Our Expert in Greece
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Last reviewed: 20 May 2026
If you need to know how to trademark a name in Greece, 2026 is a year of meaningful change. The publication of Law 5271/2026 on 30 January 2026 introduced enhanced criminal and administrative sanctions for IP-related offences, strengthening enforcement across the country’s intellectual-property landscape. At the same time, the Hellenic Industrial Property Organisation (OBI), Greece’s national trademark office, continues to refine its electronic filing channels, while the EU Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) and the WIPO Madrid System offer alternative routes for applicants whose ambitions extend beyond Greek borders.
This guide walks you through every practical step: running a trademark availability check, preparing the correct power of attorney (POA) and translations, choosing between a national, EU or international filing, understanding the fees and timelines you will face, and knowing what to do if someone opposes your mark.
Quick answer: To trademark a name in Greece you file a national application at OBI (online or on paper), selecting your Nice classes, attaching a POA if you use a representative, and paying the official filing fee, the entire process typically takes several months from application to registration certificate, assuming no opposition.
Before you prepare any paperwork, the single most important strategic decision is where to file. Greece-based applicants and foreign businesses targeting the Greek market can choose from three routes, each with distinct territorial reach, cost profiles and procedural nuances. The comparison table below sets out the key differences side by side.
| Feature | National (OBI Greece) | EU Trade Mark (EUIPO) | International (Madrid Protocol) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Territorial scope | Greece only | All 27 EU member states (unitary right) | Each designated contracting party, applicant selects countries |
| Filing office | OBI (Athens), online or paper | EUIPO (Alicante), online via e-filing | WIPO (Geneva), filed through office of origin (e.g. OBI or EUIPO) |
| Typical official fee (single class, online) | Consult the current OBI fee schedule | €850 (EUIPO online basic fee, single class) | CHF 653 base fee + individual country designations |
| Additional-class fees | Per-class surcharge set by OBI | €50 for the 2nd class; €150 for each class from the 3rd onward | CHF 100 per additional class + supplementary designation fees |
| Examination | Formal + limited substantive (absolute grounds) | Absolute grounds only; no ex-officio relative-grounds refusal | Varies by designated country |
| Opposition period | 3 months after publication in the OBI Industrial Property Bulletin | 3 months after publication in the EUIPO Bulletin | Set by each designated country’s national law |
| Typical total timeline to registration | Approximately 6–12 months (if unopposed) | Approximately 5–8 months (if unopposed) | 12–18 months (depends on designated countries) |
| Registration duration & renewal | 10 years from filing; renewable indefinitely in 10-year periods | 10 years from filing; renewable indefinitely | 10 years from international registration date; renewable |
| Best for | Local Greek brands; cost-conscious SMEs; first filings to secure priority | Businesses operating across the EU single market | Companies targeting multiple countries outside and/or within the EU |
A national OBI filing is the fastest, most affordable option if your brand is active only in Greece. An EU Trade Mark (EUTM) through EUIPO makes sense when you sell, or plan to sell, goods or services across the single market, because one registration gives you unitary protection in all 27 member states. The Madrid Protocol route, administered by WIPO, is the pragmatic choice when you need coverage in a mix of EU and non-EU countries (for example, Greece plus Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States).
Running a thorough Greece trademark search before you invest in an application is non-negotiable. A conflict with an earlier mark can lead to opposition, refusal or costly rebranding. Here is a practical search checklist.
Greece follows the international Nice Classification of goods and services. Your application must list the specific classes relevant to your commercial activity. Common pitfalls include filing in too few classes (leaving gaps competitors can exploit) or too many (inflating fees and creating non-use vulnerability). Carefully describe the goods and services within each class using precise wording aligned with the Nice class headings. If your brand name is purely descriptive of the goods, for example, “Fresh Olives” for olive products, it is likely to be refused on absolute grounds. Distinctive, coined or suggestive names enjoy far stronger protection.
A trademark protects a sign that distinguishes commercial goods or services. Copyright protects original literary, artistic or scientific works and arises automatically upon creation, no registration at OBI is required. A trade name (registered at the local Chamber of Commerce or General Commercial Registry / GEMI) identifies a business entity but does not, on its own, provide the exclusive nationwide right to use a brand on goods or services. For comprehensive brand protection, register a trademark at OBI (or EUIPO) in addition to securing your company name.
The national route through the Greece trademark office, OBI Greece, is straightforward once you understand the sequence. Below is a practical walkthrough current as of May 2026.
Step 1, Prepare your mark. Decide whether you are filing a word mark (text only), a figurative mark (logo or stylised text), or a combination mark. If filing a figurative or combination mark, prepare a clear graphic reproduction in the format accepted by OBI (typically JPEG, at least 8 cm × 8 cm).
Step 2, Select your Nice classes and draft your goods/services specification. List the classes and write clear descriptions of the goods or services for each class. Use the accepted class-heading terminology or specific descriptors consistent with OBI’s practice.
Step 3, Run your trademark availability check. Search OBI, TMview and, where relevant, the EUIPO and WIPO databases as described above. Document the results for your file.
Step 4, Complete the application form. OBI accepts applications filed electronically through its online platform or on paper submitted in person or by post to the OBI offices in Athens. The Gov.gr filing-and-registration page provides guidance on the submission channels and the required accompanying documents.
Step 5, Attach the required supporting documents. See the required-documents table below.
Step 6, Pay the official filing fee. Payment is made at the time of filing. The fee depends on the number of classes selected.
Step 7, OBI conducts a formalities examination (completeness, fee payment, mark reproduction quality), followed by a substantive examination on absolute grounds (distinctiveness, descriptiveness, deceptiveness, public-order conflicts). OBI does not refuse applications ex officio on relative grounds, that is left to third-party opposition.
Step 8, Publication. If the application passes examination, it is published in the OBI Industrial Property Bulletin. Third parties then have a three-month opposition window.
Step 9, Registration. If no opposition is filed (or any opposition is resolved in the applicant’s favour), OBI issues the registration certificate. The trademark is protected for ten years from the filing date and is renewable indefinitely in ten-year periods.
If you file through a representative, whether a Greek attorney or an authorised trademark agent, you must submit a power of attorney (POA). The POA must identify the applicant, the representative and the scope of authority (typically covering filing, prosecution and receipt of notifications). Foreign applicants who do not have a domicile or a real and effective industrial or commercial establishment within the European Economic Area will generally need to appoint a Greek-qualified representative.
The working language of OBI is Greek. Applications must be submitted in Greek, and any supporting documents originally drafted in a foreign language must be accompanied by a certified Greek translation. POAs executed abroad typically need to be legalised (apostille or consular legalisation) and then translated into Greek by a certified translator. Failing to provide properly certified translations is one of the most common reasons for procedural delays at OBI.
| Document | Required for | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Completed application form | All applicants | Online or paper; must include applicant details, mark reproduction, class list |
| Graphic reproduction of the mark | Figurative / combination marks | Clear JPEG or equivalent; minimum 8 cm × 8 cm recommended |
| List of goods and services per Nice class | All applicants | Precise descriptions aligned with Nice headings |
| Power of Attorney (POA) | Applicants using a representative | Signed by the applicant; legalised & translated if executed abroad |
| Certified Greek translation of foreign-language documents | Foreign applicants | Certified by a Greek-qualified sworn translator |
| Proof of filing-fee payment | All applicants | Payment at filing; receipt or e-payment confirmation |
| Priority document (if claiming Convention priority) | Applicants claiming earlier foreign filing within 6 months | Certified copy from the office of first filing |
The table below summarises the principal official fees for each route. Always confirm the current amounts directly with the relevant office before filing, as fee schedules can change.
| Fee item | National (OBI) | EU (EUIPO) | International (WIPO Madrid) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic application fee (one class, online) | Per current OBI schedule, consult OBI trademarks page | €850 | CHF 653 (black & white mark) |
| Second class | Per-class surcharge (OBI) | €50 | CHF 100 |
| Each additional class from the 3rd onward | Per-class surcharge (OBI) | €150 per class | CHF 100 per class + country supplements |
| Renewal fee (10 years, one class) | Per OBI renewal schedule | €850 | CHF 653 |
EUIPO fees verified at euipo.europa.eu as of May 2026. WIPO fees expressed in Swiss francs per the WIPO Madrid System schedule. OBI fees should be confirmed on the official OBI website at the time of filing.
In addition to official fees, most applicants engage an IP attorney whose professional fees vary. Industry observers expect typical attorney charges for a straightforward single-class Greek national filing (including searches, preparation and prosecution) to range roughly between €500 and €1,500, depending on complexity.
| Stage | National (OBI) | EU (EUIPO) | Madrid (WIPO) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Formalities check | A few weeks | Approximately 1 month | WIPO checks within a few months; forwarded to designated offices |
| Substantive examination | Several weeks to months | Approximately 1–3 months | Varies by designated country (up to 12–18 months) |
| Publication & opposition period | 3 months | 3 months | Per national law of each designated country |
| Registration (if unopposed) | Approximately 6–12 months total | Approximately 5–8 months total | Approximately 12–18 months for most designations |
Once your trademark application is published, any third party who believes the mark conflicts with their earlier rights may file an opposition at OBI within the three-month opposition window. Grounds for opposition typically include likelihood of confusion with an earlier registered mark, bad faith, or the existence of a well-known mark in Greece. If you are on the receiving end of an opposition, you must file a defence within the prescribed deadline and present evidence and legal arguments before the OBI Administrative Trademark Committee.
Law No. 5271/2026, published in the Government Gazette (ΦΕΚ Α΄ 11) on 30 January 2026, was primarily enacted to combat art forgery and the illicit trade in collectibles. It establishes a dedicated framework combining administrative and criminal regulation, with increased sanctions for the production, circulation, trade and possession of forged works. While its core subject matter is art and collectibles, early indications suggest that the law’s heightened penalty framework and institutional mechanisms will have broader practical implications for IP enforcement more generally, including trademark-related counterfeiting cases where forged goods intersect with the art and luxury-goods market.
Practitioners have noted that Law 5271/2026 expands the institutional toolkit available to enforcement authorities. For brand owners operating in sectors exposed to counterfeit luxury goods or branded collectibles, the likely practical effect will be a stronger deterrent against large-scale counterfeiting operations. Civil remedies remain available in parallel: trademark holders may seek preliminary injunctions, provisional measures and full damages proceedings before the Greek civil courts.
Understanding how to trademark a name in Greece means also knowing where applicants most often stumble. Below are the six most common mistakes and how to avoid them.
Use this condensed six-step checklist as a project plan for a straightforward single-class national filing at OBI.
| Item | Estimated cost (EUR) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| OBI official filing fee (one class) | Confirm at OBI website | Payable at filing; additional classes incur per-class surcharges |
| Attorney professional fees (search + filing + prosecution) | €500 – €1,500 | Varies by firm and complexity; estimate only |
| POA legalisation & certified translation | €100 – €300 | For foreign applicants; includes apostille and sworn translation |
| Total estimated range (one class, unopposed) | Approximately €700 – €2,000+ | Excludes opposition defence; verify all official fees before filing |
All cost estimates are indicative ranges based on general market observations as of May 2026. Actual costs depend on the specifics of each case.
While straightforward trademark filings in Greece can be managed with careful preparation, there are situations where professional legal guidance is essential:
Understanding how to trademark a name in Greece is the first step; securing lasting protection for your brand requires diligent preparation, accurate filings and ongoing monitoring. To connect with a qualified IP lawyer in Greece or explore the full range of intellectual property specialists in our global directory, visit Global Law Experts.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information and does not constitute legal advice. Trademark laws, fees and procedures can change. Always consult a qualified intellectual-property lawyer for advice tailored to your specific circumstances.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Maria Athanassiadou at Dr. Helen G. Papaconstantinou and Partners Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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