Trademark glossary.
Working glossary for trademark practice. Definitions are neutral, fact-based, with primary legal source per entry. Marqio publishes the glossary under the global "Screening · Not Legal Advice" marker.
EUTM
European Union Trade Mark, formerly Community Trade Mark. EUIPO right with unitary effect across all 27 EU member states. Term ten years, indefinitely renewable. Source: EU Trade Mark Regulation (EU) 2017/1001.
Nice Classification
International classification system for goods and services. 34 goods classes (1–34) and 11 service classes (35–45). Maintained by WIPO, current edition NCL-12-2024. Source: WIPO Nice Agreement (1957).
EUIPO
European Union Intellectual Property Office, headquartered in Alicante. Responsible for EUTMs and Community Designs. Operating since 1996, known as OHIM until 2016. Source: euipo.europa.eu.
DPMA
German Patent and Trade Mark Office, headquartered in Munich, branches in Jena and Berlin. Responsible for German national marks (DE marks), patents, utility models, designs. Source: dpma.de.
Swissreg
Trademark register of the Swiss Federal Institute of Intellectual Property (IPI), Bern. Protection extends to Switzerland and Liechtenstein. Source: swissreg.ch.
UKIPO
United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office, headquartered in Newport. Responsible for UK trade marks since the EU split on 1 January 2021. Source: gov.uk/ipo.
WIPO
World Intellectual Property Organization, UN specialised agency in Geneva. Administers the Madrid System, the Nice Classification and the Vienna Classification. Source: wipo.int.
Madrid Protocol
International treaty (1989) for trademark registration via WIPO. A single application yields protection in over 130 contracting parties. Requires a basic mark in the home jurisdiction. Source: WIPO, Protocol Relating to the Madrid Agreement.
Opposition
Procedure before a trademark office in which holders of earlier rights challenge the registration of a later mark. EUIPO deadline: three months from publication of the application in the EUTM Bulletin. Source: Art. 46 EU TMR.
Likelihood of confusion
Risk that the relevant public will associate a later mark with an earlier one. Assessed via sign similarity, goods/services similarity and distinctiveness of the earlier mark. Source: Art. 8(1)(b) EU TMR; CJEU case law.
Bad faith filing
Filing a trademark with intent to obstruct or harm third parties. Absolute ground for invalidity, available even after registration. Source: Art. 59(1)(b) EU TMR.
Revocation
Loss of a registered mark for non-use over five years, becoming a generic term, or misleading the public. Source: Art. 58 EU TMR.
Invalidity
Retroactive cancellation of a trademark registration due to absolute grounds or earlier third-party rights. Source: Art. 59–60 EU TMR.
Grounds for refusal
Reasons a trademark office refuses an application. Absolute (e.g. lack of distinctiveness, descriptiveness, public policy) or relative (earlier third-party rights). Source: Art. 7–8 EU TMR.
Word mark
Mark consisting solely of letters, numbers or standard characters. Protects the word as such, in any typeface or formatting. Source: EUIPO mark types.
Figurative mark
Mark consisting of a graphic representation without word elements. Source: EUIPO mark types.
Combined mark
Mark combining word and figurative elements. The protected scope is the specific composition, not the word in isolation. Source: EUIPO mark types.
Sound mark
Mark consisting of an acoustic sign — melody, sound or voice. Filed with an MP3 file plus optional notation. Source: Art. 4 EU TMR; EUIPO mark types.
Position mark
Mark defined by a specific placement on a product (e.g. a coloured stripe at a fixed position on the item). Source: EUIPO mark types.
Community Trade Mark
Legacy term for the EU trademark before the 2016 reform (Regulation 2015/2424). Today known as „EU trade mark" or „EUTM". Still appears in older contracts and licences. Source: EU reform package 2015/2436.
