
Examination
About four months after filing, an examining attorney at the PTO reviews
the application and determines whether the mark may be registered. If the
examining attorney determines that the mark cannot be registered, the examining
attorney will issue a letter listing any grounds for refusal and any corrections
required in the application. The examining attorney may also contact the
applicant by telephone if only minor corrections are required. The applicant
must respond to any objections within six months of the mailing date of
the letter, or the application will be abandoned. If the applicant's response
does not overcome all objections, the examining attorney will issue a final
refusal. The applicant may then appeal to the Trademark Trial and Appeal
Board, an administrative tribunal within the PTO.
A common ground for refusal is likelihood of confusion between the
applicant's mark and a registered mark. This ground is discussed on pages
2 and 3. Marks which are merely descriptive in relation to the applicant's
goods or services, or a feature of the goods or services, may also be refused.
Marks consisting of geographic terms or surnames may also be refused. Marks
may be refused for other reasons as well.
Back to Top
Publication for
Opposition
If there are no objections, or if the applicant overcomes all objections,
the examining attorney will approve the mark for publication in the Official
Gazette, a weekly publication of the PTO. The PTO will send a NOTICE OF
PUBLICATION to the applicant indicating the date of publication. In the
case of two or more applications for similar marks, the PTO will publish
the application with the earliest effective filing date first. Any party
who believes it may be damaged by the registration of the mark has 30 days
from the date of publication to file an opposition to registration. An
opposition is similar to a formal proceeding in the federal courts, but
is held before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board. If no opposition is
filed, the application enters the next stage of the registration process.
Back to Top
Issuance
of Certificate of Registration or Notice of Allowance
If the application was based upon the actual use of the mark in commerce
prior to approval for publication, the PTO will register the mark and issue
a registration certificate about 12 weeks after the date the mark was published,
if no opposition was filed.
If, instead, the mark was published based upon the applicant's statement
of having a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce, the PTO will
issue a NOTICE OF ALLOWANCE about 12 weeks after the date the mark was
published, again provided no opposition was filed. The applicant then has
six months from the date of the NOTICE OF ALLOWANCE to either (1) use the
mark in commerce and submit a STATEMENT OF USE, or (2) request a six-month
EXTENSION OF TIME TO FILE A STATEMENT OF USE (see forms and instructions
in this booklet). The applicant may request additional extensions of time
only as noted in the instructions on the back of the extension form. If
the STATEMENT OF USE is filed and approved, the PTO will then issue the
registration certificate.
Back to Top
Copyright,
1999 Incorporate USA, Inc.