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Registered vs Unregistered Trademark Malaysia

Registered vs Unregistered Trademarks in Malaysia, When to Register, Enforce or Rely on Passing‑off (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Every business owner in Malaysia eventually faces the registered vs unregistered trademark Malaysia decision: file with MyIPO under the Trademarks Act 2019 (Act 815) and pay the official fees, or rely on common‑law passing‑off rights that cost nothing upfront but demand heavy evidence if a dispute arises. The choice matters more in 2026 than it did even two years ago, because MyIPO fee concessions introduced in September 2025 have narrowed the cost gap, while Act 815’s clearer statutory remedies have widened the enforcement gap.

This guide delivers the side‑by‑side comparison, cost tables, and decision framework you need to choose the right path, registration vs passing off, and identifies the specific triggers that mean it is time to engage a Malaysian trademark lawyer.

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

What registration gives you

A registered trademark under Act 815 is a sign, word, logo, colour, shape, sound or combination, entered on the Malaysian Register of Trademarks maintained by MyIPO. Registration confers a bundle of rights that unregistered marks simply cannot match:

  • Statutory presumption of validity. Once registered, the mark is presumed valid and owned by the registrant. In any infringement action, the burden shifts to the defendant to challenge the registration rather than requiring the plaintiff to prove it from scratch.
  • Nationwide priority from the filing date. The registration covers the whole of Malaysia, regardless of where you actually trade. A passing‑off claim, by contrast, is limited to geographic areas where goodwill is proven.
  • Exclusive right to use the mark in relation to the registered goods or services. Third‑party use of an identical or confusingly similar mark constitutes statutory infringement under Act 815, no need to prove customer confusion one transaction at a time.
  • Border enforcement. Registered owners can record marks with Malaysian Customs, enabling seizure of counterfeit goods at the point of import.
  • Assignability and licensing. A registration is a clean, documentable asset that can be licensed, assigned or used as collateral, critical for investor due diligence and franchise models.

Who should register

Registration is the default recommendation for any brand owner planning national distribution, retail presence, e‑commerce sales across Malaysia, or export. It is also essential when raising investment, venture capital and private equity term sheets routinely require proof of IP ownership. If your annual sales turnover is below RM500,000, you can take advantage of MyIPO’s reduced registration fee, making registration even more cost‑effective for early‑stage businesses. Businesses that compete in crowded product categories or face known copycats should register immediately and consider defensive filings in adjacent Nice classes.

Option B, Unregistered Marks and Passing‑Off: What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Legal foundation, the three elements of passing‑off

Malaysia’s common law, inherited from the English tradition, recognises the tort of passing off. To succeed, a claimant must prove three elements, sometimes called the “classic trinity”:

  • Goodwill. The claimant must show that the mark has acquired goodwill among a relevant segment of the Malaysian public. Goodwill is typically proven through sales volume, advertising expenditure, duration of use, and consumer recognition.
  • Misrepresentation. The defendant’s use of an identical or similar mark must cause, or be likely to cause, the public to believe its goods or services originate from, or are associated with, the claimant.
  • Damage. The misrepresentation must result in actual or likely damage to the claimant’s goodwill, lost sales, brand dilution, or loss of licensing opportunity.

All three elements must be established on the balance of probabilities. Failure on any one defeats the claim entirely.

Who might rely on passing‑off

A passing‑off strategy may be adequate, temporarily, for a sole trader testing a concept in a single locality with no significant competitors, or an overseas brand with demonstrable international reputation exploring Malaysia before committing to registration. It can also serve as a stopgap if you discover infringement before your registration application is granted. However, relying on unregistered rights is a calculated risk: evidence degrades, competitors can file first, and litigation costs dwarf the price of registration. You can use the ™ symbol without registering, but the ® symbol is reserved for registered marks.

Registered vs Unregistered Trademark Malaysia: Side‑by‑Side Comparison

The comparison table below is the centrepiece of this guide. It maps every decision dimension that matters when choosing between registration and passing off in Malaysia.

Dimension Registered Trademark (MyIPO) Unregistered Mark (Passing‑Off)
Eligibility Any sign capable of being represented graphically and distinguishing goods/services (Act 815) Any mark with demonstrable goodwill among the Malaysian public
Filing cost per class RM650–RM950 registration fee per class (concession for turnover < RM500k); plus agent fees No filing fee; costs arise only at enforcement (evidence gathering, litigation)
Time to enforceable rights Filing date priority; registration typically 12–18 months Immediate if goodwill already exists; but proving it in court takes months or years
Geographic reach Nationwide, entire Malaysia from filing date Limited to localities where goodwill is proven
Presumptions / evidence burden Statutory presumption of validity and ownership; easier interlocutory relief Must prove goodwill, misrepresentation and damage, higher evidentiary burden
Remedies available Injunctions, damages or account of profits, delivery up, statutory damages Injunctions, damages or account of profits, but higher proof threshold
Border enforcement Can record mark with Malaysian Customs for seizure of counterfeit imports Not available
Online platform takedowns Registration certificate accelerates takedown on Shopee, Lazada, Amazon Requires additional proof; platforms may reject without registration
Typical enforcement cost Lower, registration reduces preliminary hearing costs and discovery burden Higher, forensic evidence, market surveys, longer discovery
Key risk Invalidation if mark is descriptive or registered in bad faith Competitor files first; goodwill insufficient or not proven
Renewability Renewable every 10 years (Form TME1, RM1,000 fee) Persists as long as goodwill exists, but goodwill can evaporate
Assignability Freely assignable and licensable; registrable as a security interest Goodwill may transfer with business sale, but enforceability uncertain

Key takeaways from this comparison of registered vs unregistered trademarks in Malaysia:

  • Registration wins on enforceability, cost‑efficiency of enforcement, geographic reach, and border protection, every dimension that matters when a dispute actually arises.
  • Passing‑off wins only on upfront cost, and that advantage disappears the moment you need to enforce your rights.
  • The 2025 fee concession means businesses with turnover under RM500,000 can register for as little as RM650 per class, further eroding passing‑off’s cost advantage.

Dimension‑by‑Dimension Analysis

Cost and Fees: Trademark Registration Cost Malaysia

Cost is usually the first question, so the table below sets out the actual MyIPO fees alongside typical professional and enforcement cost ranges for both paths.

Cost item Registered (MyIPO) Unregistered (Passing‑Off)
MyIPO registration fee (per class) RM950 (standard); RM650 (applicants with turnover < RM500k) Nil
Agent / law firm filing fee (per class) RM1,000–RM4,000 (simple single‑class filing) Nil at filing stage
Clearance search RM500–RM1,500 Not applicable
10‑year renewal (Form TME1) RM1,000 Nil, but goodwill maintenance costs (marketing, ongoing use) are indirect
Enforcement (interlocutory injunction application) RM15,000–RM50,000 (estimate; simpler with registration certificate) RM30,000–RM100,000+ (estimate; evidence‑heavy preparation)
Full trial (passing‑off or infringement) RM50,000–RM200,000+ (estimate) RM80,000–RM300,000+ (estimate; higher due to evidence requirements)

The trademark registration fee Malaysia schedule was updated in September 2025, when MyIPO reduced the per‑class registration fee from RM950 to RM650 for applicants with annual sales turnover of less than RM500,000. That concession, reported by Skrine in its September 2025 alert, was designed to encourage small‑business filings. For a single‑class filing with a registered agent, total out‑of‑pocket cost (MyIPO fee plus professional fee) can be as low as RM1,650–RM4,650. By contrast, a single passing‑off enforcement action, even one that settles before trial, can easily exceed RM30,000 in legal fees and evidence preparation costs. Registration is therefore the cheaper option over any 10‑year protection horizon.

Timing and Procedural Steps

The typical registration journey through MyIPO follows these steps:

  • Clearance search. A few working days; confirms no conflicting prior marks on the Register.
  • Filing. Application via Form TMA1 (or through a registered trademark agent using the MyIPO online system). Filing date establishes priority.
  • Examination. MyIPO examines for absolute and relative grounds of refusal. If objections arise, the applicant can respond.
  • Advertisement. The accepted mark is published in the MyIPO journal for opposition purposes.
  • Opposition period. Third parties may file a notice of opposition.
  • Registration. If no opposition, or opposition is resolved in the applicant’s favour, the mark proceeds to registration.

End‑to‑end, the process typically takes 12–18 months when there is no opposition. Using a registered trademark agent familiar with MyIPO trademark forms and selecting goods and services descriptions from MyIPO’s pre‑approved list can reduce examination queries and speed up the process.

Enforceability and Remedies

This dimension is where the gap between registered and unregistered trademarks in Malaysia is widest. A registered owner suing for infringement under Act 815 needs to prove that the defendant used an identical or confusingly similar sign in the course of trade in relation to identical or similar goods or services. The registration certificate itself satisfies questions of validity and ownership, substantially reducing the evidentiary load.

An unregistered mark owner suing in passing off must prove all three elements of the classic trinity, goodwill, misrepresentation, and damage, from scratch. Malaysian courts require cogent evidence of actual goodwill within Malaysia, not merely reputation abroad. For interlocutory injunctions, courts applying the balance‑of‑convenience test routinely regard a registration certificate as strong prima facie evidence of right, making injunctive relief significantly easier for registered owners. Industry observers expect this advantage to grow as courts increasingly rely on the statutory framework of Act 815 over older common‑law precedents.

Border enforcement is exclusively available to registered owners, who can record their marks with Malaysian Customs. E‑commerce platform takedowns on Shopee, Lazada, and similar marketplaces are also faster and more reliable when supported by a registration certificate.

Evidence and Practical Enforcement Costs

If you rely on passing off, evidence preservation is your most important ongoing obligation. Courts will expect documentary proof of goodwill, and anecdotal testimony alone is rarely sufficient. A practical evidence checklist includes:

  • Sales records broken down by product/SKU and time period
  • Dated invoices and delivery orders showing the mark in use
  • Marketing expenditure records (print, digital, social media) with campaign dates
  • Screenshots of online listings, social media pages, and website analytics, all with timestamps
  • Distributor and retailer agreements referencing the mark
  • Customer testimonials or survey evidence demonstrating recognition

Gathering and preserving this evidence is an ongoing cost that many businesses underestimate. Missing a single year of records can create a gap that undermines a goodwill claim. By contrast, a registration certificate, a single document, replaces most of this evidentiary burden in an infringement action. For businesses that want to protect your IP across borders, registration provides a documentable, portable asset that passing‑off cannot replicate.

Liability, Countersuits and Bad Faith

Relying on unregistered rights carries a specific strategic risk: a competitor can file to register the same or a similar mark before you do. Once they hold a registration, you become the party that must challenge their right, an expensive process involving invalidation or cancellation proceedings. The competitor may also countersue for threats of infringement or trade libel if your enforcement attempts are poorly founded.

Conversely, registering a mark in bad faith, for example, filing a mark you know belongs to another trader with the intent to extract a licence fee, exposes you to cancellation proceedings and potential costs orders. The lesson is straightforward: register early, register honestly, and use your mark genuinely.

Regulatory and Procedural Burden

Filing requires selecting the correct Nice classification, preparing a clear representation of the mark, and appointing a registered trademark agent if the applicant does not have a principal place of business in Malaysia. Foreign applicants must file through a Malaysian‑registered agent. The procedural burden is modest compared to patent or industrial design filing and is largely handled by the agent. Renewal requires filing Form TME1 and paying RM1,000 every 10 years, a minimal ongoing obligation.

What Changed in 2025–2026 for Registered vs Unregistered Trademarks in Malaysia

Two developments shift the cost‑benefit analysis toward registration in 2026. First, MyIPO reduced the per‑class registration fee from RM950 to RM650 for applicants with annual sales turnover below RM500,000, effective from September 2025. This concession, designed to encourage formalisation of IP among SMEs, cuts the government fee by roughly 32 per cent for qualifying businesses. Second, MyIPO’s continued expansion of online filing and processing tools has shortened examination timelines and reduced agent handling costs. The combined effect is that the marginal cost of registration, already modest, has decreased, while the enforcement advantages of registration remain as strong as ever under Act 815. For scaling brands, the calculation is now clear: register.

Consult our international intellectual property guide for multi‑jurisdiction filing strategies.

Decision Framework: When to Register vs When Passing‑Off May Suffice

Use the table below to match your business priority to the right trademark protection path in Malaysia.

If your priority is… Choose
National roll‑out, retail distribution, or e‑commerce across Malaysia Register, nationwide protection from filing date
Raising investment or entering a franchise model Register, investors and franchisees require proof of IP ownership
Competing in a crowded category or facing known copycats Register immediately and file defensive marks in adjacent classes
Annual turnover below RM500,000 with plans to scale Register, take advantage of the reduced RM650 per‑class fee
Export or cross‑border sales (ASEAN, global) Register domestically first, then extend via Madrid Protocol
Short‑term, low‑budget local market test with no competitors Unregistered, but document all use meticulously and file as soon as traction appears
Temporary bridge while MyIPO application is pending Unregistered (passing‑off) as interim protection until registration is granted

Choose registration when:

  • You plan to trade under the mark for more than 12 months
  • You need border enforcement or e‑commerce takedown capability
  • You are licensing the mark to third parties
  • You want to minimise future enforcement costs

Choose passing‑off (temporarily) when:

  • You are testing a concept for fewer than three months in a single locality
  • You have zero revenue and no budget, but start preserving evidence immediately
  • Your mark has not yet been finalised (rebranding in progress)

In almost every scenario where the business intends to operate beyond a minimal pilot, registration is the recommended default. The cost is modest; the protection is dramatically superior.

When to Engage a Trademark Lawyer

Not every trademark filing requires a lawyer, a straightforward single‑class application through a registered agent may suffice. However, specific situations demand professional legal advice immediately:

  • A competitor is copying or has filed your mark. You need an urgent clearance assessment, potential opposition or cancellation action, and likely an interlocutory injunction application.
  • Pre‑investment due diligence. Investors or acquirers are examining your IP portfolio and require clean title opinions.
  • Cross‑border expansion. Filing under the Madrid Protocol or coordinating multi‑jurisdiction strategy requires specialist IP counsel.
  • Opposition or cancellation proceedings. Whether attacking or defending, these are contested proceedings before the MyIPO Registrar or the courts.
  • Complex evidence gathering for a passing‑off claim. Market surveys, forensic evidence compilation, and witness preparation are lawyer‑led tasks.

A Malaysian trademark lawyer will typically handle clearance searches, filing, prosecution, oppositions, enforcement, and licensing. Browse the Malaysia lawyer directory to connect with a qualified trademark practitioner.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Parvathi Kandasamy at MESSRS K.SILADASS & PARTNERS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. MyIPO, Trademarks Act 2019 (Act 815)
  2. MyIPO, Trademark Forms and Fees
  3. MyIPO, Applying for a Trademark
  4. MyIPO, Managing Your Trademark
  5. Skrine, Trademark Registration Fee Reduced for Applicants (September 2025)
  6. Azmi & Associates, Registering a Trademark in Malaysia
  7. MahWengKwai & Associates, Trademark Protection in Malaysia
  8. World Trademark Review, Malaysia Country Guide

FAQs

Do I need to register my trademark in Malaysia or can I rely on passing‑off?
For most businesses, registration under Act 815 is strongly recommended. It provides nationwide protection, statutory presumptions of validity, and significantly lower enforcement costs. Passing‑off offers some protection for unregistered marks with proven goodwill, but the evidentiary burden is heavy and geographic scope is limited. Practical next step: order a clearance search from a MyIPO‑registered agent to confirm your mark is available.
You cannot sue for statutory trademark infringement without a registration. However, you can bring a passing‑off action in the High Court if you can prove goodwill, misrepresentation, and damage. The standard of proof is higher and litigation costs are typically greater than for registered infringement claims. Practical next step: consult a trademark lawyer to assess the strength of your passing‑off evidence before committing to litigation.
The MyIPO registration fee is RM950 per class at the standard rate, or RM650 per class for applicants with annual sales turnover below RM500,000 (concession effective September 2025). Professional agent fees for a simple single‑class filing typically range from RM1,000 to RM4,000. Renewal costs RM1,000 per class every 10 years (Form TME1). Practical next step: check the current MyIPO fee schedule and budget for at least one class filing plus agent fees.
A typical uncontested application takes 12–18 months from filing to registration. Examination, advertisement, and the opposition window account for most of this timeline. Using pre‑approved goods and services descriptions and a registered agent familiar with MyIPO’s application process can reduce delays. Practical next step: file early, your priority date is your filing date, and protection is retroactive to that date once registration is granted.
Copyright protects the artistic expression in a logo (the graphic design) but does not protect the mark as a source identifier for goods or services. A competitor can use a different design that is confusingly similar as a brand identifier, and copyright alone will not stop them. Trademark registration protects the function of the mark, distinguishing your goods from others. For maximum protection, register the logo as a trademark and ensure copyright subsists in the underlying artwork.
Yes, you can file for registration at any time, but the risk is that a competitor may have already registered the same or a similar mark. If that happens, you would need to pursue cancellation or invalidation proceedings, which are costly and uncertain. The safest approach is to document all evidence of use from day one and file for registration as early as possible, even if you are currently relying on common‑law rights. Practical next step: start a trademark evidence folder now, dated invoices, marketing materials, screenshots, and file your application within 90 days.
Foreign companies must appoint a Malaysian‑registered trademark agent to file and maintain a registration. Well‑known foreign marks may receive protection even without local registration under Act 815’s well‑known mark provisions and Malaysia’s obligations under the Paris Convention and TRIPS Agreement. However, registration remains the most reliable enforcement tool. Practical next step: engage a Malaysian trademark lawyer to assess whether your mark qualifies for well‑known mark protection and to file a domestic application.
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Registered vs Unregistered Trademarks in Malaysia, When to Register, Enforce or Rely on Passing‑off (2026)

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