Our Expert in Bulgaria
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Last updated: 25 May 2026
Customs recordal in Bulgaria gives trademark owners one of the most powerful frontline tools available for stopping counterfeit goods before they reach domestic consumers. Under Regulation (EU) No 608/2013, the EU framework governing customs enforcement of intellectual property rights, brand owners and their representatives can file an Application for Action (AFA) with the Bulgarian National Customs Agency, instructing border officials to detain suspect consignments on sight. With Bulgarian customs authorities continuing to prioritise seizure of counterfeit goods in 2026, and with the EU’s electronic Application for Action (eAFA) system through the IP Enforcement Portal (IPEP) now fully operational, the procedural pathway for customs recordal of a Bulgaria trademark has never been more accessible.
This guide walks in-house counsel and brand protection teams through every stage of the process, from the initial compliance decision and evidence preparation to filing, detention timelines and enforcement outcomes.
Customs protection in Bulgaria is not the right tool for every brand-protection problem. It works best when infringing goods physically cross the Bulgarian border, whether entering from non-EU countries, transiting through Bulgarian ports and airports, or arriving via postal and courier channels. Before committing resources to an Application for Action, rights holders should assess whether customs recordal addresses the actual threat or whether alternative routes, such as civil interim injunctions, marketplace takedowns or criminal complaints to the Bulgarian prosecution authorities, would deliver faster results.
Industry observers recommend recording with customs when at least two of the following conditions are present:
If the primary threat is online infringement within Bulgaria rather than physical importation, a combination of civil enforcement and platform-specific takedown procedures will typically be more effective than customs recordal alone.
Regulation (EU) No 608/2013 covers a broad range of intellectual property rights eligible for customs enforcement, including registered trademarks, designs, patents, geographical indications and copyright. For trademark-specific customs recordal in Bulgaria, the following registrations are accepted:
In each case, the applicant must supply a certified copy or official extract of the registration confirming that the mark is in force. For BPO trademarks, certified extracts can be requested through the BPO’s electronic services platform. For EUTMs, an extract downloaded from the EUIPO eSearch database is generally sufficient.
An Application for Action may be filed by:
Where a representative files on behalf of the rights holder, the POA must clearly state authority to submit the AFA, receive correspondence from customs and take decisions regarding detained goods. For filings with the Bulgarian National Customs Agency, the POA should be notarised or apostilled if executed outside Bulgaria, and accompanied by a certified Bulgarian translation where the original is in a language other than Bulgarian or English.
There are two parallel pathways for filing an Application for Action with Bulgarian customs, and the choice depends on the type of intellectual property right being recorded and whether the applicant seeks protection in Bulgaria alone or across multiple EU Member States.
For holders of an EU trade mark or an international registration designating the EU, the most efficient route is to file an electronic Application for Action through the EUIPO’s IP Enforcement Portal (IPEP). The eAFA system allows rights holders to submit a single application requesting customs action in multiple Member States, including Bulgaria. The Bulgarian National Customs Agency receives the application electronically and processes it according to the timelines set out in Regulation (EU) No 608/2013.
For holders of a national Bulgarian trademark registered with the BPO, or for rights holders who prefer to file directly with the Bulgarian authorities, a national AFA can be submitted to the Customs Agency’s central administration in Sofia. This route uses the standard AFA form prescribed by Implementing Regulation (EU) No 1352/2013.
For rights holders seeking to protect their intellectual property across borders, the eAFA route is particularly efficient because a single filing can cover every EU customs authority, including Bulgaria, without the need to submit separate national applications.
The quality and completeness of the evidence pack directly determines how effectively Bulgarian customs officers can identify counterfeit goods during inspections. A well-prepared evidence bundle allows officers to make rapid visual assessments, compare suspect products against authenticated samples and justify detention decisions.
Organise all digital files using a consistent naming convention, for example, [BrandName]_[DocType]_[Date], and compile them into a single indexed PDF with bookmarks for each document category. Where original documents are in a language other than Bulgarian or English, provide certified translations alongside the originals. The Bulgarian National Customs Agency will accept documents in English for IPEP-routed applications, but national-pathway filings may require Bulgarian translations of key supporting documents.
| Evidence Type | Why It Matters | Recommended Format |
|---|---|---|
| Trademark certificate (BPO / EUTM / WIPO) | Proves registration and ownership | PDF (certified copy) |
| Photos of authentic vs infringing goods | Enables visual comparison at the border | High-resolution JPEG + annotated PDF |
| Commercial invoices / purchase orders | Establishes provenance and distributor links | PDF with highlighted relevant lines |
| Packaging / labels / barcodes | Confirms how the mark is used on genuine products | Photographs + scanned label sheets |
| Import/export manifests / bills of lading | Provides customs movement evidence | PDF or official extract |
| Signed power of attorney | Confirms authority to act on behalf of the rights holder | Notarised PDF (or e-signature where accepted) |
Rights holders managing enforcement across multiple jurisdictions may wish to consult the International Intellectual Property practice guide for a broader perspective on evidence standards and cross-border coordination.
Once an Application for Action is granted, Bulgarian customs officers are authorised to detain goods suspected of infringing the recorded trademark. The detention procedure and timelines are governed by Regulation (EU) No 608/2013, which sets harmonised deadlines across all EU Member States. The practical application of these deadlines within Bulgaria follows the framework below.
| Milestone | Timeline Under Regulation (EU) No 608/2013 | Action Required by the Rights Holder |
|---|---|---|
| Customs suspends release / detains goods | Immediately upon identification of suspect goods | None, customs acts on its own initiative or based on the granted AFA |
| Notification to the rights holder (or representative) | Within one working day of detention | Acknowledge receipt; prepare for inspection |
| Rights holder confirms infringement and initiates proceedings or requests destruction | Within 10 working days of notification (extendable by a further 10 working days on request) | Inspect goods (or appoint representative to do so); confirm in writing that the goods are counterfeit; either initiate court proceedings or request the simplified destruction procedure |
| Simplified destruction (if declarant/holder of goods does not oppose) | Within 10 working days of notification to the declarant/holder | Confirm written agreement to destruction; bear the costs of destruction and storage |
| Release of goods (if rights holder fails to act within deadline) | After expiry of the applicable deadline without action | Goods are released to the consignee; no further customs action unless fresh proceedings are initiated |
The 10-working-day response window is critical. If the rights holder does not confirm infringement, initiate legal proceedings or request the simplified destruction procedure within that period, or within the extended 20-working-day window if an extension has been granted, customs must release the goods. Industry observers note that in practice, rights holders operating in Bulgaria should aim to respond within five working days to allow time for any administrative delays in communication.
For small consignments (typically postal and courier shipments containing three units or fewer), Regulation (EU) No 608/2013 provides a streamlined destruction procedure that does not require the rights holder to initiate court proceedings, provided the applicant has requested use of this procedure in the original AFA and the declarant does not oppose destruction.
After customs detains goods under an Application for Action in Bulgaria, the enforcement pathway diverges depending on the response of the rights holder and the position taken by the importer or declarant. The principal outcomes are:
Cost considerations are important in every enforcement decision. Storage charges at Bulgarian customs warehouses accrue from the date of detention, and destruction costs vary depending on the nature and volume of the goods. Rights holders should factor these expenses into their annual brand-protection budgets and maintain a standing fund or insurance arrangement to cover them.
Understanding the distinction between why trademark protection matters in theory and executing effective border measures in practice is central to building a sustainable enforcement programme.
When an EU trade mark is the basis for customs recordal, the eAFA filed through IPEP automatically notifies the customs authorities of every designated Member State, including Bulgaria. This means the Bulgarian National Customs Agency receives the application electronically and coordinates with its EU counterparts where a shipment is identified as transiting through multiple jurisdictions. For rights holders managing intellectual property rights protection in Bulgaria alongside enforcement in neighbouring countries, Romania, Greece, Serbia (for goods entering the EU through Bulgarian borders), the IPEP system provides a single dashboard for tracking applications, detention notifications and outcomes.
The Bulgarian Patent Office also plays a coordination role. Where the validity of a national BPO trademark is challenged by the importer as a defence against detention, the BPO’s records serve as the authoritative reference. Rights holders should ensure their BPO registrations are current, with all renewals filed and any ownership changes recorded, to prevent procedural challenges during enforcement.
The following quick-reference checklist summarises the items required for a complete Application for Action filing:
Maintaining a standardised evidence pack template that can be updated with new product lines and intelligence as they emerge allows rights holders to respond rapidly when new counterfeit threats are identified, rather than assembling documentation from scratch each time a new AFA or renewal is needed.
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.
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