Author
No results available
If your business sells products or services in Serbia, your brand name, logo, and slogan are among your most valuable commercial assets, and a registered trademark is the only reliable way to protect them. This trademark registration Serbia overview sets out the legal framework, practical filing steps, and strategic choices that company founders, in-house counsel, and brand managers need to make before, during, and after the registration process. Serbia’s intellectual property system is built on two foundational principles, territoriality (a mark registered elsewhere does not automatically protect you in Serbia) and specificity (protection extends only to the goods and services listed in your application).
At NCR lawyers, we guide domestic and international clients through every stage of trademark registration in Serbia, from pre-filing clearance searches to post-registration enforcement, and in this article I distil the approach I recommend to every business entering the Serbian market.
Under the Serbian Law on Trademarks, a trademark is a sign capable of distinguishing the goods or services of one undertaking from those of another. That sign must be capable of being represented in the Register of Trademarks maintained by the Intellectual Property Office of the Republic of Serbia (ZIS) in a manner that enables the competent authorities and the public to determine the clear and precise scope of the protection afforded to its owner.
Once registered, a trademark confers an exclusive right on its owner. That right entitles the owner to prevent third parties from using an identical or confusingly similar sign in the course of trade for identical or similar goods or services, without the owner’s consent. This exclusivity is the core commercial reason for registration: it converts a brand asset into a legally enforceable monopoly in the Serbian market.
Two principles underpin every filing decision I discuss with clients. Territoriality means that a trademark registered in the European Union, the United States, or any other jurisdiction does not automatically extend protection to Serbia. If you trade in Serbia, you need a right that covers Serbia, either through a national filing at ZIS or through an international registration designating Serbia under the Madrid Protocol. Specificity means that the scope of your protection is limited to the goods and services you list in your application, classified under the Nice Classification system. Drafting that list accurately is one of the most consequential steps in the process.
Serbian law recognises a broad range of sign types. The most common are word marks (brand names, slogans), figurative marks (logos, labels), and combined word-and-figurative marks. Three-dimensional shapes, colours, sounds, and other non-traditional signs may also qualify, provided they meet the distinctiveness threshold and can be represented in the register.
Understanding the categories of marks available under Serbian law helps businesses choose the right protection strategy. The principal types are as follows:
If you represent a trade association, a consortium of producers, or a standards body, a collective or certification mark may be more appropriate than multiple individual registrations. These marks are particularly useful for geographical indications of origin or industry quality seals. The key additional requirement is the submission of regulations of use, which must specify the conditions under which members (or licensees) may use the mark, the quality standards they must meet, and the sanctions for non-compliance.
Serbia follows the Nice Classification system, the international classification of goods and services administered by WIPO. The current edition divides all goods into Classes 1–34 and all services into Classes 35–45. Your application must specify the classes and the individual items within each class for which you seek protection.
In my practice, I find that the single most common drafting mistake is listing goods or services in overly broad terms, which invites office objections, or in terms so narrow that the registration fails to cover the full commercial scope of the brand. I recommend the following approach:
Before filing, a thorough trademark search Serbia clearance exercise is essential. The purpose is to identify earlier rights, identical or confusingly similar marks already registered or applied for, that could block your application or expose you to opposition proceedings after publication.
Several tools are available. The ZIS E-Register (the official Serbian trademark database) allows searches of registered and pending marks in Serbia. TMview, maintained by the European Union Intellectual Property Office network, aggregates data from multiple national offices including ZIS. The WIPO Global Brand Database covers international registrations under the Madrid system. Commercial search platforms such as Marcaria also offer Serbia-specific searches with analytical reporting.
No single database is exhaustive. I always recommend cross-referencing at least two sources and assessing results not only for identical marks but for marks that are visually, phonetically, or conceptually similar in respect of identical or related goods and services.
One of the first strategic decisions in any trademark registration Serbia overview is the choice of filing route. There are three principal options, and the right one depends on your geographic market, budget, and long-term brand strategy.
A national application is filed directly with the Intellectual Property Office of the Republic of Serbia. The application must include the applicant’s details, a clear representation of the mark, a list of goods and services classified under the Nice Classification, and the prescribed filing fee. Foreign applicants without a domicile or registered seat in Serbia must appoint a local representative (a registered patent attorney or attorney-at-law admitted to practice in Serbia) and submit a power of attorney.
This is the most direct route to securing exclusive rights in Serbia. It is independent of any other filing, which means it is not vulnerable to central attack, a significant advantage over the Madrid route during the first five years.
Serbia is a contracting party to the Madrid Protocol, administered by WIPO. If you already hold a trademark application or registration in your home country (the “basic mark”), you can file a single international application through your home office and designate Serbia as one of the target jurisdictions. The Madrid Protocol Serbia route is cost-efficient when you need protection in multiple countries simultaneously.
However, there is an important caveat: during the first five years, the international registration is dependent on the basic mark. If the basic mark is cancelled, refused, or restricted during that period, the international registration (including the Serbia designation) may be affected, a risk known as “central attack.” After five years, the international registration becomes independent.
Serbia is not a member of the European Union. An EU trademark registered with EUIPO covers the 27 EU Member States but does not extend to Serbia. If your brand operates in both EU markets and Serbia, you need a separate Serbian right, either via a national ZIS filing or a Madrid Protocol designation, in addition to your EUTM.
| Filing route | Geographic scope | Key advantages / constraints |
|---|---|---|
| National (ZIS) | Serbia only | Direct route for Serbian rights; lower official fees; fully independent from day one; required for enforcement in Serbia. |
| Madrid Protocol (designating Serbia) | Multi-country via single application | Centralised filing; cost-efficient for multiple jurisdictions; dependent on basic mark for first 5 years; ZIS examines on national grounds. |
| EU / EUTM | EU Member States only | Does not extend to Serbia (non-EU); useful if EU market is targeted, must file national or Madrid for Serbia separately. |
After filing a national trademark application with ZIS, the process follows a structured sequence. The office first conducts a formalities examination, checking that the application is complete, the fees have been paid, and the representation of the mark is adequate. This is followed by a substantive examination, during which the examiner assesses whether the mark meets the absolute conditions for registration (distinctiveness, non-descriptiveness, non-deceptiveness, and compliance with public policy).
If the application passes examination, the mark is published in the official gazette of the Intellectual Property Office. Third parties with earlier rights then have a statutory window in which to file an opposition. The length of this opposition period is defined by the Law on Trademarks and the regulations published by ZIS. Oppositions are decided by the Office after both parties have been heard.
If no opposition is filed, or if an opposition is dismissed, and the registration fee is paid, ZIS issues the certificate of registration and enters the mark in the Register of Trademarks. From filing to registration, the timeline varies depending on the complexity of the case and whether objections or oppositions arise, but straightforward applications can typically expect completion within several months. To minimise delays, I advise submitting a complete application with a clear specimen, an accurate goods/services list, and all supporting documents (including a notarised power of attorney for foreign applicants) from the outset.
Official fees for trademark registration in Serbia are set by ZIS and vary depending on the number of Nice classes covered and the stage of the procedure. The main fee categories include:
Attorney fees are separate from official fees and vary by firm and complexity. At NCR lawyers, we provide a tailored fee estimate at the outset of every engagement so clients can budget with certainty. For Madrid Protocol filings, WIPO charges its own set of fees (a basic fee plus supplementary and complementary fees per designated country and per class), and Serbia may also levy individual fees as a designated contracting party. I recommend checking the current WIPO fee calculator and the ZIS fee schedule before budgeting, as these figures are updated periodically.
Registration is not the end of the process, it is the foundation for ongoing brand protection. Once a trademark is registered in Serbia, the owner gains access to a range of enforcement mechanisms:
A registered trademark in Serbia is valid for 10 years from the filing date and is renewable indefinitely for successive 10-year periods upon payment of the prescribed renewal fee. The renewal request must be filed before the expiry date (or within a grace period, subject to a surcharge). In my experience, missed renewal deadlines are one of the most avoidable, yet most damaging, errors a brand owner can make.
Third parties may seek cancellation of a registered mark on grounds including non-use (if the mark has not been genuinely used in Serbia for a continuous period of five years), or invalidity (if the mark should not have been registered in the first place, for example, because it conflicts with an earlier right). Building and maintaining evidence of genuine use is therefore an essential part of any trademark management strategy.
Having handled numerous filings at ZIS, I have identified six recurring mistakes that delay or derail applications. Avoiding them will save time, reduce costs, and strengthen the resulting registration:
If any of the following apply to your situation, I recommend seeking specialist legal advice before filing:
You can find a Serbia corporate lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory or contact me directly at NCR lawyers for a case-specific consultation.
For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nemanja Curcic at NCR lawyers.
posted 5 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 8 hours ago
posted 8 hours ago
posted 9 hours ago
posted 10 hours ago
posted 10 hours ago
posted 11 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message