Is Trademark Registration Mandatory in India? The Complete Legal Answer (2026)

Every business owner in India, at some point, asks the same question: Is it compulsory to register a trademark? The short legal answer is no — trademark registration is not mandatory under Indian law. But this answer, without context, is dangerously misleading. Operating a business without a registered trademark in India exposes you to risks that can cost you your brand name, your customer goodwill, and years of business investment — often with no legal recourse. Understanding the difference between what the law requires and what prudent business practice demands is critical for every entrepreneur, startup, e-commerce seller, and established enterprise.

This complete guide by DisyTax explains exactly what Indian law says about trademark registration, the specific rights that registered and unregistered marks carry, the real-world risks of operating without registration, and who must prioritise trademark registration as a matter of urgency. For more foundational knowledge, read our guides on what is a trademark in India and the benefits of trademark registration.

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Is Trademark Registration Mandatory in India?

No — trademark registration is not mandatory under the Trade Marks Act, 1999. You can legally operate a business and use a brand name without registering it. However, an unregistered trademark carries only limited common law protection (passing off) and zero statutory infringement rights — making it highly vulnerable. Registration is optional by law but essential by strategy.

Not Compulsory by Law But Strongly Advisable TM vs ® Symbol Difference Section 27 — Passing Off Only Section 28 — Exclusive Statutory Rights

📋 Quick Summary: Is Trademark Mandatory in India? (2026)

  • Legal Position: Trademark registration is NOT mandatory under the Trade Marks Act, 1999. Both registered and unregistered trademarks are legally recognised in India.
  • Unregistered Mark Protection: Limited to passing off (common law) — requires proving goodwill, misrepresentation, and damage. No statutory infringement action available.
  • Registered Mark Protection: Full statutory rights under Section 28 — exclusive use, right to sue for infringement, civil + criminal remedies, ® symbol use.
  • ™ vs ®: Anyone can use ™ (claimed trademark, unregistered). Only registered proprietors can use ® — misuse of ® is a criminal offence under Section 107.
  • Amazon, Flipkart, Meesho: These platforms strongly recommend or require trademark registration for Brand Registry and brand-gated listing protection.
  • 5-Year Non-Use Rule: A registered trademark unused for 5 years and 3 months becomes vulnerable to cancellation. Use it or lose it.
  • Practical Answer: Not mandatory. But not registering your trademark is one of the most expensive business mistakes you can make in India's competitive market.

1. What Indian Law Actually Says: The Legal Position

The Trade Marks Act, 1999 — which governs all aspects of trademark law in India — does not anywhere state that trademark registration is compulsory. Businesses are entirely free to use a brand name, logo, or mark without ever filing a trademark application. The Act recognises both registered and unregistered trademarks, and provides specific (though unequal) legal protections to each category. This is the basis of the legal answer: registration is optional, not mandatory.

Trade Marks Act, 1999 — Section 27: Rights of Unregistered Trademarks
"(1) No person shall be entitled to institute any proceeding to prevent, or to recover damages for, the infringement of an unregistered trade mark.

(2) Nothing in this Act shall be deemed to affect rights of action against any person for passing off goods or services as the goods of another person or as services provided by another person, or the remedies in respect thereof."

— Trade Marks Act, 1999, Section 27
Plain Explanation: Section 27(1) is the critical limitation — if your trademark is NOT registered, you CANNOT file an infringement suit against someone who copies your mark. You have no statutory right to sue for trademark infringement. However, Section 27(2) preserves your common law right to file a passing off action — but that requires you to prove established goodwill, active misrepresentation by the infringer, and actual or likely damage. This is far harder, more expensive, and less certain than an infringement action under Section 29 (available only to registered proprietors).
Trade Marks Act, 1999 — Section 28: Rights Conferred by Registration
"(1) Subject to the other provisions of this Act, the registration of a trade mark shall, if valid, give to the registered proprietor of the trade mark the exclusive right to the use of the trade mark in relation to the goods or services in respect of which the trade mark is registered and to obtain relief in respect of infringement of the trade mark in the manner provided by this Act."

— Trade Marks Act, 1999, Section 28(1)
Plain Explanation: Section 28 is what registration actually gives you — the exclusive statutory right to use your trademark for your registered goods or services, and the right to sue anyone who infringes it. No registration = no Section 28 rights. This is the single most important reason why trademark registration, while not legally mandatory, is strategically indispensable for any business that wants enforceable brand protection.

2. Registered vs Unregistered Trademark: The Real-World Difference

®

Registered Trademark

  • Sue for infringement under Section 29 — statutory remedy
  • Exclusive use rights under Section 28 in registered classes
  • Criminal prosecution — police complaint possible under Section 103
  • ® symbol — legally recognised mark of registered ownership
  • Prima facie proof of ownership (Section 31) — burden on challenger
  • Amazon / Flipkart Brand Registry — enrollment eligible
  • License and assignment rights — can monetise the mark
  • Customs recordal — block counterfeit imports at ports
  • Madrid Protocol — use as basis for international filing
  • 10-year validity with unlimited renewals

Unregistered Trademark

  • NO infringement action — Section 27(1) bars it explicitly
  • Passing off only — must prove goodwill + misrepresentation + damage
  • NO criminal remedy — civil passing off action only
  • ™ symbol only — using ® without registration is a criminal offence
  • No presumption of ownership — must prove exclusive use every time
  • No Brand Registry — Amazon/Flipkart platform protection unavailable
  • No license recordal — licensing is contractual only, unrecognised by registry
  • No customs protection — cannot block counterfeits at border
  • No international basis — cannot file Madrid Protocol application
  • Indefinite — no expiry but also no certificate of ownership

3. The ™ vs ® Symbol: An Important Legal Distinction

One of the most common and consequential misunderstandings about Indian trademark law involves the ™ and ® symbols. Many businesses use ® next to their brand name without having a registered trademark — either out of ignorance or in an attempt to appear more established. This is not merely incorrect; it is a criminal offence under the Trade Marks Act, 1999.

Trade Marks Act, 1999 — Section 107: Falsely Representing a Trademark as Registered
"(1) No person shall make any representation — (a) with respect to a mark, not being a registered trade mark, to the effect that it is a registered trade mark; or (b) with respect to a part of a registered trade mark, not being a part separately registered as a trade mark, to the effect that it is separately registered as a trade mark... (2) If any person contravenes any of the provisions of sub-section (1), he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to three years, or with fine, or with both."

— Trade Marks Act, 1999, Section 107
Plain Explanation — What You Can Use:
™ (TM Symbol): Anyone can use ™ — it simply means "I am claiming this as my trademark." There is no legal requirement for registration before using ™. You can use it from Day 1 of adopting the mark.

® (Registered Symbol): Only the registered proprietor of a trademark under the Trade Marks Act, 1999, can use ®. Using ® before your trademark registration certificate is issued — even after filing, during the pending period — is technically a violation of Section 107 and punishable with up to 3 years imprisonment and/or fine.

4. Real Risks of Operating Without a Registered Trademark

While the law does not compel you to register, the practical consequences of not registering can be severe. These are not hypothetical risks — they are documented, recurring situations that destroy Indian brands every year, particularly e-commerce businesses and fast-growing startups.

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Competitor Registers Your Name First

A competitor or brand squatter monitors your growth, files your brand name as their trademark, gets it registered, and then legally demands you stop using your own brand name. You have no infringement remedy — only an expensive, uncertain cancellation petition.

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Amazon / Flipkart Listing Attacks

Without Brand Registry (which requires a registered trademark), hijackers can list counterfeit products on your brand's listings. You cannot take them down through the platform's brand protection tools — each complaint requires manual review and is far less effective.

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Forced Rebranding Costs

If a registered trademark owner sends you a cease and desist notice (even if you have been using the mark longer), you may need to rebrand entirely — new packaging, new domain, new marketing materials, updated GST/ROC records. Costs can run into lakhs or crores.

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Costly Passing Off Litigation

Without registration, even legitimate protection requires proving goodwill through years of evidence — invoices, advertisements, sales records, affidavits. Passing off suits are complex, expensive (₹2–10 lakh+), and time-consuming compared to a straightforward infringement action.

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Domain & Social Media Squatting

Competitors can register domain names and social media handles using your unprotected brand name. Without a registered trademark, you have very limited grounds to recover them through UDRP (domain dispute) proceedings or platform complaint mechanisms.

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Investment / Due Diligence Risk

Investors and acquirers conduct IP due diligence. An unregistered brand name = unprotected IP = significant valuation discount or deal blocker. Banks also increasingly require trademark registration for brand-related loan applications and IP-backed financing.

5. Who Needs Trademark Registration Most Urgently?

Business Type Urgency Primary Reason
E-commerce sellers (Amazon, Flipkart, Meesho) CRITICAL Brand Registry enrollment requires registered trademark. Without it, listing hijacking is rampant and nearly impossible to stop.
Startups and new businesses CRITICAL First-mover advantage in trademark registration — file before competitors do. Brand squatting of growing startup names is a documented problem in India.
D2C brands with growing social following CRITICAL Visible brand growth attracts squatters. Register before you go viral. A growing Instagram or YouTube presence is a signal for brand squatters to act.
FMCG / packaged goods brands HIGH Physical products with nationwide distribution need registration across relevant product classes to prevent counterfeit goods and parallel imports.
Service businesses (CA firms, legal, medical) MEDIUM–HIGH Class 35 (business services) and professional service classes — increasingly important as professional services move online and brand names gain national visibility.
Established businesses seeking investment HIGH IP due diligence is standard in funding rounds. Registered trademarks are a key component of intellectual property valuation and investor confidence.
Exporters and international businesses HIGH India registration is the basis for Madrid Protocol international filing. Unregistered marks cannot be protected globally through the trademark treaty system.
Local/single-location businesses MEDIUM Lower immediate risk but still advisable. A local business that grows regionally or nationally will regret not registering early — priority date is from filing, not from scaling.

6. Common Myths About Trademark Registration in India

❌ MYTH
"My company is registered with ROC, so my brand name is automatically protected."
Company registration (MCA/ROC) and trademark registration are completely separate. A company name registered under the Companies Act 2013 does not give you trademark rights. Another company can register the same name as a trademark and legitimately stop you from using it commercially.
❌ MYTH
"I've been using my brand name for 10 years — I'm automatically protected."
Long use creates goodwill for passing off claims only. If someone else registers your mark today, they get statutory rights. Your passing off claim is valid but requires expensive litigation, while they can simply file an infringement suit against you.
❌ MYTH
"Trademark registration is too expensive for a small business."
Government filing fee for MSMEs and individuals is just ₹4,500 per class (e-filing). Complete trademark registration with professional fees typically costs ₹7,000–₹15,000 — less than one month of most business's marketing spend. The cost of a dispute later starts at ₹50,000+.
❌ MYTH
"Once registered, trademark protection is permanent and I don't need to do anything."
Trademarks must be renewed every 10 years. More importantly, a trademark unused for 5 years and 3 months continuously becomes vulnerable to cancellation by anyone on grounds of non-use. You must actively use the registered mark in commerce.
❌ MYTH
"Trademark registration only matters for big brands and corporations."
Small businesses are actually more vulnerable — they lack legal resources to fight expensive passing off suits. Registration gives small businesses the same statutory rights as large corporations at the same cost. A ₹4,500 filing fee gives you the same Section 28 rights as Tata or Amul.
❌ MYTH
"I can use ® next to my name while my trademark application is pending."
No. Using ® before receiving the final registration certificate is a criminal offence under Section 107 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, punishable with up to 3 years imprisonment and/or fine. During the pending period, use — not ®. Use ® only after receiving your registration certificate.

7. How to Register Your Trademark in India: Quick Overview

The trademark registration process in India is governed by the Trade Marks Act, 1999 and the Trade Marks Rules, 2017. It involves five key stages from application to registration, and takes approximately 18–24 months in total for uncontested applications. The priority date — which is critical for all legal purposes — is established from the day of filing, not the day of registration. This means your legal priority begins the moment you submit your application on the IP India portal.

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Step 1: Trademark Search

Search the IP India database for identical or similar existing marks in your target classes. Identify conflicts before filing to avoid Section 11 objections. DisyTax provides free trademark search assistance.

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Step 2: File Application (TM-A)

File Form TM-A on ipindia.gov.in with your trademark details, applicant information, and selected classes. Receive application number immediately — you can start using ™ and enrolling in Brand Registry from this date.

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Step 3: Examination Report

The Trademark Registry examines your application within 1–3 months. If objections are raised (absolute or relative grounds), reply within 30 days. DisyTax handles all examination report replies professionally.

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Step 4: Journal Publication

After examination clearance, the mark is published in the Trademark Journal for 4 months — a public notice period during which third parties can file an opposition. If no opposition: proceed to registration.

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Step 5: Registration Certificate

After the opposition period with no challengers, the registration certificate is issued. Now you can legally use ® and have full Section 28 exclusive rights. Certificate is valid for 10 years from the application date.

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Step 6: Renew Every 10 Years

File Form TM-R within 6 months before expiry (or within 6 months after expiry with a surcharge). Renewal keeps your trademark alive indefinitely. A trademark maintained continuously can last forever.

💡 Key Tip: File in the Right Classes from Day One Most businesses make the mistake of filing trademark only in one class and later discover they need protection in additional classes — which requires fresh applications with new priority dates. A complete trademark strategy covers at minimum: your primary product/service class + Class 35 (retail/online services) for e-commerce sellers, and Class 38 (telecommunications/internet) for tech or app-based businesses. Read our complete guide on trademark classes in India to identify the right classes for your business.

8. Frequently Asked Questions: Is Trademark Mandatory?

Is trademark registration compulsory in India? What does the law say? +
No — trademark registration is not compulsory under the Trade Marks Act, 1999. The Act does not require any business to register its trademark. Both registered and unregistered trademarks are legally recognised. However, the Act explicitly provides that no infringement action can be instituted for an unregistered trademark (Section 27(1)) — meaning the strongest legal remedy for brand protection is available only to registered trademark owners. Registration is legally optional but practically essential.
Can I use the ™ symbol without registering my trademark in India? +
Yes. Anyone can use the ™ (TM) symbol next to their brand name in India without registering it. The ™ symbol simply indicates that you are claiming the mark as your trademark — it is an assertion of ownership, not a confirmation of registration. There is no law requiring trademark registration before using ™. However, the ® (Registered) symbol can only be used after receiving an official trademark registration certificate from the IP India Trademark Registry. Using ® on an unregistered or pending trademark is a criminal offence under Section 107 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999.
Does GST registration or company registration protect my brand name? +
No — neither GST registration nor company/LLP registration under the Companies Act 2013 provides trademark protection. These are separate legal systems for entirely different purposes. A company name registered with MCA/ROC gives you the right to use that name as a company name — it does not give you exclusive trademark rights over the brand name for your products or services. A competitor can register your company name as their trademark and legally stop you from using it commercially. Trademark registration is the only mechanism that provides exclusive brand name rights.
If trademark registration is not mandatory, why should I bother? +
Because the risks of not registering are severe and costly. Without registration: (1) you cannot sue for trademark infringement — only the harder, costlier passing off action is available; (2) a competitor can register your brand name and legally force you to rebrand; (3) you cannot enroll in Amazon/Flipkart Brand Registry — making your listings vulnerable to hijackers; (4) you cannot use ® — limiting the legal deterrence your brand mark carries; (5) you cannot use your Indian trademark as the basis for international protection under the Madrid Protocol. The government filing fee is ₹4,500 per class — the insurance value far exceeds the cost.
What is the difference between passing off and trademark infringement in India? +
Trademark infringement (Section 29) is a statutory remedy available only to registered trademark owners — it requires proving that the defendant used a mark identical or similar to the registered mark for same/similar goods or services. The registered trademark certificate is prima facie proof of ownership, making these cases relatively straightforward. Passing off is a common law remedy available to both registered and unregistered trademark owners — it requires proving three elements: (1) goodwill/reputation in the mark, (2) misrepresentation by the defendant, and (3) actual or likely damage. Passing off cases are significantly harder to prove, more expensive to litigate, and take longer to resolve than infringement cases.
How long does trademark registration take in India in 2026? +
The complete trademark registration process in India currently takes approximately 18–24 months for uncontested applications in 2026. The timeline: Filing (Day 1) → Examination Report within 1–3 months → Reply to examination report → Hearing if required → Journal Publication for 4 months → Registration Certificate issued. However, from the date of filing, you receive an application number that can be used immediately for Amazon Brand Registry enrollment, and you can legally use the ™ symbol. The full ® right comes only upon receipt of the registration certificate.
Can I register a trademark myself without a professional? +
Yes — the IP India portal (ipindia.gov.in) allows direct filing by individuals and businesses without a trademark agent. However, professional assistance is strongly recommended for: (1) pre-filing trademark search to avoid conflicts; (2) selecting the correct trademark classes; (3) drafting the trademark description (especially for device marks requiring Vienna Code); and (4) responding to examination reports and objections. Errors at the filing stage — wrong class, poor mark description, missed objection deadlines — can result in rejection or abandonment. DisyTax provides complete trademark registration services starting at ₹4,500 government fee + professional charges. See our trademark registration page for details.

🚀 Register Your Trademark Today — Before Someone Else Does

Not mandatory. But not registering is one of the costliest brand mistakes in India. DisyTax handles your complete trademark registration — search, filing, examination report reply, and registration certificate — across all 45 classes.

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