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Zambia’s intellectual-property landscape changed fundamentally when the Patents and Companies Registration Agency (PACRA) issued its notice on 30 December 2025 confirming that the Trade Marks Act No. 11 of 2023 had been operationalised through Statutory Instrument No. 86 of 2025. The Zambia Trade Marks Act 2026 regime, as the new framework is now commonly referenced, replaces the outdated Trade Marks Act, Chapter 401 of the Laws of Zambia, which had governed trademark registration Zambia since 1958. For brand owners, in-house counsel and trademark agents, the new Act introduces multi-class filings, extends protection to service marks and nontraditional marks, strengthens well-known mark provisions, modernises opposition and cancellation procedures, and expands enforcement remedies to include criminal sanctions and border measures.
This guide delivers the practical, step-by-step compliance roadmap that rights-holders need right now.
The Trade Marks Act No. 11 of 2023 is not a cosmetic amendment, it is a comprehensive replacement of Zambia’s prior trade marks legislation. Brand owners and their advisers should focus on six headline changes:
Industry observers expect the practical effect of these reforms to be significant: Zambia’s trade mark system is now substantially aligned with international best practice, making it a more attractive and predictable jurisdiction for brand protection across Southern Africa.
Understanding the timeline is critical for compliance planning. The PACRA Trade Marks notice published on 30 December 2025 confirmed that the Act was brought into operation by Statutory Instrument No. 86 of 2025, with an effective date of 31 December 2025. In practical terms, PACRA began accepting filings under the new regime in early January 2026.
| Date / Deadline | Event | Action for Brand Owners |
|---|---|---|
| 31 December 2025 | Statutory Instrument No. 86 of 2025 operationalises the Trade Marks Act No. 11 of 2023 | Confirm the effect on all existing Zambian registrations; prepare a transition checklist covering renewals and potential re-filings. |
| Early January 2026 | PACRA begins accepting applications under the new Act | Submit any pending applications under the new framework; decide whether to pursue multi-class or single-class filings. |
| Within 90 days of commencement | Recommended window to audit existing portfolio and instruct local agents | Conduct a full portfolio review, update ownership records at PACRA, and file new service mark applications where relevant. |
| Ongoing | Opposition period after advertisement of accepted marks | Monitor the Trade Marks Journal and file oppositions within the statutory window prescribed by the Act. |
Rights-holders who have not yet reviewed their Zambian portfolios should treat the 90-day window from commencement as an urgent internal deadline. Early indications suggest that PACRA’s processing capacity is ramping up steadily, and filing early positions applicants ahead of any backlog.
Under the former Chapter 401, each Nice Classification class required a separate application. The Trade Marks Act No. 11 of 2023 now permits multi-class trademark Zambia filings, a single application covering, for example, Classes 9, 35 and 42. This aligns Zambia with the approach taken across most ARIPO member states and the Madrid system. The practical benefit is a streamlined filing process and potentially lower aggregate fees, although applicants should still weigh the tactical advantages of single-class filings (discussed below in the prosecution section).
The 2023 Act expressly defines and accommodates service marks, marks used to distinguish services rather than goods. It also opens the door to registration of nontraditional marks, including colour combinations, three-dimensional shapes, sound marks and other signs capable of graphical representation. For businesses in the technology, hospitality, financial services and telecommunications sectors, this is a particularly significant development that enables protecting intellectual property across borders with consistency.
The Act introduces specific provisions for well-known marks Zambia, implementing Paris Convention (Article 6bis) obligations. A mark recognised as well-known in Zambia, even if not registered locally, may form the basis for opposing a conflicting application or seeking cancellation of a registered mark. This is a critical tool for multinational brand owners who have not yet obtained Zambian registrations.
The new framework provides for the registration of collective marks and, through associated provisions, creates a mechanism for protecting geographical indications (GIs). These provisions will be particularly relevant to agricultural cooperatives, producer associations and regional branding initiatives.
The Act codifies the doctrine of honest concurrent use, allowing the Registrar to accept a mark for registration where two or more parties have concurrently and honestly used identical or similar marks. This long-recognised common-law principle is now given express statutory footing, providing greater certainty for applicants and opponents alike.
The following numbered checklist sets out the priority actions that brand owners and their advisers should complete within the next 90 to 180 days. It directly answers the question most frequently asked since the Act came into force: what must we do now?
Applications for trademark registration Zambia under the new Act should include: the applicant’s full name and address; a clear representation of the mark; a specification of goods and/or services classified according to the Nice Classification; a signed power of attorney (where a local agent is appointed); and any priority claim under the Paris Convention. For nontraditional marks, additional representations (e.g., colour codes, sound files) may be required.
The table below compares the two approaches to help rights-holders decide which strategy best suits their needs:
| Factor | Multi-Class Filing | Single-Class Filing |
|---|---|---|
| Administrative efficiency | One application covers multiple classes | Separate application per class |
| Cost | Potentially lower total fees (single filing fee plus per-class surcharges) | Full filing fee per application |
| Opposition risk | An opposition against the application may affect all classes | Opposition is confined to the individual class |
| Assignment / licensing flexibility | More complex to assign or license rights in only some classes | Each registration can be assigned or licensed independently |
| Madrid Protocol compatibility | Fully compatible; mirrors international multi-class practice | Also compatible but results in multiple basic registrations |
For brand owners with broad portfolios, a blended approach is often optimal: use multi-class filings for core house marks and single-class filings for marks that may need to be assigned or licensed separately.
PACRA examines each application for compliance with formal requirements and substantive registrability (distinctiveness, descriptiveness, conflict with prior marks). Accepted applications are advertised in the Trade Marks Journal. If no opposition is filed within the statutory period, the mark proceeds to registration.
Zambia is a member of the Madrid Protocol, and international registrations designating Zambia continue to be processed through PACRA. The new Act accommodates Madrid designations, but applicants should ensure that their international specifications align with Zambian practice and that a local correspondent agent is appointed to handle any office actions or oppositions.
Any person wishing to oppose a trademark registration in Zambia may file a notice of opposition within the statutory period following advertisement. Typical grounds include:
The Act also provides for the cancellation (rectification or removal) of registered marks on grounds including non-use, invalidity or fraud. Cancellation proceedings may be initiated before the Registrar or, in certain circumstances, directly before the High Court. For guidance on dispute resolution structures and how to navigate international intellectual property regimes, practitioners should consult both the Act and available institutional commentary.
The Trade Marks Act No. 11 of 2023 codifies a range of civil remedies for trademark enforcement Zambia, including:
The Act introduces specific criminal offences for counterfeiting and unauthorised use of registered marks. Penalties may include fines and imprisonment. These provisions signal Zambia’s commitment to taking trademark infringement seriously and provide an additional deterrent beyond civil litigation. Understanding essential intellectual property clauses in employment contracts can help businesses reduce internal infringement risks at the same time.
For the first time, the Act provides a statutory basis for customs cooperation and border seizure of counterfeit goods. Rights-holders can record their marks with customs authorities and request the detention of suspect consignments at ports of entry. Industry observers expect this provision to be particularly valuable for consumer-goods companies battling cross-border counterfeiting in Southern Africa.
Applications for interim (interlocutory) injunctions may be made to the High Court on an urgent basis. Practitioners should be prepared to demonstrate a prima facie case of infringement, irreparable harm and a balance of convenience favouring the applicant.
Litigating trade mark disputes under the new Act requires familiarity with both the statutory procedures and the practical realities of Zambian court practice. Key recommendations for counsel include:
The table below provides indicative ranges for the most common actions under the Zambia Trade Marks Act 2026. Actual costs will depend on the complexity of the matter and the number of classes involved.
| Action | Typical Timeline | Indicative Cost Range |
|---|---|---|
| New registration (single class, unopposed) | 6–12 months | Low to moderate |
| New registration (multi-class, unopposed) | 6–12 months | Moderate (economies on filing fee; per-class surcharges apply) |
| Opposition proceedings (full hearing) | 12–24 months | Moderate to high (depends on evidence and hearing length) |
| Cancellation action (non-use) | 12–18 months | Moderate |
| Enforcement, interim injunction | Days to weeks (urgent application) | Moderate to high |
| Customs recordation | 4–8 weeks | Low |
Rights-holders should budget for agent and counsel fees, official PACRA fees and, where applicable, evidence-gathering costs. Obtaining precise fee schedules from PACRA or local counsel at the outset of any project is strongly recommended.
The Zambia Trade Marks Act 2026 reforms create both obligations and opportunities. Brand owners who act promptly, auditing portfolios, filing new applications, recording marks with customs and establishing monitoring systems, will be best positioned to protect their rights under the new regime. Those who delay risk gaps in coverage and missed opposition deadlines. Consult qualified Zambian intellectual property counsel to develop a tailored compliance and protection strategy. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can connect you with experienced practitioners in Zambia and across Southern Africa.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Bonaventure Mutale at Ellis & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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