China Trademark Classes for Software & SaaS Companies: Class 9, Class 42 & China Filing Strategy

⏱️ Reading time: 10 minutes 📅 Updated: June 30, 2026 ✍️ Author: CTMAA Expert Team

⚠️ Most software companies assume “software = Class 9” — but in China, downloadable software, SaaS, cloud services, and software development each sit in distinct subclasses or entirely different classes.

A US SaaS company that files only in Class 9 may find its core cloud platform unprotected, while a mobile app developer that overlooks Class 42 may lose the right to its backend service brand in China.

📌 Introduction: Why Software Companies Get China Classification Wrong

For international software and SaaS companies, China’s trademark classification system creates a structural risk that product‑based brands rarely encounter. A single software product — whether a mobile app, a cloud platform, or an AI service — can simultaneously involve Class 9 (downloadable software), Class 42 (SaaS and cloud computing), Class 35 (online marketplace services), and Class 38 (data transmission). CNIPA does not treat these as overlapping protections. Each is examined independently under its own subclass group. To navigate this complexity, a clear understanding of the China Trademark Classification List and the China Subclass System is essential.

To understand why this matters, consider well‑known global platforms: Salesforce relies on both Class 9 for its downloadable integrations and Class 42 for its core CRM SaaS. Zoom requires Class 9 for its desktop/mobile apps, Class 42 for cloud meeting services, and Class 38 for real‑time communication. If a foreign company files only in Class 9, a local third party could legally register the same brand in Class 42 — and the original company would have no grounds to stop them in China.

Why Software Trademark Filing Is Different From Product Brands

Software companies face three structural challenges that hardware, food, and fashion brands do not:

  • No physical product: a SaaS platform has no “goods” — the trademark protects a service, not an item. This shifts the classification logic entirely toward service classes and intangible software.
  • Service-software duality: one brand may deliver a downloadable desktop application (Class 9), a web‑based SaaS dashboard (Class 42), and an online subscription marketplace (Class 35) under the same name. CNIPA treats these as three separate protection points.
  • International classification diverges from Chinese practice: WIPO and USPTO filings often describe software generically. CNIPA requires precise subclass‑level specification — and a Madrid Protocol designation that worked in the US may be rejected or narrowed in China.

Why CNIPA Subclasses Matter (USPTO vs CNIPA)

Unlike the USPTO or EUIPO, CNIPA further divides each class into multiple subclasses (similar goods groups). For software companies, this means two marks can coexist in different subclasses even within the same class — a concept that surprises most foreign applicants. For a detailed explanation, refer to our guide: What is the China Trademark Subclass System?

For instance, within Class 9:

  • 0901 – Computer software (downloadable programs, operating systems)
  • 0907 – Communication software (messaging apps, video conferencing)
  • 0908 – Audio and video software (media players, streaming apps)

A registration in subclass 0901 for “computer software” does not automatically block a later application in subclass 0907 for “communication software.” In practice, we have seen cases where a US company registered its collaboration app in 0901, only to discover a Chinese competitor later registered the same brand in 0907 for a messaging tool — and the CNIPA examiner found no conflict because the subclasses were different. This is one of the most common and costly surprises for foreign software companies, and it underscores why subclass‑level mapping must be part of any China filing strategy from day one. Learn how to select the right subclasses in our article How to Correctly Select China Trademark Classification Subclasses.

1. Core Classes for Software & SaaS Companies

Class 9 – Downloadable Software, Mobile Apps, AI Applications

Class 9 covers downloadable software: mobile applications, computer programs, operating systems, AI software, and any software that is installed on a device. If your product is distributed through an app store or as a downloadable installer, Class 9 is the primary class. However, as noted above, the subclass mapping within Class 9 is critical. For a complete list of CNIPA‑approved goods and services items across all classes, see the Similar Goods & Services List, and for subclass‑specific PDFs you can explore each class (e.g., Class 09 subclasses).

Class 42 – SaaS, PaaS, Cloud Computing, Software Development

Class 42 is the home for software‑as‑a‑service, platform‑as‑a‑service, cloud computing, data storage, hosting services, and software development. If users access your software through a browser without downloading anything, or if you provide API‑based services, cloud infrastructure, or custom software development, Class 42 is essential. A Class 9 registration does not protect a SaaS platform, and a Class 42 registration does not protect a downloadable app.

Class 35 – Online Marketplaces, Subscription Platform Marketing

Class 35 covers online retail services, subscription platform marketing, and business management. If your software operates a marketplace or if you plan to market a subscription service directly to Chinese consumers, Class 35 provides the commercial service layer that Class 9 and Class 42 do not cover.

Class 38 – Communication Platforms, Messaging, Video Conferencing

Class 38 covers data transmission, streaming, messaging services, and video conferencing. For platforms with communication features — like a project management tool with built‑in chat — Class 38 may be required in addition to Class 9 and Class 42.

CNIPA Standard Items for Software (Typical Selections)

Below are commonly used CNIPA-approved goods and services items. Using these precise descriptions helps avoid rejection and ensures the correct subclass coverage.

ClassCNIPA Standard ItemSubclass / Note
9Downloadable computer software applications0901 – Core software subclass
9Downloadable mobile applications0901 – Mobile apps
9Computer operating programs, recorded0901 – Operating systems
42Software as a service (SaaS)Cloud services subclass
42Cloud computing servicesIaaS / PaaS coverage
42Platform as a service (PaaS)Infrastructure services
42Computer software design and developmentDevelopment services
38Providing online chat rooms and messaging servicesCommunication features
35Online retail store services for softwareMarketplace / subscription sales

Using these standard CNIPA items — rather than free-text descriptions — significantly reduces the risk of office actions and ensures your application maps to the correct subclass on the first examination.

2. The Class 9 vs Class 42 Problem — Core Analysis

CNIPA draws a bright line between software as a product (Class 9) and software as a service (Class 42). The following table illustrates how the same functional product can require different class protection depending on how it is delivered:

ProductCorrect ClassCNIPA Rationale
Downloadable CRM softwareClass 9Installed and run locally — a product
Online CRM SaaS platformClass 42Accessed via browser — a service
Mobile app (iOS / Android)Class 9Downloaded from app store — a product
Cloud computing platform (PaaS)Class 42Infrastructure provided as a service
AI SaaS (e.g., cloud‑based GPT)Class 42AI delivered as an online service
Downloadable AI applicationClass 9Installed AI software — a product
Software development servicesClass 42Custom development — a service
API‑based data platformClass 42Data delivery as a service

CNIPA examiners ask: “Is the software downloaded and installed, or accessed as a service?” The answer determines whether protection falls under Class 9, Class 42, or both — and filing in the wrong class leaves the core business model unprotected. This is a direct consequence of China’s first‑to‑file principle, where the timing and accuracy of your filing determine ownership.

3. Software Ecosystem Coverage Examples

Software Business TypeClass 9Class 42Class 35Class 38
Project Management PlatformDesktop softwareSaaS platformMarketplace services
AI Assistant CompanyDownloadable AI appAI service platformCommunication features
FinTech SaaSMobile banking appCloud transaction platformFinancial marketplace
Video Conferencing PlatformDesktop & mobile appCloud meeting serviceSubscription managementStreaming & data transmission
API‑First PlatformSDK / library downloadsAPI hosting & deliveryDeveloper marketplaceData delivery services

Each column in the table above represents a separate CNIPA examination unit. A trademark registered only in Class 9 for a video conferencing platform does not protect the cloud meeting service (Class 42) or the streaming functionality (Class 38).

4. Real Trademark Risks for Software Companies

📦 Local Partner Registration — SaaS Collaboration Platform

One of our European SaaS clients entered China through a local integration partner. The partner registered the brand in Class 42 (SaaS) and Class 35 (marketplace) before the foreign company filed. When the client later attempted to launch its own China platform, it discovered its core service class was already occupied. (Name omitted for confidentiality.)

📱 App Store Pre‑Launch Squatting — Mobile Productivity App

A US productivity app developer we assisted prepared a China launch via the Apple App Store and local Android stores. Before filing its CNIPA trademark, a third party in Shenzhen registered the app’s English name in Class 9 and its common Chinese transliteration in Class 42. The developer was blocked from using both names until it purchased the registrations.

☁️ Class 9‑Only Filing — AI Cloud Service

A cloud platform client filed only in Class 9 for “downloadable AI software.” Its core product was a cloud‑based AI service accessed via API — correctly classified under Class 42. A competitor later registered the same brand in Class 42 and filed a complaint, forcing our client into a protracted dispute. (Name omitted for confidentiality.)

🔤 Chinese Name Squatting — Enterprise SaaS

An enterprise SaaS company we advised discovered that its de facto Chinese brand name — used organically by Chinese tech media — had been registered by a local consulting firm in Class 42. The vendor could not use its own Chinese name in official marketing materials without risking infringement liability.

These cases illustrate how China’s first‑to‑file system can work against foreign software companies. If you face a similar situation, explore our remedy series for possible actions.

5. Common Filing Mistakes Software Companies Make

  • Filing only in Class 9 — believing “software” covers both downloadable and cloud‑based products.
  • Filing only in Class 42 — protects the SaaS platform but leaves the downloadable app unprotected.
  • Filing only the English brand name — Chinese users create a Chinese name; if unregistered, a third party will claim it.
  • Not covering AI‑specific services — AI SaaS requires explicit subclass entries in Class 42.
  • Overlooking Class 38 for communication features — messaging and streaming need separate protection.
  • Assuming a Madrid Protocol registration covers China — specification must satisfy CNIPA subclass requirements.
  • Filing after app store launch — public exposure triggers squatting; file first.

For a deeper understanding of OEM‑related risks (even for software development outsourcing), see our guide on China Trademark OEM Risks.

6. Filing Strategy by Business Type

📱 Mobile App Startup

  • Class 9: downloadable app
  • Class 42: backend / cloud
  • Class 35: if in‑app marketplace
  • Chinese name in all classes

☁️ SaaS Startup

  • Class 42: core SaaS platform
  • Class 9: any downloadable client
  • Class 35: subscription management
  • Chinese name in all classes

🤖 AI Platform

  • Class 9: downloadable AI app
  • Class 42: AI SaaS / ML platform
  • Class 38: if real‑time communication
  • Chinese name + AI subclasses

🏢 Enterprise Software Company

  • Class 9: on‑premise software
  • Class 42: cloud / hosted version
  • Class 35: enterprise marketplace
  • Class 38: collaboration / messaging
  • Full Chinese name portfolio

🌐 Global Software Vendor

  • Full portfolio: 9, 42, 35, 38
  • Class 42: development & consulting
  • Chinese name in all classes
  • Customs recordal if physical media
  • Watching service active

Not sure whether your software requires Class 9, Class 42, or both? Request a quick classification assessment before filing.

7. Chinese Brand Name Strategy for Software

In China’s software market, Chinese brand names are how users search, share, and discuss products. Platforms like Zoom (中:中目), Microsoft Teams (中:微软 Teams), and Feishu (飞书) all operate under distinct Chinese names. If you do not create and register a Chinese trademark, one of three things happens: Chinese users coin a name organically, a local partner registers it, or a competitor registers it to block you. In all scenarios, the foreign software company loses control of its own brand identity in China. Register a Chinese version early — a phonetic transliteration, a meaningful equivalent, or both — and file it in all core classes simultaneously with your English‑language mark. For a complete strategy, see our Chinese Name Strategy for China Trademark Registration.

8. Business Implications

📱 App Store Listing Requirements

Chinese app stores require trademark certificates or filing receipts for brand‑name listings.

🇨🇳 ICP Filing & Regulatory Compliance

A trademark application is often required for ICP filings and software product registrations.

🤝 Partner & Distributor Agreements

Without a registered trademark, a local partner can register your brand and use it as leverage.

🌐 Cross‑Border SaaS Sales

Even if you serve Chinese customers from overseas, a third‑party registration in Class 42 can block your marketing.

For additional cross‑border insights, see our article for Amazon FBA Sellers — many principles apply to software vendors selling through Chinese platforms.

9. FAQ

Do software companies need Class 9 or Class 42?

It depends on delivery. Downloadable software requires Class 9; SaaS and cloud services require Class 42. Most companies need both.

Can I use my US trademark in China?

No. Trademark rights are territorial. A US registration provides no protection in China. You must file with CNIPA.

Is a Madrid Protocol registration sufficient for software companies?

A Madrid designation can be valid, but the goods/services specification must meet CNIPA subclass requirements. Many WIPO filings are too vague and get rejected or narrowed.

Should I file before entering Chinese app stores?

Yes. Chinese app stores require a trademark certificate or filing receipt, and public exposure before filing invites squatting.

Does a China trademark protect SaaS outside China?

No. A CNIPA registration is valid only in mainland China. For other jurisdictions, you need separate registrations.

Why do software companies need to worry about subclasses?

CNIPA divides classes into subclasses; marks in different subclasses can coexist. Without subclass‑level mapping, you may miss key protection for communication or media features.

10. Conclusion & Strategy Review

For software and SaaS companies, China trademark protection is a classification challenge that rewards precision. The line between Class 9 (downloadable software) and Class 42 (cloud‑based services) is the single most important distinction — and CNIPA’s subclass system adds another layer of complexity that does not exist in the USPTO or EUIPO. Multi‑component software platforms must be mapped as an ecosystem, not as a single filing. For a comprehensive overview of all classes and their subclasses, visit our Similar Goods & Services List and explore our Foreign Brand China Entry Legal Risk Series for broader context.

Map Your Software Ecosystem Across Class 9 & Class 42 Before Filing

Request a full trademark strategy review — covering downloadable software vs SaaS classification, subclass mapping, Chinese name creation, and a filing timeline that protects you before app store launch or partner engagement in China.

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By: CTMAA Expert Team
CNIPA-registered trademark professionals and cross‑border IP specialists with extensive experience advising US and EU software and SaaS companies — including the cases mentioned above.
Reviewed: Kevin Kang Founder & Trademark Strategy Lead – 15+ years in China trademark strategy for foreign brands.

📘 China Trademark Classes by Industry

This article is part of our industry-based China trademark classification series. Explore how trademark classes and subclass rules apply across different industries:

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