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Intellectual Property Lawyers Bulgaria 2026: TMGIA Amendments, Fee Changes & USTR Delisting

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Three regulatory shifts in the first half of 2026 have fundamentally altered the compliance landscape for anyone holding or seeking trademark rights in Bulgaria. Amendments to the Trade Marks and Geographical Indications Act (TMGIA) were promulgated on 11 March 2026, introducing new procedural rules for oppositions, broader grounds for refusal, and updated geographical indication protections. A revised fee schedule published by the Bulgarian Patent Office (BPO) took effect on 26 April 2026, changing the economics of both national filings and Madrid Protocol designations.

And on 1 May 2026 the United States Trade Representative (USTR) formally removed Bulgaria from the Special 301 Watch List, signalling improved enforcement but also shifting the external pressure dynamics that many intellectual property lawyers Bulgaria‑based and international have relied upon when pursuing cross‑border brand protection strategies.

Key Decision: What Rights‑Holders Must Decide Now About Intellectual Property Lawyers Bulgaria Can Advise On

The convergence of legislative reform, fee restructuring and a changed international enforcement posture creates a narrow window in which portfolio owners must make concrete decisions. Industry observers expect that the majority of multi‑class filing strategies will need to be recalculated, and enforcement budgets reallocated, before the end of Q3 2026.

The central compliance question is straightforward: should you change your Bulgaria filing or enforcement approach immediately, and if so, what exactly must you do by when? The answer depends on three variables: the size and class spread of your existing Bulgarian trademark portfolio, whether you file nationally or via the Madrid system, and the degree to which your enforcement programme has historically relied on USTR pressure as a lever.

Quick Decision Checklist: 30 / 60 / 90‑Day Actions

  • Within 30 days (by mid‑June 2026). Audit your Bulgarian portfolio for marks approaching renewal or those filed under pre‑amendment procedural rules. Confirm that all pending oppositions comply with the revised TMGIA grounds.
  • Within 60 days (by mid‑July 2026). Recalculate filing costs for any planned new registrations under the revised fee schedule. Decide whether national or Madrid filing is more cost‑effective per class under the new rates.
  • Within 90 days (by mid‑August 2026). Review your enforcement playbook in light of the USTR delisting. Update customs recordal applications and e‑commerce platform notice templates for the Bulgarian market.

TMGIA Amendments 2026: What Changed and Why It Matters

The amendments to Bulgaria’s Trade Marks and Geographical Indications Act, promulgated on 11 March 2026 and published in the State Gazette, represent the most significant overhaul of the country’s trademark framework since its 2019 alignment with the EU Trade Mark Directive. The changes affect registration procedure, opposition grounds, geographical indication treatment and enforcement remedies.

The principal changes include the following:

  • Expanded absolute grounds for refusal. The BPO now has explicit authority to refuse marks that conflict with protected plant variety denominations and with traditional terms for wine and spirit products recognised under EU regulations.
  • Broader opposition framework. Third parties may now oppose applications on the basis of earlier unregistered marks with more than local significance, aligning Bulgarian practice more closely with the EUIPO model. The evidentiary threshold for proving “more than local significance” has been codified for the first time.
  • Streamlined cancellation procedure. Non‑use cancellation actions can now be filed directly before the BPO rather than requiring a separate court action, reducing both cost and processing time for rights‑holders seeking to clear deadwood from the register.
  • Enhanced geographical indication protections. The amendments introduce a dedicated opposition channel for GI holders and grant the BPO power to refuse ex officio any trademark application that conflicts with a registered geographical indication or designation of origin.
  • Updated remedies and damages calculation. Courts are now expressly directed to consider licence‑analogy damages as a baseline for infringement awards, codifying a method that was previously applied inconsistently.

Transitional Provisions TMGIA: Timelines and Required Actions

The transitional provisions set out a phased implementation. Applications filed before 11 March 2026 will be examined under the previous substantive rules but are subject to the new procedural timelines. Oppositions filed against applications published on or after 11 March 2026 must use the expanded grounds. Existing registrations are not affected retrospectively, but renewal applications filed from the effective date onward are processed under the new fee schedule.

Filing date Which rules apply Action required
Before 11 March 2026 Old substantive grounds; new procedural timelines Check pending oppositions for procedural compliance
11 March – 25 April 2026 New substantive grounds; old fee schedule File under new grounds at old fee rates where advantageous
26 April 2026 onward New substantive grounds and new fee schedule Recalculate all planned filings; adjust class strategy

New Trademark Fees Bulgaria 2026: How to Calculate and Who Saves Money

The revised fee schedule published by the Bulgarian Patent Office took effect on 26 April 2026. The changes restructure per‑class surcharges, adjust Madrid Protocol designation fees and introduce a reduced renewal fee for marks that have been continuously used and renewed at least once. The likely practical effect will be lower per‑class costs for applicants filing in three or more classes nationally, while single‑class national filers may see a modest increase.

Table A: Comparative Fee Table, Old vs New (National Filing)

Filing type Old fee (BGN) New fee (BGN, from 26 Apr 2026)
National application, first class 500 520
Each additional class 200 170
Official search report 100 100 (unchanged)
10‑year renewal, first class 400 380
Each additional renewal class 150 130
Madrid Protocol, individual fee (designation of Bulgaria) Per WIPO schedule Updated, see BPO notice

Table B: Quick Fee Calculator Examples

Scenario Old total (BGN) New total (BGN) Difference
Single‑class national filing + search 600 620 +20 (3.3 % increase)
Three‑class national filing + search 1,000 960 −40 (4.0 % decrease)
Madrid extension, one class (designation only) Per WIPO Per updated BPO individual fee Check WIPO fee calculator

Fee Optimisation Tactics

For portfolios with multi‑class filings, the reduced per‑additional‑class surcharge now makes national filing more competitive against Madrid designations for applicants covering three or more classes. Early indications suggest that bundling classes within a single national application will yield savings of approximately 4–6 % compared with the pre‑amendment schedule. Conversely, rights‑holders who routinely file single‑class marks nationally should evaluate whether a Madrid designation, which enables coverage in multiple jurisdictions from a single application, offers better overall value per market.

Madrid Protocol fees for Bulgarian designations are published by WIPO and updated to reflect the BPO’s revised individual fee declaration. Rights‑holders should cross‑reference the WIPO fee calculator with the BPO’s published schedule before committing to either route.

Filing Strategy for Trademark Registration Bulgaria: National Filing vs Madrid Protocol

Choosing between a national Bulgarian filing and a Madrid Protocol designation is one of the most consequential decisions intellectual property lawyers Bulgaria counsel their clients on each year. The 2026 fee changes and procedural reforms tilt the analysis in several directions depending on the applicant’s broader portfolio strategy.

Consideration National filing is better when… Madrid designation is better when…
Number of classes 3+ classes (lower per‑class surcharge post‑Apr 2026) 1–2 classes, especially if filing in multiple jurisdictions simultaneously
Speed to registration BPO examination averages 6–8 months; no central‑attack vulnerability WIPO processing adds an initial phase; but simultaneous multi‑country coverage is faster overall
Central attack risk National registration is independent, no risk of cascading cancellation If the home registration is cancelled within 5 years, all Madrid designations fall
Cost for Bulgaria‑only coverage Typically cheaper when Bulgaria is the sole target market Cost‑effective only if Bulgaria is one of several designated countries
Enforcement flexibility National certificate simplifies domestic customs recordals Madrid registration accepted; but some Bulgarian courts prefer national certificates for interim measures

Step‑by‑Step: Preparing a Filing Under Both Routes

For a national filing, applicants must submit the application to the BPO with a clear representation of the mark, a list of goods and services classified under the Nice Classification, proof of payment of filing fees, and (for foreign applicants) a power of attorney appointing a Bulgarian representative. The BPO conducts a formal examination, publishes the application for opposition, and, if no opposition is filed within three months, proceeds to registration.

For a Madrid designation, the process begins with a home‑office application or registration in the applicant’s country of origin, followed by an international application filed through WIPO designating Bulgaria. The BPO then examines the designation under national law within 18 months. Madrid Protocol fees are payable through WIPO’s fee schedule, which incorporates Bulgaria’s individual fee declaration.

Enforcement Landscape After USTR Special 301 Bulgaria Delisting

On 1 May 2026 the United States Trade Representative formally removed Bulgaria from its Special 301 Watch List. The delisting reflects measurable improvements in enforcement infrastructure, including the establishment of a dedicated IP crimes unit within the Bulgarian police and increased customs seizure activity over the prior 24 months.

For brand owners, the delisting has nuanced implications. On the positive side, it signals to trading partners and international platforms that Bulgaria’s enforcement environment meets a threshold of credibility. On the other hand, the removal of USTR scrutiny may reduce the external political pressure that some rights‑holders leveraged, formally or informally, to accelerate customs actions and prosecutorial attention.

The practical steps for rights‑holders to take following the USTR Special 301 Bulgaria delisting include:

  • Update customs recordals. Ensure that all Bulgarian customs applications for action (AFAs) are current and filed under the EU Customs Regulation framework. Proactive recordals remain the most effective first line of defence at the border.
  • Refresh e‑commerce platform notices. Bulgarian‑language notice‑and‑takedown templates should be updated to reference the amended TMGIA provisions and the specific registration numbers for each mark.
  • Maintain direct relationships with enforcement authorities. Industry observers expect that rights‑holders who have built direct communication channels with the BPO, customs and police IP units will be better positioned than those who previously relied on the USTR process as an indirect lever.
  • Monitor domestic legislative follow‑through. The delisting was predicated on commitments by the Bulgarian government to maintain enforcement resources. Rights‑holders should monitor whether budget allocations and staffing levels remain stable in the post‑delisting period.

Immediate Action Plan and 90‑Day Checklist for Intellectual Property Lawyers Bulgaria Clients Should Follow

The following checklist provides a structured 90‑day action plan for brand owners and portfolio managers responding to the 2026 changes. Each action is tied to a specific deadline and assigned to the appropriate responsible party, whether in‑house IP counsel, external local counsel in Bulgaria, or a centralised portfolio management team.

Sample Timeline

Deadline Action Responsible party
By 31 May 2026 Complete full audit of Bulgarian trademark portfolio (mark‑by‑mark review of classes, renewal dates and opposition exposure) In‑house IP team + external Bulgarian counsel
By 31 May 2026 Identify any pending oppositions that must be amended to comply with new TMGIA procedural rules External Bulgarian counsel
By 15 June 2026 Recalculate filing costs for all planned 2026 applications under the revised fee schedule; produce revised budget In‑house IP team
By 30 June 2026 File any urgent national applications where the new per‑class fee structure offers savings over Madrid External Bulgarian counsel
By 15 July 2026 Update customs AFA recordals with current registration details and contact information for enforcement representatives in Bulgaria Customs / trade compliance team + external counsel
By 31 July 2026 Refresh e‑commerce platform notice templates (in Bulgarian and English) to reference amended TMGIA provisions Brand protection / online enforcement team
By 31 August 2026 Establish or confirm direct communication channel with BPO enforcement liaison and Bulgarian police IP unit External Bulgarian counsel
By 31 August 2026 Commission a trademark watch service covering the Bulgarian register and the EUIPO for conflicting applications In‑house IP team + watch service provider

This schedule assumes that the rights‑holder has an existing Bulgarian portfolio. New market entrants should compress the first four steps into a single 30‑day sprint and engage local counsel as early as possible to navigate the post‑amendment filing landscape.

Trademark Enforcement Bulgaria: Practical Tactics for Litigators and Rights‑Holders

Bulgaria offers a full spectrum of enforcement remedies for trademark infringement. The 2026 TMGIA amendments have not removed any existing remedy; they have added clarity to the damages calculation framework and streamlined administrative cancellation actions.

  • Civil remedies. Rights‑holders may seek injunctive relief, seizure and destruction of infringing goods, an account of profits, and damages calculated on a licence‑analogy basis (now codified). Bulgarian courts can grant preliminary injunctions within days when urgent circumstances are demonstrated.
  • Criminal remedies. Counterfeiting remains a criminal offence under the Bulgarian Penal Code. Prosecution is typically initiated on a complaint by the rights‑holder and supported by evidence gathered through police raids. The dedicated IP crimes unit established in 2025 provides a more streamlined referral path.
  • Customs measures. Rights‑holders who have filed an AFA with Bulgarian customs can trigger border seizures of suspect goods. Under the EU Customs Regulation, goods can be detained for up to 10 working days (extendable) to allow the rights‑holder to initiate proceedings.
  • Platform takedowns. For online infringement, rights‑holders should use direct notice‑and‑takedown procedures on major platforms, supplemented by Bulgarian‑law cease‑and‑desist letters. The amended TMGIA provides clearer statutory authority to support platform cooperation requests.

Before initiating any enforcement action, assemble a pre‑action evidence file that includes certified copies of the registration certificate, proof of use, purchase of infringing samples (with chain‑of‑custody documentation), and screenshots of online listings with timestamps.

Costs, Timelines and Sample Fee Calculations

The following worked examples illustrate the total official fees payable for two common filing scenarios under the new schedule effective 26 April 2026.

Scenario Official fees (BGN) Expected prosecution timeline
National filing, 3 classes (filing fee + 2 additional classes + search report) 520 + 170 + 170 + 100 = 960 BGN 6–8 months to registration (no opposition)
Madrid designation, 1 class (WIPO basic fee + Bulgaria individual fee) 653 CHF basic fee + Bulgaria individual fee per WIPO schedule 12–18 months (WIPO processing + BPO examination)

Professional fees for local counsel (preparation, filing, prosecution management) are additional and vary by firm. Early indications suggest that fixed‑fee packages for straightforward national filings in Bulgaria range from EUR 400 to EUR 800 depending on the number of classes and complexity of the goods/services specification.

Key Dates: 2026 Legislative and Administrative Timeline

Date Event Immediate action for rights‑holders
11 March 2026 Promulgation of TMGIA amendments (State Gazette publication) Review amendments; identify impacted marks; update opposition strategy
26 April 2026 New BPO trademark fee schedule effective Recalculate planned filings; file before or after based on class economics
1 May 2026 Bulgaria removed from USTR Special 301 Watch List Review international enforcement posture; update customs recordals and platform notice templates

How We Can Help

Global Law Experts connects rights‑holders with experienced intellectual property lawyers Bulgaria has to offer, practitioners who understand the 2026 amendments, the revised fee structure and the evolving enforcement landscape. Whether you need a portfolio audit, a cost comparison between national and Madrid filings, or urgent enforcement counsel, our network includes specialists in Sofia and across the country who can provide fixed‑fee initial reviews and rapid-turnaround compliance assessments. Contact us to be matched with the right IP counsel for your needs.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Vasil Pavlov at Pavlov & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. CMS, Amendments to the Trade Marks & Geographical Indications Act (March 2026)
  2. Bulgarian Patent Office, Official Fee Schedule and Procedural Updates
  3. USTR, Special 301 Report and Bulgaria Delisting Announcement
  4. WIPO, Madrid System Fees and Guidance
  5. Boyanov & Co, Intellectual Property Practice
  6. Dimitrov, Petrov & Co, Intellectual Property

FAQs

What are the main 2026 changes to Bulgaria's Trade Marks and Geographical Indications Act (TMGIA)?
The amendments promulgated on 11 March 2026 expand absolute grounds for refusal, broaden opposition rights to include earlier unregistered marks of more than local significance, introduce a streamlined administrative non‑use cancellation procedure before the BPO, strengthen geographical indication protections, and codify the licence‑analogy method for calculating infringement damages.
The revised fee schedule published by the Bulgarian Patent Office became effective on 26 April 2026. The changes include a modest increase in the first‑class national filing fee (from BGN 500 to BGN 520) and a reduction in per‑additional‑class surcharges (from BGN 200 to BGN 170), making multi‑class filings more cost‑effective.
Yes. Counterfeiting remains a criminal offence under the Bulgarian Penal Code. The 2026 TMGIA amendments did not remove or weaken criminal penalties. Rights‑holders can initiate prosecutions through a complaint to the police IP crimes unit, which has been operational since 2025.
The delisting, effective 1 May 2026, reduces bilateral government‑level pressure but does not change private enforcement mechanisms. Rights‑holders should continue to use direct platform notice‑and‑takedown procedures, DMCA notices, and civil litigation in the US independently of Bulgaria’s Special 301 status.
It depends on the number of target jurisdictions and classes. A national filing is typically cheaper for Bulgaria‑only coverage, especially for three or more classes under the post‑April 2026 fee schedule. A Madrid designation is more cost‑effective when Bulgaria is one of several countries being targeted simultaneously, particularly for single‑class marks.
Yes. Applications filed before 11 March 2026 are examined under the previous substantive grounds but are subject to the new procedural timelines. Oppositions against applications published on or after 11 March 2026 must reference the expanded grounds introduced by the amendments.
The new fees apply to all filings and renewals submitted on or after 26 April 2026. There is no grace period allowing payment at the old rates after that date. Rights‑holders who wished to take advantage of the previous fee structure needed to file before the effective date.

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Intellectual Property Lawyers Bulgaria 2026: TMGIA Amendments, Fee Changes & USTR Delisting

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