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Understanding how to apply trademark in Malaysia is one of the most commercially important steps a business can take before launching a brand, product line or service in this market. The Intellectual Property Corporation of Malaysia (MyIPO) administers trademark registration under the Trademarks Act 2019 and its accompanying Guidelines of Trademarks 2019 (VA1-2024), which together set out the filing requirements, examination standards and fee schedules that every applicant must follow. This guide walks business owners, in-house counsel and entrepreneurs through the complete trademark application process in Malaysia, from pre-filing clearance searches and document preparation through to examination, publication, opposition and renewal, so that you can file confidently and avoid the most common pitfalls.
For a broader perspective on protecting brands across multiple jurisdictions, see our international intellectual property practice guide.
At a high level, the MyIPO trademark registration process follows five core stages:
A pre-filing trademark search in Malaysia is not a legal requirement, but it is overwhelmingly regarded as best practice. Filing an application without checking existing registrations risks a refusal at the examination stage, or worse, a costly opposition from a senior mark holder after publication. The small upfront investment in a clearance search can save months of delay and thousands of ringgit in wasted official fees and professional costs.
MyIPO provides free access to its trademark database through the IP Online portal. To perform a basic search:
The portal also allows searches by application number, registration number and proprietor name, which is useful when investigating a specific competitor’s portfolio.
A DIY search on the IP Online portal covers exact and near-exact word matches, but it has limitations. It does not reliably capture phonetic equivalents, transliterations, device-mark similarities or common-law rights held by unregistered users. A professional clearance search, typically conducted by a registered trade mark agent, adds analysis of phonetic, visual and conceptual similarity across multiple classes, review of pending applications not yet indexed, and a written opinion on registrability risk. For businesses filing in more than one class, or those with significant brand investment at stake, professional clearance is the more prudent approach.
The Trademarks Act 2019 sets out both the eligibility criteria for applicants and the substantive requirements that a mark must satisfy before MyIPO will accept it for registration. Understanding these trademark requirements in Malaysia before you begin drafting the application will reduce the risk of objections during examination.
The following checklist summarises the documentary and format requirements that MyIPO expects at the time of filing:
This section explains the full trademark application process in Malaysia, covering both the online and manual filing routes. The online route through IP Online is now the default method for the majority of filings and is generally faster.
Malaysia follows the Nice Classification system, which divides all goods into Classes 1–34 and all services into Classes 35–45. Selecting the correct class, or classes, is one of the most consequential decisions in the entire filing process. Each class attracts a separate official fee, so over-classifying increases costs, while under-classifying leaves gaps in protection that competitors can exploit.
Industry observers find that one of the most frequent causes of examination objections is an overly broad or vague goods-and-services description. Descriptions such as “all goods in Class 25” are routinely rejected. Instead, applicants should specify the actual goods, for example, “shirts, trousers, jackets and footwear”, using the pre-approved descriptions in MyIPO’s published list wherever possible. Descriptions drawn from the pre-approved list also attract a lower official fee (see the fee table below).
For businesses operating across several product lines, a food-and-beverage company that also sells branded merchandise, for instance, filing in multiple classes from the outset is generally more cost-effective than filing separate applications later. Each additional class is treated as a separate designation within the same application, simplifying portfolio management.
The MyIPO IP Online portal is the primary electronic filing system. The key steps are:
Applicants who prefer to file in person can submit a physical application at any MyIPO counter. Manual filing requires completion of the prescribed trademark application form (Form TM5 for a single-class application or the equivalent multi-class form), together with printed copies of the mark representation, supporting documents and payment of the official fee by bank draft, money order or cash. Manual applications typically take longer to process than online filings because of data-entry lead times at MyIPO.
| Form Code | Purpose | When Used |
|---|---|---|
| TM5 | Application to register a trademark | Filing a new single-class or multi-class application |
| TM28 | Request to amend an application | Correcting applicant details, mark description or class errors after filing |
| TM18 | Notice of opposition | Third party opposing a published mark within the 2-month window |
| TM19 | Counter-statement | Applicant responding to an opposition notice |
| TM24 | Application for renewal | Renewing registration before or after expiry |
One of the most common questions from businesses exploring how to apply trademark in Malaysia concerns the trademark registration Malaysia price, specifically how much the process will cost in total. Costs divide into two categories: the official government fees payable to MyIPO and the professional fees charged by a registered trade mark agent, if one is engaged.
MyIPO publishes its trademark forms and fees schedule on its website. The two headline figures for a new application are:
Additional official fees apply at later stages, including fees for requesting amendments, filing opposition proceedings and renewing a registration.
| Item | Official Fee (RM) | Typical Agent Fee (RM) |
|---|---|---|
| Filing, single class (pre-approved list) | 950 | 800 – 2,000 |
| Filing, single class (not pre-approved) | 1,100 | 800 – 2,000 |
| Each additional class | 950 / 1,100 | 500 – 1,500 |
| Pre-filing clearance search | , | 500 – 1,500 |
| Responding to examination objection | , | 800 – 3,000 |
| Renewal (per class, 10-year term) | 1,000 | 500 – 1,000 |
For a straightforward single-class filing using pre-approved descriptions, a typical all-in cost (official fee plus agent fee) falls in the range of RM 1,750 to RM 2,950. Multi-class filings and applications requiring substantive amendments or opposition defence will be higher. Corporate portfolio filings, where a brand owner registers the same mark across five or more classes, often benefit from volume pricing arrangements with agents.
After an application is filed with MyIPO, it passes through a multi-stage examination and publication process. Understanding each stage, and the realistic timeline for each, helps applicants plan product launches and marketing calendars with greater certainty.
MyIPO first conducts a formality check to confirm that all required fields are completed, the mark image is clear, the correct fee has been paid and the goods-and-services description is properly classified. If deficiencies are found, MyIPO issues a formality objection requiring a response within a prescribed period.
Once formalities are cleared, the application proceeds to substantive examination. The examiner assesses the mark against the absolute and relative grounds for refusal set out in the Trademarks Act 2019, including distinctiveness, descriptiveness, deceptiveness, conflict with earlier marks and conflict with well-known marks. If the examiner raises an objection, the applicant receives an office action and is given an opportunity to submit arguments, evidence or amendments in response.
Marks that pass substantive examination are published in the MyIPO Official Journal (sometimes referred to as the trademark journal Malaysia). Publication opens a two-month opposition window during which any third party may file a notice of opposition on prescribed grounds. If no opposition is filed within this period, the application proceeds to registration.
Where a third party files an opposition, the applicant must file a counter-statement within the prescribed deadline. The opposition process involves the exchange of evidence and, in many cases, a hearing before the Registrar. Industry observers note that contested oppositions can add six to 24 months to the overall timeline, depending on the complexity of the case and the volume of evidence involved. Settlement negotiations and consent agreements are common practical resolutions.
| Stage / Action | Typical Time (No Objections) | Typical Time (With Objection or Opposition) |
|---|---|---|
| Formality check | 1 – 4 weeks | 1 – 3 months (if deficiencies must be corrected) |
| Substantive examination | 3 – 9 months | 6 – 18+ months (office actions and responses) |
| Publication and opposition window | 2 months | If opposed: 6 – 24 months (evidence and hearings) |
| Registration certificate issued | 1 – 3 months after publication closes | Additional 1 – 3 months after opposition resolved |
| Total estimated timeline | 12 – 18 months | 18 – 36+ months |
Once MyIPO issues the Certificate of Registration, the proprietor obtains the exclusive right to use the registered mark in relation to the goods and services covered by the registration throughout Malaysia. From this point, the proprietor may lawfully use the ® symbol next to the mark, prior to registration, only the unregistered “TM” designation should be used.
A registered trademark confers the right to take legal action against any third party that uses an identical or confusingly similar sign in the course of trade without consent. It also serves as prima facie evidence of validity in infringement proceedings, making enforcement significantly more straightforward than relying on common-law passing-off claims alone. For guidance on enforcing IP rights across multiple jurisdictions, see our article on how to protect your intellectual property across borders.
A Malaysian trademark registration is valid for ten years from the date of registration and can be renewed indefinitely for successive ten-year periods. Renewal applications can be filed online through the IP Online portal using Form TM24. The official renewal fee is RM 1,000 per class. Renewal may be filed up to six months before the expiry date and up to six months after expiry, but late renewal attracts an additional surcharge. Failure to renew within the late-renewal window results in the mark being removed from the Register, although a restoration application may be possible in limited circumstances. Tracking renewal deadlines is essential for any trademark portfolio; many businesses use docketing software or instruct their agent to manage renewals proactively.
The following checklist summarises every item you should have in hand before submitting your trademark application to MyIPO. It is designed to be printed or saved as a one-page reference document.
Even experienced filers encounter avoidable errors that delay the Malaysian trademark application process. The following practitioner tips address the most frequently seen mistakes:
Malaysian law does not require applicants to engage a registered trade mark agent for domestic filings. However, there are situations where professional representation is strongly advisable.
When engaging an agent, ensure that you sign a power of attorney on the agent’s prescribed form, agree a clear fee schedule (including any additional charges for office-action responses), and retain copies of all correspondence filed on your behalf. The agent should provide regular status updates and copies of all official communications from MyIPO. You can find qualified Malaysia IP lawyers through our directory or search our general lawyer directory for professionals experienced in trademark prosecution.
Knowing how to apply trademark in Malaysia, from the initial clearance search through the MyIPO filing portal to examination, publication and renewal, gives businesses a decisive advantage in protecting their brands in one of Southeast Asia’s most dynamic markets. With official fees starting at RM 950 per class, a realistic timeline of 12 to 18 months for uncontested applications, and a well-structured online filing system, the process is accessible to both SMEs and multinational corporations. The key to a smooth registration lies in thorough preparation: select the right classes, draft precise descriptions using pre-approved terms, assemble all required documents before filing, and monitor every deadline during examination.
Businesses considering related legal matters in Malaysia, such as corporate structuring or property transactions, may also find our overview of Malaysia stamp duty and conveyancing changes a useful companion resource.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jyeshta Mahendran at Shearn Delamore & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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