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How to Enforce Design Rights in Germany (2026): Customs Seizure, Border Measures & Practical Steps

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Rights-holders looking to enforce design rights in Germany face a pivotal question in 2026: which enforcement route, customs seizure, preliminary injunction, full civil proceedings, or platform takedown, delivers the fastest, most cost-effective relief against infringers? The answer depends on the nature of the infringement, the infringer’s location, and the urgency of the threat. Phase 2 of the EU Design Regulation (EUDR), which takes effect on 1 July 2026, expands registrable subject matter and sharpens enforcement tools, meaning brand owners and in-house IP counsel must recalibrate their strategies now. This guide provides a step-by-step enforcement playbook covering all four routes, complete with checklists, realistic timelines, cost estimates, and evidence templates tailored to the German legal landscape.

What Changed in 2026: EUDR Phase 2 and Why It Matters for Enforcement

The reform of EU design law has been the most significant legislative development in European design protection in over two decades. Phase 2 of the EU Design Regulation, as published by the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO), enters into force on 1 July 2026 and represents a fundamental expansion of what can be registered and, critically, what can be enforced.

EUDR Phase 2 at a Glance

  • Expanded registrable subject matter. Designs for graphical user interfaces (GUIs), animated designs, interior spaces, typefaces, and designs generated through technological processes, including 3D printing files, now qualify for registration under the reformed regulation.
  • Strengthened enforcement provisions. Rights-holders gain clearer legal standing to pursue infringers who manufacture, offer, import, export, or stock infringing products within the EU, including those who distribute digital design files intended for 3D reproduction.
  • Modernised evidence and procedural rules. The regulation aligns evidence standards more closely with existing trademark enforcement frameworks, simplifying cross-border customs cooperation between Member State authorities.

Practical Consequences for German Rights-Holders

For rights-holders operating in Germany, the practical effect of EUDR Phase 2 is twofold. First, the expanded scope of registrable designs means more products and digital assets can be formally protected, strengthening the evidentiary foundation needed for customs applications and injunction proceedings. Second, German customs authorities at the Bundeszollverwaltung (Zoll) will need to handle a broader range of seizure requests, particularly for digital design files and goods produced via additive manufacturing. Industry observers expect the German Patent and Trade Mark Office (DPMA) to issue updated procedural guidance before the 1 July effective date, and rights-holders are advised to review their existing design portfolios in the interim.

Those holding only national German registered designs under the Designgesetz should consider parallel EU registrations to take advantage of the regulation’s enhanced cross-border enforcement mechanisms.

Quick Decision Matrix: Which Route to Enforce Design Rights in Germany

Before committing resources, rights-holders should match their enforcement route to the specific fact pattern. The table below compares the four primary options available under German and EU design regulation enforcement frameworks.

Enforcement Route When to Use Pros / Cons
Customs seizure / border measures Suspected imports at ports, airports, or postal hubs when the rights-holder can act quickly to stop distribution before goods enter commerce + Fast interception of incoming goods; + Relatively low cost compared to full litigation; Requires advance identification of shipments and evidence; Risk of wrongful seizure claims and liability for storage costs
Preliminary injunction (Einstweilige Verfügung) Domestic sellers or continuing infringement where speed is essential and the rights-holder has strong prima facie evidence + Rapid relief, often within days; + Court-ordered seizures, takedowns, and cease-and-desist; Costs and security bond required; Requires strong, well-documented prima facie evidence
Full civil proceedings (damages / trial) When seeking monetary compensation, accounting of profits, and permanent injunctive relief after the infringement is established + Full range of remedies including damages; + Binding and permanent enforcement orders; Time-consuming (typically twelve to eighteen months); Higher legal costs
Platform takedowns Online marketplace infringement, counterfeit product listings, or digital file distribution on e-commerce platforms + Quick removal of infringing listings; + Low direct cost; May not prevent re-listing or offline distribution; Limited deterrent effect on persistent infringers

As a practical decision guide: if infringing goods are crossing the German border, begin with a customs seizure application. If the infringer is an established domestic seller, a design preliminary injunction in Germany offers the most immediate court-backed relief. For persistent online infringement across multiple marketplaces, combine platform takedowns with an injunction to create a comprehensive enforcement net. Where significant financial losses have occurred, full civil proceedings remain the only route to damages and an account of profits.

Customs Seizure in Germany: Step-by-Step Border Measures Against Design Infringement

A customs seizure is often the fastest way to enforce design rights in Germany against imported infringing goods. Under the EU Customs Regulation on IP enforcement (Regulation (EU) No 608/2013) and its German implementing provisions, the Bundeszollverwaltung (Zoll) has authority to detain goods suspected of infringing registered design rights at ports, airports, and postal processing centres. Unregistered Community designs may also be enforced at the border, though evidentiary requirements are more demanding.

When Customs Can Act

German customs authorities may act in two scenarios. First, the rights-holder files a proactive application for action, requesting that customs monitor incoming shipments and detain suspect goods. Second, customs officers may detain goods ex officio, on their own initiative, if they encounter obviously infringing items during routine inspections. In both cases, the legal basis is the EU customs IP regulation, which applies directly in Germany alongside national provisions.

How to Apply: Forms, Evidence, and Fees

The application process involves several key steps:

  • Submit an Application for Action (AFA). The AFA is filed with the central customs authority (Zentralstelle Gewerblicher Rechtsschutz) and can cover the entire EU or be limited to Germany. The form requires details of the design right, a description of authentic products, and identifying features of the infringing goods.
  • Provide an evidence pack. Include certified copies of the design registration certificate (DPMA or EUIPO), photographs of the authentic product from multiple angles, photographs or samples of the infringing product (if available), and any intelligence on suspected importers, shipping routes, or container numbers.
  • Post a bond or security. While the AFA itself is typically free of charge, the rights-holder may be required to provide a security deposit or indemnity to cover potential storage costs and damages if the seizure is later found to be wrongful. Industry observers estimate that security amounts typically range from €3,000 to €10,000 for standard consumer goods shipments, though this varies by case.

Evidence Checklist for Customs Seizure in Germany

  • Certified copy of design registration (DPMA or EUIPO certificate)
  • High-resolution product photographs (authentic item, all angles)
  • Photographs or samples of the suspected infringing goods
  • Written description of distinguishing features
  • Shipping intelligence: known importers, freight forwarders, container numbers, or tracking data
  • Authorised representative details and power of attorney
  • Indemnity declaration or proof of security deposit

Timeline and Likely Outcomes

Once customs detains goods, the rights-holder is notified and typically has ten working days (extendable to ten additional working days in justified cases) to initiate civil proceedings or reach an agreement with the importer. If no action is taken within this period, the goods are released. In practice, seizure notifications often lead to rapid settlement because importers prefer to avoid the cost of protracted storage and potential court proceedings.

Coordinating Customs Measures with Civil Proceedings

A customs seizure is most effective when paired with a preliminary injunction application. The detained goods serve as powerful evidence in court, and the injunction can prevent the importer from redirecting shipments through alternative ports. Rights-holders are strongly advised to have their injunction application substantially prepared before the customs seizure is executed, so that proceedings can be launched immediately upon notification of a detention.

German Civil Enforcement: Design Preliminary Injunctions (Einstweilige Verfügung)

When a rights-holder needs to enforce a registered design in Germany against a domestic infringer, or supplement a customs seizure with binding court orders, the preliminary injunction (Einstweilige Verfügung) is the primary procedural tool. German courts are experienced in handling IP-related injunctions and can issue orders with remarkable speed.

When to Use a Preliminary Injunction vs. Ordinary Proceedings

A preliminary injunction is appropriate when there is genuine urgency: the infringement is ongoing, the infringer is actively distributing products, and delay would cause irreparable harm to the rights-holder’s market position. If the primary objective is damages rather than an immediate stop, ordinary proceedings (Hauptsacheklage) are the better route, potentially preceded by a letter of formal notice (Abmahnung).

Procedural Steps and Competent Courts

Design infringement cases are heard at the Landgericht (Regional Court) level. Several German courts have specialised IP chambers that handle design cases regularly, including those in Düsseldorf, Munich, Hamburg, and Mannheim. The procedural steps are:

  • Prepare the application. Draft a written motion (Antrag auf Erlass einer einstweiligen Verfügung) setting out the design right, the infringement, the urgency, and the specific relief sought (cease-and-desist, seizure of infringing stock, production stop).
  • Assemble the evidence bundle. This must include the design registration, side-by-side comparison images, purchase records or test purchases of the infringing product, an affidavit (eidesstattliche Versicherung) confirming the facts, and any market intelligence.
  • File ex parte or inter partes. In cases of extreme urgency, courts may issue an order without hearing the opposing party (ex parte). More commonly, the court schedules a short oral hearing within days of filing.
  • Serve and enforce. Once the order is granted, it must be served on the infringer by a bailiff (Gerichtsvollzieher). Enforcement mechanisms include seizure of infringing goods, injunction against further production or sale, and penalty payments (Ordnungsgeld) for non-compliance.

Evidence Standard and Urgency Requirement

The applicant must demonstrate a prima facie case of infringement, meaning the court must be satisfied, on the evidence presented, that infringement is more likely than not. Critically, German courts impose an urgency requirement: the application must generally be filed within approximately one month of the rights-holder becoming aware of the infringement. Delay beyond this window risks the court rejecting the application for lack of urgency, regardless of the merits.

Sample Timeline: Day 0 to Day 30

  • Day 0: Discovery of infringement, preserve evidence immediately (screenshots, test purchases, witness statements).
  • Days 1–5: Instruct local counsel, prepare application and evidence bundle.
  • Days 5–7: File application at the competent Landgericht.
  • Days 7–14: Court reviews application; schedules oral hearing or issues ex parte order.
  • Days 14–21: Order granted and served on infringer via bailiff.
  • Days 21–30: Enforcement begins; infringer either complies or files an objection (Widerspruch), triggering a full inter partes hearing.

Estimated Costs

Court fees for a preliminary injunction depend on the value in dispute (Streitwert), which in design cases is typically set between €50,000 and €500,000. Court fees for a dispute valued at €100,000 are approximately €1,200 to €1,500 in the first instance. Attorney fees are calculated under the German Lawyers’ Remuneration Act (RVG) but are often agreed on an hourly basis for complex IP matters. In total, industry observers estimate that a straightforward preliminary injunction costs between €10,000 and €30,000 including legal fees, court fees, and service costs.

Design Right Damages in Germany: Accounting, Remedies, and Proof Strategies

A full trial allows the rights-holder to claim the complete range of remedies available under the Designgesetz, including monetary compensation that preliminary injunctions cannot deliver. The German Design Act, as published on Gesetze im Internet, provides for several categories of relief.

Types of Recoverable Relief

  • Injunctive relief. A permanent court order prohibiting future infringement.
  • Damages. Calculated using one of three methods: actual loss suffered, the infringer’s profits, or a reasonable licence fee (licence analogy).
  • Account of profits. The infringer must disclose and surrender profits derived from the infringing activity.
  • Destruction and recall. The court may order destruction of infringing goods and recall of products already in the supply chain.
  • Delivery up. Infringing goods, moulds, and production tools may be surrendered to the rights-holder.
  • Information disclosure. The infringer must provide details of suppliers, customers, and distribution channels.

Calculating Damages: Worked Example

Calculation Method Basis Illustrative Figure
Actual loss Rights-holder’s lost sales × profit margin per unit 5,000 lost units × €12 margin = €60,000
Infringer’s profits Infringer’s revenue from infringing goods minus attributable costs €200,000 revenue − €120,000 costs = €80,000
Licence analogy Hypothetical royalty rate × infringer’s total sales of infringing products 5% royalty × €200,000 sales = €10,000

The rights-holder may choose whichever method yields the highest recovery. In practice, the account-of-profits method often delivers the strongest result, particularly where the infringer achieved high volumes at low margins. The broader principles of international intellectual property enforcement apply here, but German courts have developed specific procedural expectations around evidence disclosure.

Practical Proof Strategies

Evidence Type Best Source Weight in Court
Test purchases of infringing product Notarised purchase with chain-of-custody documentation High
Side-by-side product comparison images Professional photographs with measurement annotations High
Sales data and invoices Obtained via pre-trial disclosure order or information claim High
Market surveys or consumer confusion evidence Independent market research institute Medium
Internet archive screenshots (for online infringement) Wayback Machine captures with timestamps Medium
Expert opinion on design similarity Appointed court expert or party expert High (if court-appointed)

Limitation Periods

The standard limitation period for design infringement claims in Germany is three years from the end of the year in which the rights-holder became aware of the infringement and the identity of the infringer. An absolute limitation period of ten years applies irrespective of knowledge. Rights-holders should diarise these deadlines and ensure evidence preservation measures are taken early.

Platform Takedowns in Germany: E-Commerce Enforcement for Design Rights

Online marketplaces remain a primary distribution channel for infringing products. Platform takedowns in Germany follow a notice-and-action model that varies by marketplace, but the underlying legal framework is consistent: once notified of a clear intellectual property infringement, platforms are obligated to act expeditiously to remove or disable access to the infringing listing.

Notice-and-Takedown on Major Marketplaces

  • Amazon. Through Brand Registry and the Report a Violation tool, rights-holders can submit design registration details and request removal of infringing product listings. Amazon typically processes reports within one to three business days.
  • eBay. The Verified Rights Owner Program (VeRO) allows rights-holders to report listings that infringe registered designs. eBay generally removes reported listings within twenty-four to forty-eight hours.
  • Zalando and other regional platforms. Most European marketplaces have dedicated IP reporting portals. Response times vary but generally range from two to five business days.

Platform Notices vs. Court-Ordered Takedowns

Platform notices are effective for individual listings but have limitations: determined infringers can re-list products under new seller accounts. For persistent or high-value infringement, a court-ordered takedown, obtained via a preliminary injunction directed at the platform as an intermediary, provides stronger and more durable relief.

3D Printing Design Infringement and Digital File Hosts

The EUDR Phase 2 reforms explicitly address digital design files intended for additive manufacturing. Where infringing 3D models are hosted on file-sharing platforms or specialist print-on-demand services, rights-holders should submit takedown notices directly to the host platform. If the host is located outside the EU, coordinating a takedown with a German court order directed at the German-accessible domain or payment processor can be an effective alternative strategy.

Cross-Border and Multi-Jurisdiction Enforcement Tactics

Design infringement rarely respects national borders. The EU Customs Regulation (Regulation (EU) No 608/2013) allows a single application for action to cover customs authorities across all EU Member States, enabling coordinated seizures at multiple entry points. Rights-holders should consider the following steps when planning cross-border enforcement to effectively enforce design rights in Germany and beyond:

  • File an EU-wide AFA. A single customs application filed through the German Zentralstelle can be extended to cover all twenty-seven Member States, ensuring parallel monitoring at major EU ports.
  • Coordinate with neighbouring jurisdictions. If infringing goods enter the EU through the Netherlands (Rotterdam) or Belgium (Antwerp) before reaching Germany, initiate seizure requests at those entry points in parallel.
  • Recognise German injunctions across the EU. Under the Brussels I Regulation (Recast), a German preliminary injunction can be recognised and enforced in other EU Member States without a separate exequatur proceeding, providing pan-European reach from a single German court order.
  • Assess forum selection carefully. Germany’s specialised IP courts, combined with its relatively fast preliminary injunction procedures, often make it the preferred forum even when infringement also occurs in other Member States.

Practical Annexes: Checklists, Timelines, and Templates

Pre-Action Checklist for Rights-Holders

  • Confirm the design registration is in force and renewed (check DPMA or EUIPO register).
  • Gather and preserve all evidence of infringement (screenshots, test purchases, shipping records).
  • Prepare a product identification sheet with photographs and distinguishing features of the authentic design.
  • Identify the infringer’s supply chain: manufacturer, importer, distributor, and online seller.
  • Instruct local German counsel experienced in design enforcement.
  • Decide on the enforcement route(s) using the decision matrix above.
  • Prepare and file a customs application for action (if imports are expected).
  • Draft the preliminary injunction application and evidence bundle (if domestic infringement is ongoing).
  • Submit platform takedown notices for any infringing online listings.
  • Diarise limitation periods and urgency deadlines (one-month window for preliminary injunction filing).

Customs Evidence Pack Checklist

  • Design registration certificate (certified copy)
  • Product photographs, authentic item (minimum six angles)
  • Product photographs, infringing item (if available)
  • Written description of distinguishing features and known differences
  • Intelligence on suspected shipments (tracking numbers, importer names, freight forwarder details)
  • Power of attorney for the authorised representative
  • Security deposit confirmation or indemnity declaration

Sample Injunction Application Timeline

  • Week 1: Evidence gathering, counsel instruction, and application drafting.
  • Week 2: Filing at the competent Landgericht; court review period.
  • Week 3: Oral hearing (if scheduled) or ex parte order issued.
  • Week 4: Service on infringer and commencement of enforcement.

For downloadable template packs, including a sample customs application for action, a cease-and-desist letter template, and a platform takedown notice, rights-holders are encouraged to contact a qualified design enforcement specialist through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Conclusion: Next Steps to Enforce Design Rights in Germany

With EUDR Phase 2 taking effect on 1 July 2026, the window to update enforcement strategies is narrowing. Rights-holders should act now: review and expand design registration portfolios to capture newly registrable subject matter, prepare customs applications for action before the peak import season, and ensure that evidence preservation systems are in place to support rapid preliminary injunction filings. The combination of German customs seizures, fast-track court injunctions, and targeted platform takedowns creates a layered enforcement strategy that addresses infringement at every stage of the supply chain. Those who need to enforce design rights in Germany in 2026 have more powerful tools at their disposal than ever before, the key is deploying them with precision and speed.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Marisa Michels at Alpmann Fröhlich, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. DPMA, German Patent and Trade Mark Office: Designs Guidance
  2. Gesetze im Internet, Act on the Legal Protection of Designs (Designgesetz)
  3. EUIPO, EU Design Regulation Phase 2 (EUDR Phase 2)
  4. Bundeszollverwaltung (German Customs), Intellectual Property Protection
  5. ICLG, Designs Laws and Regulations: Germany
  6. World Trademark Review, Protecting and Enforcing Design Rights in Germany
  7. Bardehle Pagenberg / WTR, Designs Germany Practice Guide

FAQs

How do I enforce a registered design in Germany?
Preserve evidence immediately, then send a cease-and-desist letter (Abmahnung) with a settlement offer. If imports are expected, file a customs seizure application. For urgent domestic cases, seek a preliminary injunction. Proceed to full trial for damages if needed. Tip: Use local counsel to prepare the injunction evidence bundle, as German courts have specific procedural expectations.
Yes. Unregistered Community designs can be enforced against copying (but not independent creation) for up to three years from the date of first disclosure within the EU. The protection scope is narrower than for registered designs. Tip: Document the first public disclosure date with timestamped evidence to support any future claim.
Available remedies include injunctions, seizure and destruction of infringing goods, delivery up, damages or accounting of profits, information disclosure orders, and customs detention at the border. German courts may also award recall orders compelling the infringer to retrieve products already distributed.
Submit an Application for Action (AFA) to the Zentralstelle Gewerblicher Rechtsschutz with certified proof of your design right, product identification materials, and any available shipping intelligence. Customs will monitor incoming shipments and detain suspect goods. Tip: Prepare detailed product identification sheets with annotated photographs before filing, the quality of these materials directly affects customs officers’ ability to identify infringements.
Emergency injunctive relief can be obtained within days to two weeks in urgent cases. Evidence required includes the design registration, side-by-side product comparisons, test purchase documentation, and a sworn affidavit (eidesstattliche Versicherung). Tip: File within approximately one month of discovering the infringement to satisfy the court’s urgency requirement.
A preliminary injunction typically costs between €10,000 and €30,000 including court and legal fees for a dispute valued at around €100,000. Full civil proceedings are more expensive, often ranging from €30,000 to €80,000 or more depending on complexity. Customs applications are generally free, but security deposits of €3,000 to €10,000 may be required. Tip: Budget for enforcement costs as part of your product launch planning, not as an afterthought.
Within the EU, German injunctions are recognised and enforceable under the Brussels I Regulation (Recast) without a separate exequatur proceeding. For sellers outside the EU, enforcement depends on bilateral treaties or the domestic law of the infringer’s country. Tip: Consider targeting the infringer’s EU-based payment processors, logistics partners, or marketplace accounts as practical enforcement pressure points.

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How to Enforce Design Rights in Germany (2026): Customs Seizure, Border Measures & Practical Steps

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