[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to oppose a trademark application in UAE

Our Expert in United Arab Emirates

How to File a Trademark Opposition in the UAE (step‑by‑step, 2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

If you have discovered a trademark application in the UAE Trademark Journal that conflicts with your brand, you need to know how to oppose a trademark application in UAE, and you need to act fast. The UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism (MOET) allows any interested party to file a formal opposition within 30 calendar days from the date the application is published in the Trademark Journal. This guide sets out every procedural step, the documents you must prepare, the costs involved, and the key deadlines that govern the trademark opposition procedure in the UAE in 2026.

It also addresses the practical impact of the UAE’s adoption of the 13th Edition of the Nice Classification, effective 27 January 2026, which has changed class allocations for certain goods and services and directly affects how opponents frame their evidence and grounds.

Overview of the Trademark Opposition Procedure in the UAE

A trademark opposition is the formal mechanism by which a third party challenges a pending trademark application after it has been accepted by MOET and published in the UAE Trademark Journal, but before registration is finalised. The purpose is to prevent the registration of marks that are identical or confusingly similar to existing rights, that are deceptive, or that have been filed in bad faith.

The opposition window is strict: 30 calendar days from the date of publication. Once this window closes, the applicant’s mark proceeds to registration, and the opponent’s only remaining remedies are post-registration cancellation actions or court proceedings, both of which are more costly and time-consuming. The opposition period of 30 days is therefore the single most important deadline in the entire process.

MOET administers the opposition through its online services portal, where it lists the process under the service name “Trademark Objection Request”. All filings, fee payments, and document uploads are handled through this portal. Since 27 January 2026, all new trademark applications, and by extension, all oppositions referencing those applications, must align with the reclassified goods and services under Nice 13. Industry observers expect this to generate a significant number of class-mapping disputes throughout the year, particularly where goods such as eyewear have moved between classes.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Filing an Opposition

Who may file

Any natural or legal person with a legitimate interest may file an opposition against a published UAE trademark application. This includes UAE-based companies, foreign corporations, individual brand owners, and in some circumstances, licensees who can demonstrate a commercial interest in preventing registration. There is no requirement for the opponent to hold a UAE trademark registration, prior use of an unregistered mark or ownership of a registration in another jurisdiction can establish standing.

Foreign opponents may file but must appoint a local trademark agent and provide a Power of Attorney (POA) that is typically notarized in the country of origin and then legalized or apostilled for use in the UAE. Failure to provide a properly legalized POA is one of the most common reasons oppositions are rejected on procedural grounds.

Common grounds for opposition

The trademark opposition procedure in the UAE generally relies on one or more of the following grounds:

  • Prior use. The opponent can demonstrate earlier commercial use of an identical or similar mark in the UAE or internationally. The prior use doctrine is well-established in UAE trademark law and requires dated documentary evidence of trade.
  • Earlier registration. The opponent holds a registered trademark in the UAE or a relevant foreign jurisdiction that predates the contested application.
  • Likelihood of confusion. The contested mark is sufficiently similar in appearance, sound, or meaning to the opponent’s mark that consumers would likely be confused.
  • Well-known mark protection. The opponent’s mark qualifies as well-known under UAE law, entitling it to protection even without local registration.
  • Bad faith. The application was filed with knowledge of the opponent’s prior rights and without legitimate commercial purpose.
  • Deceptiveness or public order. The mark is misleading or contrary to public morals.

How to Oppose a Trademark Application in UAE: Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The following numbered steps walk through the complete trademark opposition procedure in the UAE, from monitoring to final decision. Each step identifies who is responsible and how long it typically takes.

Step 1: Monitor the MOET Trademark Journal and capture the publication date

Check the MOET Trademark Journal regularly for newly published applications. The publication date is day 0 of your 30-day opposition window. Take a screenshot or download the official gazette entry showing the application number, applicant name, mark representation, and the classes and goods or services claimed. This screenshot forms part of your evidence bundle. Set an internal calendar alert for day 20 at the latest, leaving fewer than 10 days creates unacceptable risk of missing the deadline.

Step 2: Conduct a preliminary clearance and class-mapping check under Nice 13

Before drafting the opposition, verify that the contested application’s goods and services are correctly identified under the 13th Edition of the Nice Classification, which the UAE adopted effective 27 January 2026. Cross-reference the applicant’s claimed classes against your own rights. Some goods have been reclassified, for example, eyewear such as spectacles and sunglasses moved from Class 9 to Class 10. If your prior use or registration covers items that have been reclassified, you must update your evidence mapping accordingly. This step typically takes 1–3 days depending on portfolio complexity.

Step 3: Draft the Opposition Statement

The opposition statement is the core pleading. It must be signed by the opponent or their authorised counsel and should contain:

  • Identity of the opponent, full legal name, address, and trade licence or incorporation details.
  • Contested application details, application number, publication date, applicant name, mark representation, and claimed classes.
  • Grounds for opposition, a clear statement of each ground relied upon (prior use, likelihood of confusion, well-known mark, bad faith, etc.), with reference to the specific goods or services at issue.
  • Evidence list, an index of all supporting documents attached, with brief descriptions.
  • Relief sought, a formal request that MOET refuse the application in whole or in part.

If the opponent is a foreign entity, the POA must be prepared and legalized at this stage. Depending on the country of origin, legalization may require notarization, consular attestation, or an apostille under the Hague Convention. Drafting typically takes 2–7 days, depending on complexity and the number of grounds raised.

Step 4: Compile the evidence bundle

Evidence wins oppositions. Organise your supporting documents by category, ensuring each item is clearly dated and its provenance is apparent. Priority evidence types include:

  • Dated invoices and sales receipts showing commercial transactions under the mark in the UAE or internationally.
  • Shipping and customs documents proving importation of branded goods into the UAE.
  • Marketing and advertising materials, website screenshots (with URL and date visible), social media posts, print advertisements, brochures, and exhibition materials.
  • Packaging and label samples with date metadata or linked to distribution invoices.
  • Distributor and licensing agreements referencing the mark.
  • Witness statements or affidavits from employees, distributors, or industry contacts who can attest to the mark’s use, reputation, or the opponent’s prior rights.
  • Certified copies of earlier trademark registrations in the UAE or foreign jurisdictions, including renewal history.

Allow 3–14 days for evidence compilation. Where documents are in a language other than Arabic, certified translations are required.

Step 5: File the opposition via the MOET portal and pay fees

Access the MOET online services portal and select the “Trademark Objection Request” service. Log in using your UAE Pass or agent credentials, complete the required fields, upload the opposition statement and evidence bundle, and pay the applicable filing fee. Confirm submission and download the filing receipt, which records the date of filing and a reference number. Retain this receipt, it is your proof that the opposition was filed within the 30-day window.

While MOET forwards the opposition notice to the applicant, it is good practice to independently notify the applicant or their agent that an opposition has been filed. This can help facilitate early settlement discussions.

Step 6: Case management, MOET review and applicant response

After filing, MOET forwards the opposition to the applicant. Industry practice notes indicate that MOET typically forwards the notice within approximately 15 days. The applicant then has an opportunity to file a counter-statement and submit evidence in defence. During this phase, the parties may exchange further evidence. MOET may schedule a hearing or decide the matter on the written submissions. Settlement remains possible at any stage. This phase typically spans 2–6 months, though complex cases can take longer.

Step 7: Receive the decision and consider post-decision steps

MOET issues a written decision either upholding the opposition (refusing the application in whole or in part) or dismissing it. Either party may appeal an unfavourable decision to the competent UAE courts. A trademark appeal in the UAE typically adds 3–12 months or more depending on the court’s docket and the complexity of the case.

Trademark opposition timeline table

Step Who does it Typical duration
Capture publication date and calculate deadline (day 0) Opponent / IP team Immediate (same day as publication)
Conduct class-mapping check under Nice 13 Opponent / IP counsel 1–3 days
Draft opposition statement and prepare POA Counsel / opponent 2–7 days
Compile evidence bundle (invoices, ads, witness statements) Opponent 3–14 days
File opposition via MOET portal and pay fees Opponent / counsel Same day, obtain receipt
MOET forwards notice to applicant; applicant files reply MOET / applicant ~15 days (forwarding); 15–30 days (reply, varies)
Evidence exchange and MOET review Parties / MOET 2–6 months (typical)
Decision issued by MOET MOET 1–6 months from filing (cases vary)
Appeal to competent courts (if any) Parties / courts Additional 3–12 months+

Documents Needed for a Trademark Opposition in the UAE

The following table lists every document typically required or strongly recommended when filing an opposition. Opponents should treat this as a checklist and ensure all items are prepared, translated (where necessary), and legalized before the filing deadline.

Document Notes (issuer / format / validity)
MOET Trademark Journal publication screenshot Downloaded or captured from the MOET Trademark Journal. Must show publication date, application number, mark representation, and claimed classes.
Opposition Statement (signed) Signed by opponent or authorised counsel. Includes grounds, contested application details, evidence index, and relief sought.
Power of Attorney (POA) Signed by the opponent. Foreign POAs typically require notarization and legalization or apostille. Check MOET’s current attestation requirements before filing.
Identity documents of opponent Passport or national ID for individuals; trade licence or certificate of incorporation for companies. Certified copies acceptable.
Evidence of prior use Dated invoices, shipping documents, customs filings, sales receipts, distributor agreements. All items must be clearly dated and show origin.
Marketing and advertising evidence Website screenshots (with URL and date), social media posts, print ads, brochures, exhibition photos. Include archived copies where possible.
Packaging and label samples Photographs with date metadata, or linked to invoices confirming distribution date.
Witness statement or affidavit Signed statement from a person with direct knowledge of the mark’s use, reputation, or the opponent’s rights. Should be notarized.
Earlier trademark registration certificates Certified copies of UAE or foreign registrations, including renewal history and any recorded licence agreements.
Trade licence and business documents Current trade licence, tax registration, or financial documents where relevant to establishing use or commercial reputation.

Evidence strategy: what is persuasive

MOET examiners and, on appeal, UAE courts place significant weight on evidence for opposition that demonstrates continuous, dated commercial activity. Undated photographs, generic marketing materials without territorial context, or unsigned witness statements carry little weight. The strongest evidence bundles combine financial records (invoices, customs declarations) with dated public-facing materials (advertisements, packaging) and corroborating third-party testimony. Where the opposition is based on the prior use doctrine, evidence must clearly pre-date the contested application’s filing date and show use within the UAE or, for well-known marks, use sufficient to establish reputation in the UAE market.

Trademark Opposition Timeline and Key Deadlines

The critical deadline is unambiguous: an opposition must be filed within 30 calendar days from the date of publication in the MOET Trademark Journal. The publication date counts as day 0. Day 30 is the final day on which the MOET portal will accept a filing. If day 30 falls on a weekend (Friday–Saturday in the UAE) or a public holiday, the likely practical effect is that the deadline does not automatically extend, opponents should confirm the applicable counting rules with MOET or local counsel and file well in advance.

As a practical recommendation, aim to file no later than day 20. This allows a buffer for portal outages, document-upload issues, or last-minute legalization delays. Waiting until day 29 creates unacceptable risk.

If the 30-day opposition period has already expired, the mark will proceed to registration. At that point, the only available remedies are post-registration cancellation actions (for example, on grounds of non-use or non-entitlement) or court proceedings, both substantially more expensive and time-consuming. If you are approaching or past the deadline, consult qualified counsel immediately to assess alternative strategies.

Opposition Filing Fees in the UAE, Costs Table (Indicative)

The table below sets out the typical cost categories associated with filing a trademark opposition in the UAE. Official MOET fees are subject to change; confirm the current schedule on the MOET Trademark Objection Request page before filing. All counsel and third-party fees are indicative market ranges and will vary depending on case complexity.

Cost item Typical amount (AED) / Notes
MOET opposition filing fee Confirm on MOET portal at time of filing, typically a modest government fee
Government service / processing fee (portal) Variable, check MOET schedule
Local counsel drafting and filing fee AED 5,000 – AED 30,000+ (depends on complexity and evidence volume)
Translation / notarization / legalization AED 200 – AED 3,000+ (depends on number of documents and country of origin)
Evidence collection (forensic / archive costs) AED 500 – AED 5,000+ (depends on third-party providers)
Hearing attendance and witness preparation AED 2,000 – AED 15,000+
Appeal costs (court filing fee + counsel) Additional, varies widely depending on court and case

All figures above are indicative and reflect market conditions as of mid-2026. The MOET official fee schedule should be verified directly before filing, as government fees are periodically revised.

What Changes in 2026: Nice Reclassification and How to Oppose a Trademark Application in UAE Under Nice 13

The 13th Edition of the Nice Classification took effect internationally on 1 January 2026. The UAE formally adopted it for all new trademark applications filed on or after 27 January 2026. This adoption was confirmed through MOET’s implementation guidance and widely reported by industry observers.

For opponents, Nice 13 has three immediate practical effects:

  • Re-check class allocations. The contested application may claim goods or services that have been reclassified. For example, eyewear (spectacles, sunglasses, contact lenses) moved from Class 9 to Class 10. If your earlier rights cover reclassified items, you must ensure your opposition statement references the correct current class.
  • Update evidence mapping. Where your evidence of prior use or reputation relates to goods or services that have changed classes, the evidence index must clearly map old-class use to the new-class equivalent to avoid examiner confusion.
  • Adjust opposition grounds. If the applicant’s specification of goods spans classes that have been split or merged, your grounds for opposition and likelihood-of-confusion analysis must reflect the updated class structure.

A short practical checklist: run a Nice 13 audit of both the contested application and your own portfolio; update your evidence index to reflect any reclassified goods or services; and revise the wording of your opposition statement to reference the correct 2026 class numbers.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Missing the 30-day deadline. This is the most damaging and most preventable error. Monitor the MOET Trademark Journal daily or subscribe to a commercial watch service. Set internal alerts at day 0, day 10, and day 20.
  • Poorly organised evidence with no dates or provenance. Undated or unattributed documents are given little weight. Use invoices with dates and transaction references, customs records with official stamps, and archived web screenshots captured through the Wayback Machine or similar services.
  • Incorrect class comparison under Nice 13. Failing to account for reclassified goods can result in the opposition being directed at the wrong class or missing overlapping items entirely. Run a goods-and-services mapping audit before drafting.
  • Failing to legalize the POA for foreign filers. A foreign opponent whose POA is not properly notarized and legalized (or apostilled) risks having the opposition rejected on procedural grounds before MOET even considers the merits. Begin the legalization process as early as possible, it can take 1–3 weeks depending on the jurisdiction.
  • Filing without professional advice. While the MOET portal is accessible, the substantive legal analysis, identifying grounds, framing evidence, and anticipating the applicant’s counter-arguments, benefits significantly from experienced counsel.

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. Ministry of Economy & Tourism (MOET), Trademark Objection Request
  2. MOET, Responding to an Objection Against Trademark Registration
  3. WIPO, Thirteenth Edition of the Nice Classification (Notice)
  4. Abou Naja, UAE Adopts 13th Edition of Nice Classification
  5. Tamimi & Co., The Prior Use Doctrine in UAE Trademark Law
  6. Lexology, Navigating New Nice Classifications and Trade Mark Protection in the UAE
  7. CWB, UAE Adopts 13th Edition Nice Classification

FAQs

How long is the opposition period for a published UAE trademark?
The opposition period is 30 calendar days from the date the trademark application is published in the MOET Trademark Journal. The publication date is counted as day 0. This deadline is strictly enforced, once it passes, the application proceeds to registration and opposition is no longer available.
You file a written opposition through the MOET online services portal, using the service listed as “Trademark Objection Request.” You must create an account or log in, complete the required fields identifying both yourself and the contested application, upload a signed opposition statement with supporting evidence, and pay the applicable filing fee. If you are a foreign party, you must also submit a legalized Power of Attorney appointing a UAE-based agent. The portal generates a filing receipt confirming the date of submission.
At minimum, you need the MOET publication screenshot, a signed opposition statement, a POA (legalized if you are a foreign filer), identity documents, and evidence of your prior rights. The most persuasive evidence includes dated invoices showing trade in the UAE, customs and shipping documents, marketing materials with dates and territorial context, and witness statements or affidavits from individuals with direct knowledge of the mark’s use. For full details, see the required documents table above.
From filing to a first-instance decision by MOET, the trademark opposition timeline is typically 3–12 months, depending on case complexity and whether the matter proceeds to a hearing or is decided on written submissions. If appealed to the UAE courts, an additional 3–12 months or more should be anticipated. Total costs, including counsel fees, typically range from AED 5,000 for straightforward matters to AED 30,000 or more for complex, multi-class oppositions. Court appeals add further costs that vary widely.
Yes. Foreign companies and individuals may file oppositions, but they must appoint a local trademark agent and submit a Power of Attorney that has been notarized in the country of origin and legalized or apostilled for use in the UAE. The legalization process can take 1–3 weeks, so foreign opponents should begin preparing the POA as soon as a conflicting application is identified. Engaging UAE trademark lawyers early is strongly recommended.
Once the 30-day window closes, the trademark application proceeds to registration and can no longer be opposed. Your remaining options are post-registration cancellation actions, for example, seeking cancellation on grounds of non-use or non-entitlement, or initiating court proceedings for trademark infringement or bad faith. Both alternatives are more costly and time-consuming than a timely opposition. If you have just missed the deadline, consult qualified IP counsel immediately to evaluate which alternative remedies may be available in your specific circumstances.
Ideally, as soon as you identify a conflicting application. While the MOET portal is designed for online filing, the substantive legal work, identifying viable grounds, framing evidence persuasively, anticipating counter-arguments, and navigating Nice 13 reclassifications, requires specialist expertise. Engaging counsel early maximises the time available for evidence collection, POA legalization, and strategic assessment. For foreign opponents, local counsel is effectively mandatory given the POA and agent requirements.
how to report a data breach in japan online
By Global Law Experts

posted 33 minutes ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

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.

About Us

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 App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

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.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to File a Trademark Opposition in the UAE (step‑by‑step, 2026)

Send welcome message

Custom Message