Why China is “first to file,” how the CNIPA process works, the classes and Chinese-character mark most foreign brands miss — and how HCSG files it for you.
Get these right and you avoid the most expensive China-IP mistakes.
Using a brand for years abroad does not reserve it in China. The first to file generally wins — so speed matters more than seniority.
China uses international classes plus its own sub-class system; marks in different sub-classes may not conflict, so coverage must be chosen deliberately.
Customers and squatters use a Chinese-character (or pinyin) version of your brand — register it alongside your Latin mark, or someone else will.
Rough stages and timing — timelines shift, so treat these as a guide and confirm current waits.
| Stage | What happens |
|---|---|
| Search | Check the register for conflicting marks before you file |
| File | Submit to CNIPA in your chosen classes/sub-classes (via a local agent for foreign applicants) |
| Formal & substantive exam | CNIPA checks formalities, then examines for conflicts — this is the longest stage |
| Publication | The accepted mark is published for a 3-month opposition window |
| Registration | If unopposed, the mark registers — valid about ten years, renewable |
A clear sequence — HCSG runs each step, or the whole filing, for you.
Clear your mark against existing China registrations to gauge the risk of refusal before you spend on filing.
Map your products to the right classes and sub-classes so your protection actually covers what you sell.
Decide on and clear a Chinese-character and/or pinyin version of your brand to file alongside the Latin one.
Foreign applicants file via a licensed China trademark agency — we prepare and submit the application for you.
CNIPA examines the mark, then publishes it for a three-month opposition window.
Once registered, the mark lasts about ten years; we diarise renewals and watch for infringers.
The most painful China-IP stories all start the same way: a brand owner waits until they're “bigger” or until sales prove the market — and by then someone has already filed their name. Because China is first-to-file, that someone can be an opportunist, a distributor, or even your own supplier, and getting the mark back is slow and expensive. The fix is simple: file early, before you source, list or share designs. We explain exactly how squatting works, and how to prevent it, in the brand-protection guide.
For African importers and exporters, the trademark is easy to overlook until it's too late. A few realities worth planning around — we handle the filing around them.
The moment you share artwork, packaging or a brand name with a supplier, it can be filed by someone else. Register before you hand anything over.
Selling on Chinese or global marketplaces increasingly needs a registered mark to enrol in brand-protection programmes — have it ready.
A trademark at home (in Nigeria, Kenya or Ghana) does not protect you in China — China is a separate registration, and a separate first-to-file race.
You can file directly with CNIPA, or extend an international registration to China through the Madrid Protocol. Madrid can be convenient if you're filing in many countries at once, but for China specifically a direct national filing often gives cleaner sub-class coverage — which is exactly where foreign marks get caught short. We advise on the right route for your situation rather than defaulting to one.
Your China trademark, handled end to end — from clearance search to defending the mark.
We clear your mark against the register and advise on the real risk before you file.
As your filing partner we prepare and submit the application in the right classes and sub-classes.
We help choose and clear a Chinese-character/pinyin version so your brand is protected the way customers use it.
We monitor for conflicts and act on oppositions, bad-faith filings and infringements.
We manage your marks across classes and diarise renewals so protection never lapses.
The outcome: the right marks, in the right classes, filed early and defended — so your brand is yours in China, not someone else's to ransom.
Specific, net-new answers — not a repeat of the guide above.
Tell us your brand and your products — we'll run a clearance search, file in the right classes, and defend the mark for you.
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