Our Expert in China
No results available
Understanding how to respond to a trademark refusal in China is critical for any brand owner, domestic or foreign, that receives an office action from the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA). A refusal does not end your application; it opens a structured window in which you can amend the mark, submit evidence of use, narrow goods and services, or appeal to the Trademark Review and Adjudication Board (TRAB). This guide sets out the complete procedure, from initial triage through to judicial review, together with the deadlines, required documents, costs and practical implications of the draft Trademark Law amendment circulated in late 2025 for applicants responding to CNIPA refusal reasons in 2026.
Last reviewed: 7 June 2026. This article reflects the Trademark Law of the People’s Republic of China as amended up to 23 April 2019 and the draft fifth amendment released for public comment in December 2025. Readers should verify all deadlines and fees against the specific CNIPA notice they have received and consult a locally qualified agent before filing.
When CNIPA examines a trademark application, it may issue one of several official notices. Each notice type triggers different response options and deadlines. The governing statute is the Trademark Law of the People’s Republic of China (promulgated 1982; last amended 23 April 2019, in force 1 November 2019). Applicants who filed through the Madrid System (an international registration, or “IR”) receive a provisional refusal routed through WIPO, which carries its own procedural timeline.
Foreign applicants and enterprises without a domicile or business establishment in China must appoint a locally qualified trademark agent to handle all CNIPA filings, including responses to office actions. This agent requirement is mandated by Article 18 of the Trademark Law. For IR holders, the representative recorded at WIPO receives the provisional refusal, but any substantive response to CNIPA must still be filed through a Chinese agent.
Before drafting a response, confirm that the following prerequisites are in place. Omitting any of them can render a filing procedurally invalid or, worse, cause you to miss a deadline entirely.
Industry observers expect the draft 2026 amendment to increase agent accountability, agents may face administrative sanctions if they file responses containing materially misleading evidence. The likely practical effect will be more rigorous internal vetting by agents before submission.
This distinction matters because the response channel, the deadline calculation and the available post-refusal options differ significantly:
The following procedure applies to both domestic refusals and IR provisional refusals, with channel-specific notes where the two diverge. Each step begins with an action verb and states the responsible party and indicative timing.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Triage & deadline verification | Applicant’s trademark counsel / agent | 0–3 days from receiving notice |
| 2. Strategy decision (amend / evidence / withdraw) | Applicant + counsel | 3–7 days |
| 3. Prepare & submit response (arguments, amendments, evidence) | Local agent / counsel | 7–21 days drafting; file within CNIPA/WIPO deadline (see Timeline section below) |
| 4. CNIPA examination review of response | CNIPA examiner | 2–6 months (varies) |
| 5. If refused → request review / appeal to TRAB | Applicant / counsel | File within statutory appeal period (see Timeline section below) |
| 6. Judicial review (after TRAB decision) | Counsel / litigation team | Additional months to years (varies by court) |
Obtain an electronic copy of the CNIPA notice from your agent immediately. Identify whether the notice is a formality correction request, a provisional refusal (IR) or a full rejection decision. Record the date of service (stamped on the notice for domestic filings) or the date of WIPO notification (for IR holders). Calculate the response deadline and diarise it with a buffer of at least five working days before expiry.
Outcome: A confirmed deadline, a classified notice type and all parties notified.
Review the examiner’s cited grounds and decide which post‑refusal options to pursue. The main strategies are:
Outcome: A documented strategy, approved by the applicant, with an evidence-collection plan and drafting instructions issued to the local agent.
Draft a structured response that addresses every ground cited by the examiner. A typical response bundle is organised as follows:
File the response via CNIPA’s electronic filing system for domestic applications. For IR provisional refusals, file the response with CNIPA through your local agent, do not send it to WIPO.
Outcome: A complete, evidence-supported filing submitted before the deadline, with an acknowledgement receipt from CNIPA or the agent’s filing confirmation.
If CNIPA issues a formal rejection decision, whether after examining your response or as the initial decision, you may apply to TRAB for a review (复审). Under Article 34 of the Trademark Law, an applicant who disagrees with a refusal decision may apply to TRAB for review within the statutory filing period from the date of receipt of the notice.
For IR holders, a common practice is to file a “pro forma” appeal to TRAB immediately upon receiving the provisional refusal, thereby preserving the right to submit further evidence and arguments during the TRAB review proceedings. This is important because the initial window for responding to the provisional refusal is short, and evidence gathering may take longer.
Outcome: A timely TRAB review application filed within the statutory deadline, preserving the applicant’s right to a substantive re-examination.
If TRAB upholds the refusal, the applicant has further recourse:
Outcome: A clear next step, appeal, litigate or re-file, documented in writing with the client.
The strength of your response depends heavily on the quality and completeness of your evidence. The table below lists the documents needed for most CNIPA office action responses, together with formatting and authentication notes.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Power of Attorney (POA) | PDF bearing the applicant’s signature or corporate seal. If previously filed, confirm it remains current and covers the response proceedings. |
| Copy of CNIPA office action / examiner’s citation | Reference the examiner’s exact wording and paragraph numbers in your response. |
| Evidence of use in China, invoices, purchase orders, customs records, advertising materials | All items must be dated. Attach an explanatory cover letter linking each exhibit to the relevant goods or services. Prefer originals or verified copies; translate into Chinese and notarise where required. |
| Evidence of reputation / secondary meaning | Media articles, industry awards, sales figures, marketing expenditure, dated social-media screenshots. Provide context and approximate valuations. |
| Assignment / ownership documents | Notarised assignment agreements; recordal with CNIPA if an ownership change has occurred since filing. |
| Consent / coexistence agreement | Signed and dated by the owner of the cited earlier mark, translated into Chinese, notarised. |
| Translations | Official Mandarin translations of all foreign-language evidence, prepared by a professional translator. |
| Notarisation / apostille | Required for overseas documents. State the issuing authority and attach a certified translation. |
| Declaration / affidavit from company officer | Signed and (where required) notarised. Set out facts of use, sales channels and duration of use. |
| Samples / photographs | High-resolution images showing brand placement on goods, packaging or point-of-sale materials. |
For absolute-grounds refusals (descriptiveness, generic character), evidence of use is critical, focus on volume of sales, geographic reach within China and duration of continuous use. For relative-grounds refusals (conflict with an earlier mark), a consent or coexistence agreement from the cited owner, combined with evidence that the two marks coexist peacefully in the marketplace, is often the most persuasive approach.
Deadlines are strictly enforced. Missing a response window generally results in the application being deemed withdrawn or the refusal becoming final, with limited options for reinstatement. The table below summarises the key deadlines. Always verify the exact deadline stated on the CNIPA notice or WIPO notification you have received, as timeframes can vary by notice type.
| Action | When the Clock Starts | Deadline / Typical Window |
|---|---|---|
| Respond to a CNIPA domestic office action (formality correction) | Date of service stamped on the CNIPA notice | 30 days (standard); some notice types allow up to 2 months, check the specific notice |
| Respond to a WIPO IR provisional refusal | Date of WIPO notification to the holder / representative | 30 days from the date on the WIPO notification (confirm on the notice) |
| Apply to TRAB for review of a domestic refusal decision | Date of receipt of the CNIPA refusal decision | 15 days from receipt (Article 34, Trademark Law) |
| Institute judicial review proceedings (after TRAB) | Date of receipt of the TRAB decision | 30 days from receipt (Article 34, Trademark Law) |
| TRAB examination and decision | Date of TRAB acceptance of the review application | Typically 9–12 months; can be longer for complex cases |
IR-specific note: Because the 30-day response window for an IR provisional refusal is short, many practitioners file a pro forma appeal to TRAB to preserve the holder’s rights while additional evidence is being gathered. Early indications suggest that this tactic will remain effective under the draft 2026 amendment, but applicants should monitor CNIPA guidance for any changes to evidence-submission windows during TRAB proceedings.
If you miss a deadline, the consequences are typically final: the application is treated as abandoned (for formality corrections) or the refusal becomes conclusive (for substantive refusals). Limited reinstatement options exist only in narrow circumstances, for example, force majeure events, and require documentary proof. The safest course is to diarise the deadline with a buffer and instruct your agent the day you receive the notice.
The cost of responding to a CNIPA refusal varies widely depending on the complexity of the case, the volume of evidence and whether a TRAB appeal or judicial review is necessary. The table below provides indicative ranges. All official fees should be confirmed against the current CNIPA fee schedule before filing.
| Item | Typical Amount (Guidance) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Official fee for responding to a CNIPA office action | RMB 0 – modest official fee (varies by notice type) | Some formality corrections carry no official fee; substantive responses may. Check the CNIPA fee schedule. |
| TRAB review / appeal official fee | RMB 750 per class (indicative; verify current schedule) | Payable at the time of filing the TRAB review application. |
| Local agent fee to prepare the response | USD 500 – 4,000 | Wide range depending on complexity, evidence volume and whether TRAB or court proceedings are involved. Request a written fee estimate. |
| Translation / notarisation / apostille | USD 50 – 500 per document | Depends on document length, language pair and notarisation requirements. |
| Evidence collection (market reports, customs records, surveys) | USD 500 – 5,000+ | Complex evidence bundles involving market surveys or expert reports will be at the higher end. |
Agent fees are typically quoted as fixed-fee packages for a standard response, with separate quotes for TRAB appeals and court proceedings. VAT (value-added tax) applies to agent services in China at the standard rate. Foreign applicants should also factor in the cost of translating and notarising evidence generated outside China.
In December 2025, the National People’s Congress released a draft of the fifth amendment to the Trademark Law for public comment. While the draft has not yet been enacted, its key proposals are already shaping practitioner strategy for responding to trademark refusals in China.
The practical takeaway: start collecting and organising evidence of use early, vet all filings for accuracy before submission, and work with an agent who understands the evolving regulatory landscape.
Knowing how to respond to a trademark refusal in China, and acting quickly, can be the difference between securing registration and losing rights in one of the world’s largest consumer markets. The process is procedurally demanding: strict deadlines, mandatory agent representation for foreign applicants, exacting evidence-of-use requirements and a multi-stage review and appeal structure that extends from CNIPA examination through TRAB and, if necessary, to the Beijing Intellectual Property Court. The draft 2026 Trademark Law amendment signals that these requirements will only become more rigorous, with higher evidentiary thresholds and increased accountability for agents and applicants alike.
Start by confirming the notice type and deadline, appoint a qualified local agent immediately, and build your evidence bundle from the first day. Whether you choose to amend, submit evidence, negotiate a consent agreement or file an appeal to TRAB, a structured, well-documented response filed within the deadline remains the strongest foundation for protecting your brand in China.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rainy Barlow at ABION CHINA, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 13 minutes ago
posted 36 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message