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Bulgaria trademark law changes 2026

Bulgaria Trademark Law Changes 2026, What Businesses and Brand Owners Must Do After the March 6 Amendments

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The Bulgaria trademark law changes 2026 represent the most significant overhaul of the country’s intellectual-property framework in over a decade. On 6 March 2026 the National Assembly enacted sweeping amendments to the Trade Marks and Geographical Indications Act (TMGIA), introducing new proof-of-use requirements, revised opposition procedures and updated administrative formalities at the Bulgarian Patent Office (BPO). Those substantive reforms are followed by updated trademark registration fees that took effect on 26 April 2026, Bulgaria’s removal from the United States Trade Representative (USTR) IP watch list on 1 May 2026, and the country’s accession to the Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement, entering into force on 30 June 2026.

This guide breaks down every change, provides worked fee examples and timetables, and sets out a practical compliance checklist so that brand owners, IP managers and in-house counsel can protect their portfolios without delay.

Executive Summary, What Changed and What to Do Now

Businesses that hold or are applying for trademark rights in Bulgaria face four milestone dates in 2026. Each triggers specific compliance actions. The six most urgent steps are listed below, followed by a timeline table that anchors every deadline.

Top 6 immediate actions:

  • Audit pending applications. Review every Bulgarian trademark application filed before 6 March 2026 to determine whether the new procedural rules, including proof-of-use provisions, apply to your matter.
  • Recalculate filing and renewal budgets. The revised fee schedule effective 26 April 2026 changes per-class costs, opposition fees and recordal charges. Update docketing and finance systems accordingly.
  • Prepare proof-of-use evidence. The amended TMGIA now allows defendants to request proof of genuine use in both opposition and infringement proceedings. Assemble sales data, advertising samples and distribution records for every registered mark.
  • Update customs and border-enforcement filings. Ensure that Customs Agency applications for action reference current registration details and reflect any amendments to goods-and-services classifications.
  • Reassess international filing strategy. Bulgaria’s USTR removal and Geneva Act accession create new opportunities, and obligations, for cross-border portfolio management.
  • Engage local counsel. The interaction between transitional provisions, pending oppositions and new fee calculations is complex. Early legal advice reduces the risk of missed deadlines and unnecessary costs.

Key Dates at a Glance

Date Event Practical Effect for Rights-Holders
6 March 2026 Amendments to the TMGIA enacted by the National Assembly New substantive and procedural rules enter force; proof-of-use provisions clarified; scope-of-protection rules updated
26 April 2026 Revised trademark fee schedule takes effect (BPO bulletin) Filing, per-class, opposition, recordal and renewal fees change; budgets and docketing must be adjusted
1 May 2026 Bulgaria removed from the USTR Special 301 IP watch list Reduced trade-policy risk; improved enforcement reputation; potential benefits for export-oriented businesses
30 June 2026 Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement enters into force with respect to Bulgaria (WIPO) New international filing channel for geographical indications; alignment with EU GI protection standards

The March 6, 2026 Amendments, Law, Scope and Headline Changes

On 6 March 2026 the Bulgarian National Assembly conclusively adopted amendments to the Trade Marks and Geographical Indications Act, as confirmed by the Ministry of Economy and Industry and reported by the Bulgarian Telegraph Agency (BTA). The reforms align Bulgaria’s trademark legislation more closely with the EU Trade Marks Directive (2015/2436) and address long-standing gaps in enforcement and administrative procedure.

Administrative Changes at the Bulgarian Patent Office

The BPO is the competent authority for trademark registration in Bulgaria. Under the 2026 amendments, several administrative processes have been updated:

  • Updated filing forms. The BPO has introduced revised application forms that reflect new classification requirements and additional declarations, including a statement on intended genuine use where applicable.
  • Electronic filing enhancements. The amendments encourage digital submissions and streamline the examination workflow, with the BPO expected to publish updated e-filing guidance on its official portal.
  • Publication and notification procedures. Official publications in the BPO bulletin now follow revised formatting, and applicants receive electronic notifications at each procedural stage.

Substantive Changes, Proof of Use, Scope of Protection and Transit Rules

The most consequential substantive changes introduced by the Bulgaria trademark law changes 2026 fall into three categories:

Area Old Rule New Rule (TMGIA 2026) Practical Impact
Proof of genuine use Proof of use could be raised in cancellation proceedings but was not explicitly available as a defence in opposition or infringement actions Defendants and opponents may now formally request proof that the earlier mark has been put to genuine use within the five years preceding the action Rights-holders must maintain contemporaneous evidence of use; “paper marks” face cancellation or weakened enforcement positions
Scope of protection Protection assessed broadly; limited jurisprudence on non-traditional marks Clearer criteria for assessing likelihood of confusion, including consideration of reputation, distinctiveness and economic links between goods and services In-house counsel should revisit infringement risk assessments and update watch-service parameters
Goods in transit / mail shipments Limited power to intercept counterfeit goods transiting through Bulgaria Rights-holders can act against goods in transit or small consignments sent by mail where those goods infringe a Bulgarian trademark Customs enforcement options expand; brand owners should update applications for action with the Bulgarian Customs Agency

Industry observers expect the proof-of-use change to have the greatest practical effect. Trademark owners who have not used a registered mark for five or more years now face a meaningful risk that their rights will be challenged in both administrative and judicial proceedings.

Fee Changes Effective 26 April 2026, What Changed and Worked Examples

Updated Bulgaria trademark fees 2026 came into force on 26 April 2026, as published in the BPO fee bulletin. The revised schedule adjusts costs across the full lifecycle of a trademark, from initial filing through to renewal and recordal of assignments or licences.

Fee Comparison Table

Fee Type Previous Fee (BGN) New Fee, Effective 26 April 2026 (BGN)
National filing fee (one class) 520 570
Each additional class 150 170
Opposition fee 300 350
Recordal of assignment 200 230
Recordal of licence 200 230
Renewal fee (one class, 10-year term) 600 660
Each additional class on renewal 150 170

Note: Figures are expressed in Bulgarian lev (BGN). At an approximate exchange rate of BGN 1.96 = EUR 1, the new single-class filing fee is roughly EUR 291. Check the Bulgarian Patent Office bulletin for the authoritative fee schedule and any subsequent updates.

Worked Examples

Scenario A, Single-class new filing: A Bulgarian SME filing a word mark in one Nice class now pays BGN 570 (previously BGN 520), an increase of approximately 9.6 per cent.

Scenario B, Three-class new filing: An EU brand owner filing in three classes now pays BGN 570 + (2 × BGN 170) = BGN 910 (previously BGN 520 + (2 × BGN 150) = BGN 820), an increase of BGN 90 or roughly 11 per cent.

These increases are modest individually, but for portfolios with dozens of marks the cumulative budget impact is significant. IP managers should update their docketing systems to reflect the new fee amounts and ensure that standing payment instructions with local agents are amended before the next renewal or filing deadline.

Registration Process and Opposition Timeline After the Reforms

Trademark registration Bulgaria 2026 follows a multi-stage process that remains broadly familiar but now incorporates tighter procedural requirements and the new proof-of-use mechanism. The standard workflow is:

  1. Filing. Submit the application to the BPO (paper or electronic) with the revised form, specification of goods and services, and payment of the applicable filing fee.
  2. Formalities examination. The BPO checks for completeness, correct classification and payment. Deficiencies trigger a notice with a deadline for remedy.
  3. Substantive examination. The examiner assesses absolute grounds for refusal, descriptiveness, deceptiveness, public-policy conflicts and other prohibitions under the TMGIA.
  4. Publication. If no absolute grounds are found, the application is published in the BPO Official Bulletin for a three-month opposition period.
  5. Opposition window. Third parties may file an opposition within three months of publication. Under the 2026 amendments, the opponent can now also request the applicant (or the holder of the earlier mark relied upon) to prove genuine use.
  6. Decision and registration. If no opposition is filed or all oppositions are resolved, the BPO issues a decision to register, and the mark is entered in the register.
  7. Renewal. Registration is valid for ten years from the filing date and renewable for successive ten-year periods.

How Oppositions Are Affected

The trademark opposition Bulgaria framework has been materially strengthened. Key changes include:

  • Proof-of-use defence. An applicant facing an opposition based on an earlier registered mark may now request the opponent to demonstrate that the earlier mark has been genuinely used in Bulgaria during the five years preceding the publication date. If the opponent cannot do so, the opposition may be dismissed.
  • Evidence standards. The amendments clarify what constitutes sufficient evidence of genuine use, including invoices, advertising materials, packaging samples and market-survey data.
  • Procedural deadlines. The BPO has indicated that strict compliance with evidence-submission deadlines will be enforced, reducing the scope for extensions.

If you have pending applications, consider these actions:

  • Review goods-and-services specifications to ensure accuracy under the latest Nice Classification edition.
  • Compile proof-of-use evidence proactively, even before any challenge is raised.
  • Verify that all official-fee payments reflect the 26 April 2026 schedule.
  • Confirm that BPO correspondence addresses and agent authorisations are current.

Enforcement and Litigation, What Changes for Rights-Holders

The 2026 amendments to the TMGIA introduce practical changes that strengthen the hand of rights-holders while also creating new obligations. For infringement claims, the most significant development is the explicit statutory basis for requesting proof of genuine use in court proceedings.

Proof of Use in Infringement Suits

Under the amended law, a defendant accused of trademark infringement may request the claimant to prove that its registered mark has been put to genuine use within the five years preceding the date on which the action was brought. If the claimant cannot demonstrate such use, or show proper reasons for non-use, the court may dismiss the claim or limit relief. This aligns Bulgaria with the approach already adopted in many EU member states and under the EUTM Regulation.

The likely practical effect will be to compel trademark owners to maintain organised, date-stamped evidence of use at all times, rather than assembling it reactively once litigation begins.

Border Seizures and Customs Enforcement

The expanded transit and mail-shipment provisions described above give rights-holders new tools at the border. To take advantage of these provisions:

  • File or update an application for action with the Bulgarian Customs Agency, referencing current registration details and the expanded grounds available under the TMGIA 2026.
  • Provide product-identification guides to customs officials, including images of genuine products, known counterfeit variants and packaging details.
  • Establish a rapid-response protocol so that legal counsel can confirm seizures and initiate proceedings within the statutory deadlines.

Enforcement action checklist:

  • Preserve and organise all evidence of use (sales records, advertising, distribution agreements).
  • Update cease-and-desist letter templates to reference the amended TMGIA provisions.
  • Confirm that customs applications for action are current and reference the new legal grounds.
  • Brief litigation counsel on the proof-of-use defence and prepare rebuttal evidence in advance.

International Implications, USTR Removal and Geneva Act Accession

Two international developments in 2026 reshape Bulgaria’s position in the global IP landscape and create new considerations for the Bulgaria trademark law changes 2026 compliance strategy of multinational brand owners.

USTR Watch-List Removal, 1 May 2026

On 1 May 2026 the United States Trade Representative removed Bulgaria from its Special 301 IP watch list, recognising the legislative and enforcement reforms undertaken by the Bulgarian government. While the watch list is a US policy instrument and does not directly alter Bulgarian law, the removal carries practical significance:

  • Trade-policy signalling. US-headquartered companies and their counsel are more likely to view Bulgaria as a reliable enforcement jurisdiction, potentially increasing foreign direct investment and licensing activity.
  • Enforcement reputation. Industry observers expect the removal to ease bilateral customs cooperation and information-sharing between Bulgarian and US enforcement agencies.
  • Reduced compliance friction. Companies subject to global IP-risk assessments and board-level reporting can reclassify Bulgaria from a “monitored” to a “standard” jurisdiction.

Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement, 30 June 2026

Bulgaria’s accession to the Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement enters into force on 30 June 2026, according to WIPO. This creates an international registration system for geographical indications (GIs) and appellations of origin that complements the existing EU GI framework. Brand owners and producers of GI-protected products should:

  • Evaluate whether international registration via WIPO’s Lisbon system offers broader protection than relying solely on EU GI regulations.
  • Monitor WIPO publications for new international GI registrations that may conflict with existing trademarks in Bulgaria.
  • Coordinate with local counsel to align domestic GI strategies with the new international filing channel.

What to Do With EU and International Portfolios

For holders of EU trademarks (EUTMs) and international registrations under the Madrid Protocol, the 2026 reforms do not alter the fundamental relationship between EU-wide and national rights. However, the enhanced national enforcement tools and updated fee structure may make it advantageous to file parallel national applications in Bulgaria for strategically important marks, particularly where proof of use at the national level strengthens enforcement positions.

Practical Checklist, Immediate Actions for Businesses and Brand Owners

The following checklist organises compliance actions into time-bound milestones. Use it to coordinate between in-house teams, external counsel and local agents.

Within 30 Days

  • Review all pending Bulgarian trademark applications and confirm that filing fees have been paid at the new rates.
  • Update docketing and deadline-management systems to reflect the revised opposition timeline and fee schedule.
  • Circulate the amended TMGIA summary to relevant in-house stakeholders (legal, marketing, finance).

Within 60 Days

  • Prepare or update proof-of-use evidence bundles for every registered Bulgarian mark, prioritise marks older than five years.
  • File or amend customs applications for action with the Bulgarian Customs Agency.
  • Confirm that agent authorisations, correspondence addresses and power-of-attorney documents held by the BPO are current.

Within 90 Days

  • Conduct a portfolio-wide review to identify marks that may be vulnerable to non-use cancellation under the strengthened proof-of-use rules.
  • Update licensing and coexistence agreements to reference the amended TMGIA provisions.
  • Brief enforcement counsel on the new transit and mail-shipment interception powers.

Within 180 Days (by End of 2026)

  • Evaluate whether Geneva Act registration (effective 30 June 2026) is appropriate for any GI-protected products in your portfolio.
  • Reassess the balance between EUTM protection and national Bulgarian filings for core brands.
  • Schedule an annual portfolio review to maintain compliance with evolving BPO guidance and fee updates.

Documents to Prepare for Oppositions or Litigation

  • Certified copies of trademark registration certificates.
  • Evidence of genuine use: invoices, sales reports, advertising samples, packaging, distribution agreements (covering at least the preceding five-year period).
  • Power of attorney in favour of local counsel (notarised and apostilled if executed abroad).
  • Product-identification guide for customs enforcement (photographs, known counterfeits, technical specifications).

Costs and Resource Planning, Sample Budgets and Scenarios

The following order-of-magnitude estimates help IP managers budget for common scenarios under the revised Bulgaria trademark fees 2026 schedule. All figures are in BGN and exclude professional fees unless stated.

Scenario Official Fees (BGN) Estimated Professional Fees (BGN) Total Estimate (BGN)
A, Single-class national filing (word mark) 570 500–900 1,070–1,470
B, Three-class national filing (word + device mark) 910 800–1,400 1,710–2,310
C, Enforcement action (pre-litigation cease-and-desist through first-instance infringement proceedings) 350–700 (court fees vary) 3,000–8,000 3,350–8,700

Professional-fee ranges are indicative and vary by firm and complexity. For precise quotations, consult a qualified Bulgarian IP lawyer.

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

The Bulgaria trademark law changes 2026 demand prompt action from every business with trademark interests in the country. The three highest-priority steps are: (1) recalculate budgets against the 26 April 2026 fee schedule; (2) assemble proof-of-use evidence for all marks registered more than five years ago; and (3) update customs and enforcement filings to leverage the expanded border-seizure powers. Early engagement with experienced Bulgarian IP counsel is the most effective way to navigate the transitional provisions, avoid missed deadlines and position your portfolio for the opportunities created by the USTR removal and Geneva Act accession.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. CMS Legal Update, Bulgaria Introduces Major Updates to Trade Mark Law
  2. Ministry of Economy and Industry, Press Release on TMGIA Amendments
  3. Bulgarian Patent Office (BPO), National Trademark Pages and Fee Bulletin
  4. WIPO, Bulgaria Joins the Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement
  5. BTA (Bulgarian Telegraph Agency), Trademarks and Geographical Indications Act Amended
  6. ZMP, New Law on Trademarks in Bulgaria
  7. KTpatent, Bulgarian Trademark Guide

FAQs

Q1: What are the key changes introduced by the March 6, 2026 amendments to the TMGIA?
The amendments introduce an explicit proof-of-use requirement in opposition and infringement proceedings, broaden the scope for intercepting counterfeit goods in transit and mail shipments, clarify the criteria for assessing likelihood of confusion, and update administrative procedures at the Bulgarian Patent Office.
Yes. A revised fee schedule took effect on 26 April 2026. For example, the single-class national filing fee increased from BGN 520 to BGN 570, and the opposition fee rose from BGN 300 to BGN 350. The full schedule is published in the BPO fee bulletin.
The opposition window remains three months from publication. However, applicants may now request the opponent to prove genuine use of the earlier mark relied upon. If the opponent cannot demonstrate use within the preceding five years, the opposition may be dismissed.
Reassess Bulgaria’s risk classification in global IP audits, explore enhanced customs cooperation opportunities, and consider filing parallel national marks for strategically important brands to take advantage of strengthened enforcement tools.
Yes. The amended TMGIA allows a defendant in an infringement suit to request the claimant to demonstrate genuine use of its registered mark during the five years preceding the action. Failure to prove use may result in dismissal or limitation of the claim.
Bulgaria’s accession to the Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement, entering into force on 30 June 2026 according to WIPO, creates a new international registration channel for GIs and appellations of origin. This complements EU GI protection and enables Bulgarian producers to seek protection in other Geneva Act contracting parties through a single WIPO filing.
The BPO publishes guidance, fee bulletins and contact details on its official website. For specific procedural queries about pending applications or new filings, consult the BPO’s dedicated FAQ and contact pages or engage a qualified Bulgarian IP lawyer.
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Bulgaria Trademark Law Changes 2026, What Businesses and Brand Owners Must Do After the March 6 Amendments

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