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Registered vs well‑known trademark UAE

Our Expert in United Arab Emirates

Registered vs Well‑known Trademark UAE, Which Gives Stronger Protection and When to Pursue Each

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 days ago

Every brand entering or expanding in the United Arab Emirates faces a concrete choice: file a class‑by‑class registered trademark in the UAE, pursue recognition as a well‑known trademark in the UAE, or do both. The stakes are immediate, the path you choose determines whether you can block a copycat across product categories, trigger criminal prosecution, or get Customs to seize counterfeits at the border. Since Federal Decree‑Law No. 36/2021 overhauled UAE trademark law, and courts and enforcement agencies have spent 2022–2026 refining how these tools work in practice, the calculus has shifted. This guide sets out a practical, side‑by‑side framework for the registered vs well‑known trademark UAE decision so you can act, not deliberate, before engaging counsel.

Option A: Registered Trademark, What It Is, When It Applies, and Who It Suits

A registered trademark in the UAE is a mark that has passed formal examination and been accepted onto the national register maintained by the Ministry of Economy (formerly known as the Ministry of Economy and Tourism, or “MOET”). Registration follows the Nice Classification system: you file in one or more of 45 classes, each covering a defined category of goods or services. Once registered, the mark carries a legal presumption of ownership, puts the public on constructive notice, and unlocks the full suite of civil and criminal remedies under Federal Decree‑Law No. 36/2021.

Registration suits most brand owners. It is the default entry point for companies launching in the UAE market, cost‑sensitive startups protecting a single product line, and international brands that need a defensible foothold before scaling. Its principal limitation is scope: protection runs only to the classes in which the mark is registered and to identical or confusingly similar marks within those classes. A registration in Class 25 (clothing) will not, on its own, stop a third party from using the same mark in Class 43 (restaurants).

Registration Steps and Timeline

  • Filing. Submit the application to the Ministry of Economy with the required documents: mark specimen, list of goods/services by Nice class, applicant details, power of attorney for the local agent, and any priority claim.
  • Formal examination. The Ministry reviews the application for formalities and absolute grounds for refusal (descriptiveness, deceptiveness, morality). This typically takes several weeks.
  • Publication. Accepted applications are published in the Trademarks Bulletin for a statutory opposition period, during which third parties may file objections.
  • Registration. If no opposition is filed, or if opposition is resolved in the applicant’s favour, the mark is registered. The entire uncontested process typically takes six to twelve months.
  • Renewal. Registration is valid for ten years and renewable indefinitely for successive ten‑year periods.

Typical Enforcement Routes for Registrants

  • Civil action. File suit in the competent court for injunctive relief, damages, and destruction of infringing goods. Registration simplifies the burden of proof, you need only show ownership and infringement.
  • Criminal referral. Federal Decree‑Law No. 36/2021 criminalises counterfeiting and use of registered marks without authorisation. Complaints can be filed with the police or public prosecution.
  • Customs recordation. Register the mark with UAE Customs authorities so that suspected counterfeit shipments can be detained at the border before they enter the market.
  • Administrative cancellation and opposition. Challenge conflicting marks before the Ministry or the Grievance Committee.

Option B: Well‑Known Trademark in the UAE, What It Is, When It Applies, and Who It Suits

A well‑known trademark is a mark that has acquired such a level of reputation among the relevant sector of the public, or, for truly famous marks, among the general public, that it qualifies for protection beyond the classes in which it may (or may not) be registered. UAE law, consistent with Article 6bis of the Paris Convention and the TRIPS Agreement, recognises well‑known marks and provides enhanced remedies. Federal Decree‑Law No. 36/2021 reinforced these provisions, empowering the Ministry and the courts to refuse or cancel registrations that conflict with well‑known marks, even if the well‑known mark is not itself registered in the UAE.

Well‑known status is not “filed for” like a registration. It is recognised, either by the Ministry during an opposition or cancellation proceeding, or by a court in the course of infringement or unfair‑competition litigation. The distinction matters: a brand owner does not apply for a well‑known certificate but instead asserts well‑known status as a ground for relief in a live dispute or pre‑emptive proceeding.

This path suits established global brands with substantial UAE market presence or demonstrable spill‑over reputation, brands that face multi‑class counterfeiting and need protection beyond their registered classes, and rights holders confronting bad‑faith filings by local traders who have registered the mark in classes the original owner did not cover.

How Well‑Known Status Is Proven, Evidence Checklist

Courts and the Ministry assess well‑known status on the totality of the evidence for well‑known trademark recognition. The following categories of proof carry the most weight in UAE practice:

  • UAE sales records. Revenue figures, invoices, and purchase orders demonstrating actual commercial presence in the Emirates.
  • UAE and regional advertising spend. Documented expenditures on marketing campaigns directed at UAE consumers, television, print, digital, outdoor, and social media.
  • Independent market surveys. Recognition surveys conducted among UAE consumers or the relevant trade channel, ideally by a recognised market‑research firm.
  • International registrations. A portfolio of trademark registrations in other jurisdictions, showing the mark’s global reach.
  • Media citations. Press coverage, trade publications, and editorial mentions in UAE and regional outlets.
  • Distributor and retailer affidavits. Sworn statements from local distribution partners, retailers, or franchisees attesting to consumer recognition.
  • Social proof metrics. Follower counts, engagement data, and website traffic originating from the UAE, where relevant to the sector.
  • Duration and extent of use. Evidence that the mark has been in continuous use in the UAE or directed at UAE consumers over a significant period.

The evidentiary threshold is high. A single category of evidence is rarely sufficient; courts expect a multi‑layered submission establishing reputation from several independent angles.

Typical Enforcement Routes Once Well‑Known Status Is Recognised

  • Cross‑class opposition and cancellation. Block or remove conflicting registrations in classes where the well‑known mark owner has no registration of its own.
  • Civil injunctions with broader scope. Obtain injunctions covering non‑identical goods or services where the court finds a risk of association, dilution, or unfair advantage.
  • Enhanced criminal and customs cooperation. Industry observers expect, and early post‑2021 enforcement patterns suggest, that a judicial finding of well‑known status strengthens the hand of rights holders when requesting proactive customs seizures and criminal referrals, because it pre‑empts the infringer’s argument that the mark is unknown or its scope is limited.

Registered vs Well‑Known Trademark, Side‑by‑Side Comparison

Dimension Registered Trademark Well‑Known Trademark
Eligibility Any applicant who files and meets formal requirements (class‑based) Only marks with proven reputation in the relevant sector; high evidentiary threshold
Territorial / class scope Rights limited to registered classes and UAE territory Potential cross‑class protection where reputation is proven
Presumption of right Registration provides presumption of ownership and national notice No registration presumption; protection based on reputation
Enforcement (civil) Injunctions, damages, cancellations within registered classes Injunctions and cancellations; scope may extend to non‑identical goods
Enforcement (criminal & customs) Criminal remedies for counterfeiting; customs recordation available Stronger practical leverage for proactive seizures once recognised
Timing Typically 6–12 months (uncontested) 12–36+ months (litigation / recognition proceedings)
Cost Lower: official fees + per‑class attorney fees Much higher: litigation, expert evidence, surveys, cross‑jurisdictional collection
Evidence required Filing documents, priority claim, specimen of use Extensive: UAE sales, advertising, surveys, media, affidavits, international filings
Risk of reversal Non‑use cancellation or prior‑user challenges possible Recognition can be challenged, but judicial acceptance is a strong practical deterrent
Best for New entrants, targeted class protection, cost‑sensitive brands Established global brands seeking cross‑class enforcement and deterrence

Which gives stronger protection? Neither option is universally superior. A registered trademark delivers faster, cheaper, class‑specific rights with clear criminal remedies, sufficient for most brand owners entering the UAE or defending a defined product line. A well‑known trademark delivers broader rights that cross class boundaries and carry greater practical weight in customs and criminal enforcement, but at significantly higher cost and time investment. The strongest position, where resources permit, is registration in core classes combined with assertion of well‑known status in disputes where cross‑class enforcement matters.

Dimension‑by‑Dimension Analysis

Enforceability in the UAE (Including Criminal and Customs)

Enforceability in the UAE is the dimension where the registered vs well‑known trademark choice produces the most divergent outcomes.

  • Registered marks unlock criminal prosecution for counterfeiting under Federal Decree‑Law No. 36/2021. They also qualify for customs recordation, enabling border authorities to detain suspected counterfeit shipments. These remedies are, however, confined to the registered classes. If a counterfeiter sells goods bearing your mark in a class you have not covered, your registration alone may not support enforcement.
  • Well‑known marks can extend protection beyond registered classes. UAE courts may block the use or registration of a conflicting mark on non‑identical goods where they find a likelihood of confusion, dilution, or unfair advantage. In criminal and customs proceedings, a prior judicial finding of well‑known status pre‑empts the most common defence, that the mark is obscure or limited in scope, making enforcement agencies more willing to act proactively.

Cost, Fees, Litigation, and Expert Evidence

Cost is frequently the deciding factor. The table below provides directional estimates; actual figures depend on the complexity of the matter and the counsel engaged.

Cost item Registered Trademark (est.) Well‑Known Trademark (est.)
Official filing fee (per class) Ministry of Economy fee schedule (low‑to‑mid hundreds USD equivalent per class) N/A, no separate filing; achieved via court or administrative proceedings
Attorney filing & prosecution USD 800–2,500 per class USD 25,000–150,000+ (litigation, evidence, witness preparation)
Expert evidence (surveys, reports) Rarely required USD 10,000–75,000+ depending on scope
Customs recordation Nominal agent/admin fees Nominal once recognition is obtained
Typical total budget USD 1,000–5,000 per class USD 30,000–250,000+

For a brand entering the UAE with a clear product focus, routine registration offers the best cost‑to‑protection ratio. Pursuing well‑known status is a strategic investment justified only when the benefits, principally cross‑class enforcement and deterrence, outweigh the substantial upfront cost.

Timing, How Long Each Path Takes

Speed matters when a competitor or counterfeiter is already in the market.

  • Registration route. An uncontested application before the Ministry of Economy typically reaches registration in six to twelve months. Opposition or office‑action complications can extend this to eighteen months or more, but the timeline is relatively predictable.
  • Well‑known recognition route. Because recognition is achieved through contested proceedings, opposition, cancellation, or infringement litigation, timelines range from twelve to thirty‑six months and sometimes longer. Evidence gathering alone (commissioning surveys, collecting UAE sales data, obtaining affidavits from distributors) can take several months before any proceeding is filed.

The practical implication: if urgency is your priority, register first and assert well‑known status later if cross‑class issues arise.

Liability and Risk, Non‑Use, Prior Use, and Cancellation

Both paths carry vulnerabilities that brand owners must manage proactively.

  • Registered marks are subject to non‑use cancellation if the mark is not genuinely used in the UAE for a continuous period specified under the law. They are also vulnerable to prior‑user challenges, a party that can demonstrate earlier use in the UAE may seek cancellation of a later registration.
  • Well‑known claims can be both a shield and a sword. Asserting well‑known status may invite countersuits alleging non‑use of the mark in the UAE or challenging the quality of evidence. If the evidence falls short, the claim fails and the brand has incurred significant litigation costs.
  • Mitigation strategies (both paths): maintain continuous UAE sales records; document advertising spend; record the mark with Customs; use trademark watch services to detect filings early; and renew registrations on time.

Evidence and Standard of Proof

The evidence burden is the sharpest practical difference between the two options.

  • For registration: the applicant submits the application form, specimens of the mark, a power of attorney for the local agent, and any priority documents. No proof of use or reputation is required at the filing stage.
  • For well‑known recognition: the applicant must demonstrate reputation through a multi‑layered evidence package. UAE courts and the Ministry expect documentation from several independent sources: sales data, advertising expenditure, market surveys focused on UAE consumers, international registrations, media coverage, and sworn affidavits from local distributors or retailers. Single‑source submissions are almost always insufficient. The strongest cases combine quantitative data (revenue, market share) with qualitative evidence (independent survey results, press citations).

Dispute Resolution and Enforceability, Courts, Administrative Channels, and Criminal Referrals

Brand owners in the UAE have three main enforcement channels, and the choice of registered vs well‑known trademark affects which channels are available and how effective each one is.

  • Ministry of Economy (administrative). Oppositions and cancellation actions can be filed before the Ministry and the Grievance Committee. These proceedings are generally faster and cheaper than court litigation but may not resolve complex disputes or deliver damages.
  • Courts (civil and commercial). Full civil litigation delivers injunctions, damages, and binding declarations, including declarations of well‑known status. Court proceedings are necessary for broader relief and for establishing precedent.
  • Criminal referral and customs cooperation. Criminal enforcement requires documented counterfeiting of a registered mark or misuse of a well‑known mark. Having a registration simplifies the criminal complaint; having a prior judicial finding of well‑known status strengthens the complaint when the infringement crosses class boundaries.
  • Arbitration. Useful for contractual disputes (e.g., licensee breaches) but not a substitute for public enforcement remedies. Customs seizures and criminal complaints cannot be initiated through arbitration.

What Changes in 2026, Practice and Policy Updates

Federal Decree‑Law No. 36/2021 provided the legislative framework, but 2022–2026 practice has filled in the operational detail. Several developments shift the registered vs well‑known trademark UAE calculus:

  • Increased customs cooperation. Early indications suggest that UAE Customs authorities have become more responsive to proactive seizure requests backed by documented well‑known status. Brands that can present a judicial finding of well‑known recognition alongside their customs recordation report faster border interventions.
  • More predictable cross‑class enforcement. Post‑2021 Federal Court decisions have begun to clarify the evidentiary standards for cross‑class protection, making it more feasible for established brands to predict outcomes before investing in recognition proceedings.
  • Market surveys gaining acceptance. The likely practical effect of recent case law is that UAE courts increasingly accept independent consumer recognition surveys as core evidence, not merely supplementary, for well‑known claims. This strengthens the hand of brands willing to invest in rigorous survey methodology.
  • Digital enforcement. Administrative and enforcement authorities have expanded their capacity to address online counterfeiting, and a registered or recognised well‑known mark now supports takedown requests on e‑commerce platforms operating in the UAE.

The net effect: pursuing well‑known recognition is becoming more predictable and more practically valuable, but it remains a high‑investment strategy. Registration remains the essential baseline for all brand owners.

Decision Framework: When to Choose Registration, When to Seek Well‑Known Status

Choose registration (Option A) when:

  • You need fast, class‑specific protection and cost is a priority.
  • Your brand is new in the UAE or limited to one product line.
  • You plan to test the market before committing to heavy enforcement investment.
  • Your primary concern is preventing identical or near‑identical copying within your product category.

Choose well‑known recognition (Option B) when:

  • You are a well‑established global or regional brand with demonstrable reputation among UAE consumers or the relevant trade.
  • You need cross‑class protection or stronger customs and criminal enforcement leverage.
  • You are fighting systemic counterfeiting or multi‑class bad‑faith filings and can fund the evidence creation process.
  • A judicial finding of well‑known status would deter future infringers across your full brand portfolio.
If your priority is… Choose…
Speed and low immediate cost Registered trademark (file per relevant classes)
Broad, cross‑class enforcement and criminal/customs leverage Pursue well‑known recognition (plus registration where feasible)
Defensible market entry in a single product category Registered trademark + customs recordation
Long‑term regional brand protection and deterrence Invest in evidence and pursue well‑known recognition where threshold is met

Most brand owners do not face a binary either/or. The strongest IP position in the UAE is registration in core classes combined with a readiness to assert well‑known status when a dispute crosses class lines. Treat registration as the foundation and well‑known recognition as the strategic escalation.

When to Engage a Trademark Lawyer for This Decision

Not every trademark matter requires outside counsel, but the following triggers should prompt immediate engagement with a UAE‑qualified IP lawyer:

  • Third‑party infringement detected. You discover a competitor, distributor, or bad‑faith filer using or registering a mark identical or confusingly similar to yours in the UAE, in your class or outside it.
  • Multi‑class or cross‑border counterfeiting. Infringing goods are appearing in classes you have not registered, or counterfeits are entering the UAE through free‑zone ports.
  • Customs seizure or criminal referral needed. You need to initiate a border detention or file a criminal complaint, both of which require specific procedural steps and documentation.
  • Evidence creation for well‑known status. You are commissioning market surveys, collecting UAE sales data, or coordinating affidavits from regional distributors, all tasks that require legal direction to ensure admissibility.
  • Financial stakes exceed the cost of routine registration. When the potential loss from infringement (lost revenue, brand dilution, consumer confusion) materially exceeds the cost of class‑by‑class registration, the economics justify investing in a well‑known claim with professional guidance.

To connect with a specialist, use the Global Law Experts lawyer directory and filter by United Arab Emirates and Trademark.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nour Saleem at NAS & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Federal Decree‑Law No. (36) of 2021 on Trademarks, UAE Legislation Portal
  2. Ministry of Economy & Tourism, Register Trademark (official process page)
  3. Tamimi & Company, Well‑known Trademark: Bad Faith and Prior Use in the UAE
  4. Thomson Reuters Practical Law, Trademarks in UAE: Legal Overview and Jurisprudence
  5. JCA Trademark UAE, New UAE Trademark Law: Protecting Well‑Known Trademarks
  6. Abu Dhabi IP Unit (ADDED), Trademark Guidance
  7. Khurana & Khurana, Well‑Known Trademark Under the New UAE Trademark Law
  8. International Trademark Association (INTA), Well‑Known and Famous Marks Resources

FAQs

Should I register my trademark or try to establish it as a well‑known mark in the UAE?
Register first for fast, class‑specific protection. Pursue well‑known status only if you can demonstrate wider UAE or sector reputation and you need cross‑class blocking or stronger customs and criminal enforcement.
When the mark’s reputation among the relevant sector or general public is proven and the court or Ministry finds a likelihood of association, dilution, or unfair advantage, even in classes where the mark is not registered.
Registration is almost always faster (six to twelve months) and cheaper (low thousands of USD per class). Well‑known recognition requires extensive evidence and litigation, with costs often starting at USD 30,000 and timelines exceeding twelve months.
Yes. A UAE‑qualified IP lawyer directs survey design to ensure admissibility, collects locally specific evidence, coordinates expert witnesses, and presents the case in court or before the Ministry. Without professional guidance the risk of inadmissible or insufficient evidence is high.
Yes, and most sophisticated brand owners do exactly that. Maintain registrations in core classes for routine enforcement, then assert well‑known status in disputes where cross‑class protection is needed.
If you relied only on registration and later need cross‑class enforcement, you face longer and costlier litigation to prove well‑known status after the fact. If you pursued well‑known recognition prematurely, you may have spent significant resources on evidence that was not yet strong enough. The remedy in either case is to supplement: add class registrations where gaps exist, or begin building the evidence base for well‑known recognition once UAE market presence matures.
In international IP terminology, a well‑known mark is recognised among the relevant sector of the public (e.g., professionals in a specific industry). A famous mark enjoys recognition among the general public at large. UAE law follows the Paris Convention standard and refers to “well‑known” marks, but the broader the recognition, the stronger the claim, particularly for cross‑class or dilution arguments.
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Registered vs Well‑known Trademark UAE, Which Gives Stronger Protection and When to Pursue Each

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