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Saudi Arabia Trademark System Practice Guide

Gemini_Generated_Image_vu108mvu108mvu10Saudi Arabia’s trademark system is based on the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Unified Trademark Law and its implementing regulations. The Saudi Authority for Intellectual Property (SAIP) serves as the competent authority, and electronic procedures are integrated into the system’s design. This article provides a comprehensive overview of key practical points, ranging from trademark applications in Saudi Arabia to post-registration management and responses to infringement.

Overview of the System and Legal Framework

Legal Basis and Hierarchy of Norms

Trademark protection in Saudi Arabia is governed by (a) the GCC Trademark Law, (b) the GCC Trademark Law Implementation Regulations, and (c) domestic implementing decrees (Royal Decrees) and related regulations (Official Gazette schedules, publication procedures, etc.). The GCC Trademark Law itself is a unified law applicable across member states, covering definitions, grounds for refusal, procedures, scope of rights, remedies, and penalties.

Regarding domestic application, the Royal Decree approving the GCC Trademark Law is published on WIPO Lex, and it explicitly states that the law will come into force 90 days after the date of publication in the Official Gazette.

Regulatory and Involved Authorities

Agency Role Remarks
Saudi Arabian Intellectual Property Authority (SAIP) Trademark registration, publication, and procedural administration; acceptance of infringement reports Also regulates the establishment and accessibility of the registry
Customs Authorities Customs detention (border measures against counterfeit goods) System for injunctions based on claims by rights holders
Courts Injunctions, preservation of evidence, damages, and criminal penalties Please verify the latest information regarding the jurisdiction of courts
Saudi Ministry of Commerce Cooperation with SAIP regarding reports of counterfeit goods Official announcement stating that contact with the Intellectual Property Office is required

Recent Developments (Amendments and Operational Changes)

⚠ Operational Change in April 2024: Reports indicate that the option for a “10-day amendment” following a rejection has been abolished, and only appeals are now permitted after a rejection. In practice, it is crucial to confirm the latest information via the official portal.

Furthermore, under the regulations, the competent authority is permitted to establish an “electronic system and electronic database for the submission and tracking of registration and renewal applications,” and online procedures are now the standard practice.

Application Requirements, Procedures, and International Elements

Applicant Eligibility and Foreign Applications

The GCC Trademark Law lists the following as eligible for registration: (1) natural persons and legal entities conducting business within the GCC region; (2) foreign nationals residing in a GCC member state and conducting business with a license; (3) foreign nationals belonging to or residing in a country that is a party to a multilateral treaty; and (4) public agencies, etc.

✗ Important: When foreign corporations or individuals file an application in Saudi Arabia, the appointment of a local agent (registered agent) is generally required. If the applicant does not have a domestic address, the application must be filed by a registered agent with a domestic address.

Types of Trademarks and Scope of Protection

The definition of a trademark is broad, encompassing names, words, signatures, letters, numbers, designs, logos, emblems, packaging, etc., and it is explicitly stated that sounds and smells may also constitute part of a trademark.

Types of Trademarks Overview
Standard Trademarks and Service Marks Typical marks such as letters, figures, and combinations thereof
Collective Trademarks Trademarks used by members of an organization
Certification (Supervision/Inspection) Trademarks Marks certifying quality, etc.
Sound marks Represented by musical notation or description
Scent trademarks Represented by a description

Classification and Categories

Classification follows the Nice Classification. The official fee schedule is consistently structured on the premise of “one mark in one class,” and it is safest in practice to manage fees and deadlines on a per-class basis.

Priority

If the applicant has filed a prior application in a country that is a party to a multilateral treaty, a “copy of the prior application” and a “confirmation letter specifying the filing date, application number, and country of filing” must be submitted within six months of the Saudi application. Failure to do so will result in the loss of the right to claim priority.

Handling of Madrid Applications

✗ Madrid System: The treaty list on WIPO Lex does not confirm Saudi Arabia’s accession to the Madrid Protocol. It is a safe practice not to assume a Madrid designation based on international registration and, as a general rule, to treat the application as a domestic application (direct filing with the SAIP). Since treaty status may change in the future, please reconfirm the latest treaty status on the WIPO website before proceeding.

Required Documents (Formalities)

  • Power of Attorney (POA): If filed by an agent, notarization, consular legalization, etc., and an Arabic translation are required
  • Handling of Non-Arabic Elements: Translation or transliteration is required if the application contains non-Arabic words or characters
  • Trademark Specimen: Must comply with the prescribed format
  • List of Designated Goods and Services: Must be listed according to the Nice Classification

Examination Procedures

Framework for Formal and Substantive Examination

The Office may “impose restrictions or modifications necessary to avoid confusion with existing registered trademarks,” and if the applicant fails to respond within 90 days of the notification date, the application will be deemed abandoned. Furthermore, it is stipulated that the Office must render a decision on the registration application within 90 days of the filing date if the requirements are met (statutory maximum).

Major Grounds for Rejection (Grounds for Non-Registration)

Types of Grounds for Refusal Content
Lack of Distinctiveness Common names, ordinary figures, etc.
Violation of Public Order and Morals Including Religious Symbols, etc.
National Flags, National Emblems, and Emblems of International Organizations Prohibition of Unauthorized Use
Misleading Representation False or misleading representations regarding origin, quality, etc.
Conflict with prior applications or registrations Identical or Similar Marks; Likelihood of Confusion
Protection of Well-Known Trademarks Exclusion of marks constituting copies, imitations, or translations of well-known trademarks. Protection extends to dissimilar goods and services

First Steps in Practice: (a) Search for identical or similar trademarks, (b) evaluation of likelihood of confusion, including Arabic script and transliteration, and (c) preliminary verification of risks related to religious/public marks and geographical indications are essential.

Responding to Rejections

Stage Deadline Consequences of Non-Response
Response to the Office’s Restrictions or Amendments Within 90 days of the notification date Deemed abandoned
Appeal of a Rejection (or Conditional) Decision File a petition with the Board within 60 days
Appeal of the Board’s decision File a lawsuit with the court within an additional 60 days
Appeal Fees 1,000 SAR

Publication, Objections, and Appeals

Publication

If the authorities accept the trademark application, it will be published prior to registration. The publication fee is borne by the applicant; if the fee is not paid within 30 days of the acceptance notice, the application will be deemed withdrawn.

Opposition

The opposition period is 60 days from the date of publication. The procedure flow is as follows:

Stage Deadline Remarks
Filing of Opposition Within 60 days of the date of publication Fee: 2,000 SAR
Service from the Authority to the Applicant Within 30 days of the filing of the opposition Service of a copy of the notice of opposition
Applicant’s response Within 60 days of the date of notification Failure to submit will be treated as a withdrawal of the application
Hearing (if necessary) Scheduled by the Authority Application for a designated date: 1,000 SAR

Remedies following an opposition decision

Interested parties may file an appeal against the authority’s opposition decision within 30 days of the notification date, and may further challenge the decision in court within an additional 30 days. A challenge to the acceptance decision does not automatically suspend the registration procedure (unless the court orders a suspension separately).

Finalization of Registration Decision and Payment of Registration Fees

⚠ Critical Deadline: If the registration decision becomes final, failure to pay the registration fee within 30 days of the final decision date will result in the application being treated as withdrawn. It is of the utmost importance to prioritize the filing of the invoice and deadline notice issued by the authorities to avoid forfeiture of rights.

Effect of Registration and Rights, and Post-Registration Management

Registration and Effect of Rights

Registration takes effect from the filing date. The registration certificate includes the registration number, priority information, filing date, registration date, expiration date, owner information, a specimen of the trademark, and the designated goods and services and classes. The owner may prevent third parties from using identical or similar marks in a manner that is likely to cause confusion among consumers in connection with identical, similar, or related goods and services.

Term of Protection and Renewal

Item Details Official Fees (SAR)
Term of Protection 10 years (extendable by 10 years upon renewal)
Renewal Application Period The final year of the 12-month period preceding expiration 5,500 per class
Grace Period After Expiration 6 months after expiration 6,500 per category
If not renewed within the grace period The authorities will remove the entry from the registry ex officio
Renewal notice A public notice will be issued, but third-party objections are not permitted 1,000

Invalidity, Cancellation, and the Requirement of Use

Regarding “illegally registered trademarks,” the authorities or interested parties may petition the court for cancellation. Additionally, interested parties may petition the court for cancellation if there has been no “serious use” for five consecutive years (unless there are reasons beyond the right holder’s control).

Practical Point: While proof of use is not required at the time of renewal, it is essential in practice to routinely collect evidence of use (such as sales materials, advertisements, web records, and transaction documents) to guard against the risk of cancellation due to non-use.

Assignment, Licensing, and Security

Transaction Types Requirements Entry in the Registry Official Fees (SAR)
Transfer Possible for all or part Registration and public notice required to be effective against third parties Registration: 1,000 + Public Notice: 500
License Written, attested contract. The contract term cannot exceed the term of protection Registration is not mandatory, but regulations establish rules regarding enforceability against third parties when registered Registration: 2,000 + Publication: 1,000
Pledge/Seizure Securitization and attachment are possible Registration and public notice are required for third-party enforceability In accordance with the rules

Enforcement, Litigation, and Remedies

Administrative Route (SAIP Enforcement Ecosystem)

The Saudi Ministry of Commerce has officially stated that "contact with the Intellectual Property Authority is required" regarding trademark registration and reports of counterfeit trademarks, and SAIP is involved in registration and enforcement (receipt of reports). In practice, it is reasonable to incorporate administrative escalation—starting from SAIP’s infringement complaint and reporting window—into your portfolio, in addition to civil, criminal, customs, and court proceedings.

Civil Remedies (Injunctions, Preliminary Injunctions, Damages)

Rights holders may file a “petition” with the court to seek preventive or provisional measures.

Remedies Content Deadline
Preservation of evidence; description of the nature of the infringement Detailed description of the nature of the infringement, infringing goods, tools, etc., and preservation of evidence The court shall render a decision within 10 days of the filing
Attachment Seizure of infringing goods and proceeds The opposing party may file an appeal within 20 days of notification
Prevention of Distribution Includes preventing distribution after importation and preventing exportation
Cease and desist Cessation or Prevention of Infringement Ex parte orders are also possible
Damages Damages resulting from infringement (including the defendant’s profits)

Border measures

Stage Details Deadline
Application for suspension Prima facie evidence of infringement + Specific information regarding the subject goods
Customs Decision Notice Acceptance or Rejection Within 7 days
Effect of the injunction If accepted Generally 1 year (or the remaining term of protection)
Obligation to file a main action After notification of the injunction order, file a main action and notify Customs Within 10 business days (subject to extension)

Criminal and Administrative Sanctions

The GCC Trademark Law stipulates imprisonment of at least one month and up to one year and/or a fine of 1,000 to 100,000 SAR for intentional sales, possession, etc. In cases of repeat offenses, the maximum penalty may be doubled, and closure orders or publication of the judgment may also be imposed.

List of Official Fees (Cost Model)

Official fees are based on one trademark per class (SAR to USD conversion is an estimate based on the official exchange rate of 1 USD = 3.75 SAR).

Standard Official Fees from Application to Registration

Phase Fees (SAR) Estimated USD
Application 1,000 Approx. 267
Publication 500 Approx. 133
Registration + Issuance of Registration Certificate 5,000 Approx. 1,333
Total (Standard, 1 Category) 6,500 Approx. 1,733

Other major government-funded expenses

Procedure Government Fees (SAR) Estimated USD
Appeal 2,000 Approx. 533
Hearing Date Set 1,000 Approx. 267
Appeal against a rejection 1,000 Approx. 267
Renewal (Final year before expiration) 5,500 Approx. 1,467
Renewal (6-month grace period after expiration) 6,500 Approx. 1,733
Renewal Notice 1,000 Approx. 267
Transfer Records 1,000 Approx. 267
Transfer Notice 500 Approx. 133
License Records 2,000 Approx. 533
License Announcements 1,000 Approx. 267
Change of ownership 1,000 Approx. 267
Change of address 1,000 Approx. 267
Cancellation Application by the Rights Holder 200 Approx. 53
Partial removal of designation 200 Approx. 53

Deadline Management (Critical Lapse Points)

If the following deadlines are missed, the application will be treated as withdrawn or abandoned. Please prioritize the entry of requests and deadline notices issued by the Office into the docket.

Stage Deadline Consequences of Non-Compliance
Payment of Publication Fees Within 30 days of the notice of acceptance Treat as withdrawal of application
Payment of Registration Fee Within 30 days of the final decision Treat as withdrawal of application
Response to an inquiry from the Office (regarding restrictions, amendments, etc.) Within 90 days of the notification date Deemed abandoned
Response to opposition Within 60 days of the notification date Treat as withdrawal of application
Appeal against a rejection decision Within 60 days Rejection becomes final
Appeal against the Board’s decision (Court) Within an additional 60 days Committee decision becomes final
Appeal against the objection decision Within 30 days of the date of notification Objection decision becomes final
Renewal (Grace Period) Within 6 months after expiration Cancellation by Official Discretion

Procedure Flowchart

Preliminary Research and Application Strategy

Filing Preparation: Mark/Designation/POA, etc.

Filing (SAIP)

Examination by the Office (may result in restrictions or amendments)

↓ Inquiry/Conditional Acceptance ↓ Rejection

Respond within 90 days File an appeal within 60 days → Board → Court

↓ Acceptance

Request for publication fees (payable within 30 days)

Publication

Opposition period (60 days)

↓ No objections ↓ Objections

Registration Decision Finalized Opposition Proceedings (30 days from service / 60 days for response / hearing)

Payment of Registration Fee (within 30 days)

Registration + Issuance of Registration Certificate

Practical Checklist

Application Checklist

  • Determination of the Mark (Classification by type: word/design/combination, color, sound, scent, etc.)
  • Prior Art Search (Identical/Similar Marks, Well-Known Trademarks, Religious/Official Marks, Elements Likely to Cause Confusion)
  • Consideration of Arabic Transliteration and Transcription (Essential for Confusion Assessment)
  • Designated Goods and Services / Classes (Organization under the Nice Classification; understanding costs per class)
  • Determination of Whether to Claim Priority (Confirming the 6-month deadline; preparing a copy of the earlier application plus a confirmation document verifying the application number, date, and country)
  • Appointment of an Agent (Requires a Domestic Address)
  • Preparation of Power of Attorney (POA) (Notarization/Certification/Arabic Translation)
  • Establishment of internal payment processes for publication fees and registration fees (30-day deadline)

Evidence Checklist for Opposition and Appeal Proceedings

  • Prior Rights: Copy of registration certificate, application information, renewal history
  • Use and Public Awareness: Sales materials, advertisements, trade show materials, web records, transaction documents (to prepare for non-use cancellation and distinctiveness arguments)
  • Confusion: Business practices, target audience, mark comparison (including Arabic spelling and phonetic transcription)
Classification Document Name Link
Laws GCC Trademark Law (WIPO Lex) WIPO Lex
Legislation GCC Trademark Law Regulations (WIPO Lex) WIPO Lex
Treaties Saudi Arabia's Treaty Accessions WIPO Lex Profile
Authorities Saudi Arabian Intellectual Property Authority (SAIP) SAIP Official
Reference JETRO Saudi Arabia Intellectual Property Information JETRO

Please consult us regarding trademark applications and registrations in Saudi Arabia

Please feel free to consult us regarding trademark application strategies in Saudi Arabia, the appointment of local agents, and post-registration management.