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Understanding how to file a trademark opposition in India is essential for any brand owner, IP counsel or in-house legal team that spots a conflicting mark in the Trademarks Journal. The Trade Marks Act, 1999 gives “any person” a four-month window after journal advertisement to lodge a Notice of Opposition, but successfully navigating that window demands precision on forms, fees, evidence sequencing under Rule 45 of the Trade Marks Rules, 2017 and, ultimately, effective advocacy at the hearing stage. This guide consolidates every procedural step, deadline and tactical consideration into a single, practice-ready playbook current as of 25 May 2026.
Whether you are an IP litigator running your first opposition or a corporate IP manager budgeting for one, the sections below cover everything from the TM‑O form and e‑filing portal walkthrough to hearing-day strategy.
TL;DR: File Form TM‑O within four months of journal advertisement, pay the prescribed fee of INR 2,500 (e‑filing), build your evidence through the Rule 45 affidavit sequence, and prepare for a hearing before the Registrar.
Before diving into the detail, the snapshot below answers the three questions practitioners ask first when assessing a new opposition matter.
| Action | Deadline (from event) | Rule / Source |
|---|---|---|
| File Notice of Opposition (TM‑O) | Within 4 months from date of advertisement in Trademarks Journal | Trade Marks Act, 1999, Section 21(1); Trade Marks Rules, 2017, Rule 42 |
| Registrar serves copy of notice on applicant | Ordinarily within 3 months of receipt of notice | Trade Marks Rules, 2017, Rule 42 |
| Applicant files counter statement | Within 2 months from receipt of the notice | Trade Marks Rules, 2017, Rule 42 |
| Opposer files evidence in chief (affidavit) | Within 2 months from receipt of the counter statement, or as directed by Registrar | Trade Marks Rules, 2017, Rule 45 |
| Applicant files evidence in reply | Within 2 months from receipt of opposer’s evidence, or as directed | Trade Marks Rules, 2017, Rule 45 |
| Opposer files evidence in rejoinder (if any) | Within 1 month from receipt of applicant’s evidence, or as directed | Trade Marks Rules, 2017, Rule 45 |
| Hearing before Registrar | After evidence stage closes; date fixed by Registry notice | Trade Marks Rules, 2017, Rule 47 |
The process of filing a trademark opposition in India begins well before the TM‑O form is submitted. A rigorous preparation phase, monitoring the Trademarks Journal, assessing the conflicting mark and assembling grounds, determines the quality of the opposition itself.
The Trademarks Journal is published weekly on the IP India portal. Practitioners should set up watch services or manual checks for marks in their client’s classes and phonetic variants. Once a conflicting application is identified, note the exact journal number and date of advertisement, the four-month clock starts from that date.
The Notice of Opposition is filed using the prescribed TM‑O form (sometimes referenced as Form TM‑O in the Trade Marks Rules, 2017). The notice of opposition trademark format must include the following particulars:
Practical tip: Draft grounds broadly enough to preserve flexibility at the evidence and hearing stages but with sufficient specificity that the Registrar and the applicant understand the case to answer. Vague, catch-all grounds invite cost orders.
The TM‑O form India e‑filing process runs through the IP India online portal. The steps are as follows:
After filing, the Registry assigns the opposition a unique reference. You can track the trademark opposition status through the IP India public search portal by entering the application number and selecting “Opposition Details”.
Once the Registrar serves the Notice of Opposition on the applicant under Rule 42, the applicant has two months from actual receipt to file a counter statement. Failure to file within the prescribed time results in the application being deemed abandoned, a harsh but well-established consequence.
The counter statement trademark opposition India format mirrors the notice in structure. The applicant must respond to each numbered ground, admitting, denying or putting the opponent to strict proof. It should also include:
Avoid making unnecessary admissions. Where the opponent pleads prior use from a specific date, a blanket denial, rather than silence, preserves the right to challenge the date at the evidence stage. Conversely, concede non-contentious facts (such as the date of your own application) to build credibility with the Registrar. If you anticipate that cross-examination of the opponent’s witnesses would be productive, include a request under Rule 47 at this stage.
Key rule: Rule 45 of the Trade Marks Rules, 2017 governs the filing of evidence in opposition proceedings. Evidence is submitted in the form of affidavits accompanied by documentary exhibits, following a prescribed three-stage sequence.
Extensions of time are possible by application to the Registrar, but they are not granted as of right. Industry observers note that the Trade Marks Registry has increasingly enforced strict compliance with evidence deadlines, and practitioners who miss them risk having evidence excluded entirely, a point emphasised in commentary by leading IP firms.
The burden of proof rests on the opponent to establish grounds for refusal. In practice this means the opponent must lead cogent, documentary evidence on each ground relied upon. Bare assertions in affidavits carry little weight. The Registrar expects:
| Evidence Type | Weight | Best Practice |
|---|---|---|
| Invoices and sales figures | High, direct proof of use and volume | Produce originals or certified copies; tabulate by year, geography and product line |
| Advertising spend and media placements | High, demonstrates reputation and public awareness | Annex sample advertisements with dates, publications and circulation data |
| Website and social media captures | Medium-to-High, shows contemporary use | Use Wayback Machine screenshots with timestamps; certify printouts with date of capture |
| Consumer survey or market research | Variable, depends on methodology | Ensure surveys follow accepted methodologies; disclose sample size and questions |
| Affidavit by deponent with personal knowledge | High, direct, first-hand testimony | Deponent should be a senior officer who can speak to use, adoption and reputation from personal knowledge |
| Hearsay or secondary sources (news articles, Wikipedia) | Low, corroborative at best | Use only to supplement primary evidence; never as the sole basis for a ground |
All exhibits must be clearly numbered and cross-referenced in the affidavit. The deponent should explain the provenance of each document. Loose exhibits or documents annexed without explanation are routinely disregarded. Where the opponent relies on foreign documents, certified translations and notarisation (or apostille where the originating country is a Hague Convention signatory) are recommended.
The official trademark opposition fees are modest by international standards, but the total cost of running an opposition, including evidence preparation, counsel fees and hearing attendance, can be significant. The table below provides a realistic budget framework.
| Fee / Cost Item | Official Fee (INR) | Typical Practitioner Estimate (INR) |
|---|---|---|
| Filing Notice of Opposition (TM‑O), e‑filing, per class | 2,500 | 2,500 |
| Filing counter statement (applicant), e‑filing, per class | 2,500 | 2,500 |
| Attorney fees, drafting Notice of Opposition | N/A | 25,000 – 75,000 |
| Attorney fees, evidence preparation (per round) | N/A | 30,000 – 1,00,000 |
| Attorney fees, hearing representation (per hearing date) | N/A | 25,000 – 1,50,000 |
| Miscellaneous (document certification, notarisation, courier) | N/A | 5,000 – 15,000 |
Budget note: Oppositions involving well-known marks, multi-class filings or complex evidence (such as consumer surveys) will sit at the higher end of these ranges. Parties should also factor in the cost of potential adjournments, which can add several months and additional counsel fees to the total spend.
Once the evidence stage closes, the Registrar issues a hearing notice under Rule 47. The trademark opposition hearing is a quasi-judicial proceeding, and its outcome often depends as much on preparation and advocacy as on the underlying merits.
Adjournment requests are a frequent tactic used to delay proceedings. To resist: object on the record, cite the number of prior adjournments, emphasise prejudice to your client, and request that costs be imposed as a condition of any further adjournment. The Registry has shown an increasing willingness to refuse adjournments in the interest of timely disposal.
The Trade Marks Registry now routinely conducts hearings via video conferencing. Ensure your internet connection is stable, that all hearing documents are available digitally and shared-screen ready, and that the deponent (if cross-examination is ordered) is available on camera with original documents at hand. Test your setup at least 24 hours before the hearing.
Parties may settle at any stage. A consent order, typically recording coexistence terms, limitations on goods or services, or withdrawal of the opposition, can be filed jointly with the Registrar. Early settlement discussions, particularly after the evidence stage reveals the relative strength of each side, can save substantial costs.
After the hearing, the Registrar delivers a written decision. The possible outcomes are:
Appeals from Registrar decisions lie to the High Court (following the abolition of the IPAB in 2021). The appeal must be filed within the prescribed limitation period. Industry observers note that successful appeals are uncommon unless the Registrar’s decision discloses an error of law or a perverse finding of fact, so getting the opposition right at first instance is critical.
For the prevailing party, the decision should be used to update watch services, notify customs authorities (if relevant to anti-counterfeiting enforcement), and diarise any further deadlines (such as renewal of the opponent’s own registrations).
The following checklists condense the key steps and requirements discussed above into quick-reference lists for each stage of the opposition process.
Knowing how to file a trademark opposition in India, from identifying the four-month window and preparing the TM‑O form, through Rule 45 evidence sequencing, to advocacy at the hearing, is a core competency for any IP practitioner or brand protection team operating in the Indian market. Every deadline in the trademark opposition timeline is strict, every affidavit matters, and every hearing offers the chance to win or lose the case on preparation alone. For complex or high-value matters, engaging experienced India-based IP disputes counsel early in the process remains the single most important step a brand owner can take.
This guide should serve as a starting point, but professional legal advice tailored to the specific facts of your opposition is strongly recommended.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult a qualified trademark attorney before acting on any of the information contained herein.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Saikrishna & Associates at Saikrishna & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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