Brand vs Trademark in China: What’s the Difference and Why It Matters

⏱️ Reading time: 4 minutes 📅 Updated: April 6, 2026 ✍️ Author: CTMAA Expert Team

Must-read for China market: Core differences between brand & trademark + protection strategies

📌 A brand creates market value; a trademark provides legal protection in China. China follows first-to-file – the first to register owns the right, regardless of prior use. Without registration, your brand can be legally taken by squatters. Spend $1,500 now or risk $700,000+ later.
📑 Table of Contents & Sponsor Area

1. Core Insight: Brand & Trademark – The Odd Couple

here’s the deal: brand is what you feel. Trademark is what you own. In China, if you don’t own the trademark, your brand is basically a free house for squatters.

👉 Brand = market concept (emotional).
👉 Trademark = legal concept (cold, hard).

Your brand builds loyalty, reputation, love. Your trademark gives you the right to sue.

👉 Bottom line: A brand creates value, a trademark protects that value.

No trademark = naked brand.

💬 Honestly, we get calls every month from founders shaking with anger. “Someone registered my brand in China! They want $200k!” And I have to tell them: China uses first-to-file. The law doesn’t care if you’ve been using it for 10 years in the US. It’s brutal, but it’s the truth.
💰 COST COMPARISON Preventive trademark filing: $1,500 vs Squatter ransom + legal fees: $700,000+
You do the math.

2. Brand: A Living, Breathing Asset

A brand is like a person. It grows, changes, expands into new industries. It includes your identity, reputation, customer vibes – everything.

👉 Brands grow through:

  • Marketing money
  • Product quality
  • Customer experience
  • Long-term positioning
Key insight: Brands expand like crazy. Huawei from switches to phones to EVs. Apple from computers to watches to services. But your trademark? It doesn’t move an inch unless you pay for new classes.
⚡ Real Case: US Skincare Brand “L**e Beauty” – The $700k Mistake
When: March 2021 – November 2022
Where: Guangzhou (squatter) vs California (owner)
Cost: Squatter asked $700k. Total brand loss > $1.1M (legal, repackaging, lost Tmall).
What happened: They entered China via cross-border e-commerce in 2019, no trademark. 2021, a Guangzhou company registered “L**e Beauty” in Class 3. Alibaba complaints → store suspension. Negotiation failed (price rose from $200k to $700k). They spent $80k on invalidation – lost because squatter showed “token use”. Forced to rebrand to “LUX+”.
Founder’s words: “My US lawyer said common law rights would protect me. That advice was total garbage.”
Our take: If they’d spent $1,500 on a Chinese trademark in 2019, none of this would have happened. Do not ship a single unit without registration.

3. Trademark: The Cold, Unpredictable Legal Weapon

A Chinese trademark gives you exclusive rights – but only if CNIPA approves it. And here’s the thing nobody tells you: examiners have moods. Sometimes they reject a perfectly good mark because they “feel” it’s descriptive. Other times they approve something surprisingly similar. It’s a bit of a black box.

💬 I’ve had cases where two nearly identical marks were approved for different applicants on the same day. And other cases where a totally unique mark was rejected for vague reasons. My honest advice? File anyway, and be ready to argue. There’s a lot of “examiner’s discretion” in China – which is a fancy way of saying “it’s a bit random.”
✨ We had a U.S. client at 2025 who filed two trademark applications. One of them, filed under Class 8, was rejected. Surprisingly, the examiner considered “Flytrim” to be similar to “Fly,” which led to the refusal. We found this decision quite unexpected. Subsequently, we filed an appeal, and the refusal review procedure is currently in progress. For full case details, please refer to: China Trademark Registration Case: US Fl* Beauty Brand Success & Refusal (Real CNIPA Case Study

3.1 Four Fixed Elements – No Flexibility

  • Applicant (locked)
  • Classes (locked)
  • Trademark drawing (locked)
  • Registration number

👉 Once registered, you cannot change a comma. Want to expand to a new product? New application.

3.2 First-to-File – The Iron Rule

China’s first-to-file principle: Whoever files first wins, period. Prior use means nothing unless you’re a famous brand (and good luck proving that).

CNIPA 2024 data: 152k foreign applications, ~7% opposed. But real squatting is likely double – many cases settle before official record.

📌 Critical note: Official stats are garbage for measuring squatting. Most squatters don’t even file oppositions; they just send threatening letters. And the ones that register? They often use the mark once to avoid cancellation, then sit on it.

4. Static Trademark vs Dynamic Brand – The Trap

Brand = dynamic: can jump categories, change logos, evolve.

Trademark = static: stuck in the classes you filed.

👉 Real example: German machinery company registered Class 7 (machines). Then they launched software (Class 9) – squatted. Demanded $400k. Founder: “I thought one trademark covered everything.” Nope. You need forward-looking coverage.

5. Why This Matters – Practical & Painful

  • 1. Brand hijacking is real: 2023 case: “SunPower” power banks squatted for $280k. We settled for $20k after legal fight, but client lost Prime Day – total loss > $700k.
  • 2. You can get sued: Using an unregistered mark in China can lead to counter-suits for damages up to $400k.
  • 3. Market chaos: No registration = anyone can copy, complain, or extort you.
  • 4. China-specific hell: CNIPA does not recognize prior use unless you’re a globally famous brand (almost impossible).
💬 The most frustrating conversation: “But my US attorney said…” Look, US lawyers are great, but they don’t know Chinese law. Common law rights don’t exist here. First-to-file is everything.

6. Key Differences + Visual Chart

🏷️
BRAND
Market concept

✅ Builds recognition
✅ Dynamic, can expand
✅ Flexible scope
❌ No legal protection
🌍 Global territory
⚖️
📜
TRADEMARK
Legal right

✅ Provides protection
❌ Static, fixed classes
❌ Limited to registration
✅ Legally enforceable
🇨🇳 China only
DimensionBrandTrademark
NatureMarket conceptLegal right
FunctionBuilds recognitionProvides protection
ChangeabilityDynamicStatic
ScopeFlexibleLimited to classes
ProtectionNo legal forceLegally enforceable
TerritoryGlobalChina only

⬆️ Feel free to screenshot and share.

7. Actionable Roadmap for Foreign Businesses

  • Timeline: Start China trademark search 12 months before entry. File core classes 6 months before first sale.
  • Class strategy: Don’t just file your current product. Coffee brand? File Class 30 (coffee), Class 43 (cafe), Class 35 (e-commerce), Class 21 (mugs). How to Choose the Right Subclass & goods
  • Defensive filings: File English name + Chinese transliteration separately. Squatters love grabbing the Chinese version. Chinese Name Trademark Strategy in China
  • Monitoring: Quarterly gazette checks. Oppose within 3 months of publication.
💬 A win we’re proud of: May 2024, a German parts company came to us 6 months before Shanghai fair. We filed in 48 hours and opposed a squatter 3 days before their publication ended. Client said, “You’re more punctual than the Germans.” That’s the stuff.

8. FAQ – The Honest, No-BS Edition

Q1: Can I start selling first and register later?

Answer: Hell no. We’ve seen squatters file just 3 months after a Tmall launch. Then your store is gone. “Wait and see” is a suicide strategy.

Q2: My US trademark – does it count?

Answer: Nope. Trademarks are territorial. China doesn’t care about your USPTO registration. File locally or use Madrid (but direct filing is faster). Direct CNIPA Application or Madrid System? A Strategic Guide to Choosing Your China Trademark Path

Q3: One trademark for all my products?

Answer: No. Each class needs its own registration. Tesla forgot Class 25 (apparel) – squatted, had to buy it back.

Q4: What if my brand is already squatted? Any hope?

Answer: Maybe. If registration >3 years, file non-use cancellation (if squatter never used). If it’s malicious, try invalidation. But success rate <40%, takes 1-2 years, Prevention is Nx cheaper.

Q5: I heard CNIPA examiners are random – is that true? Legal Remedies & Step-by-Step Actions for Foreign Companies in China

Answer: Honestly? Sometimes it feels like a lottery. We’ve had identical marks get different results from different examiners. One examiner might reject because they “feel” it’s too descriptive; another might approve. There’s a lot of subjective discretion. My advice: file anyway, and be ready to argue with evidence. And don’t assume the first rejection is final – appeal.

💬 The question that makes me sigh: “Can I just call you after I get squatted?” – Sure, but by then you’re not calling a lawyer, you’re calling a priest. The cost will be 10x more.

9. Action List: Do This Tomorrow

  • ✅ Order a professional trademark search (skip the free tools – they’re garbage).
  • ✅ List all current products + future categories (3 years out).
  • ✅ File Chinese trademark applications (online, 3-4 months to first action).
  • ✅ Set up quarterly monitoring for new trademark gazettes.

10. How We Can Help

China’s trademark system is a maze. We’ve been through it hundreds of times. We offer:

  • Deep availability analysis + evidence strategy
  • China-specific class portfolio planning
  • Expedited filing (as fast as 48 hours)
  • Monitoring & enforcement (opposition, invalidation, litigation)
👉 Secure your brand before China does. Don’t let squatters turn your brand into their ATM.

🏁 Final Takeaway

👉 A brand creates value. A trademark protects it.

China = first-to-file. No registration, no rights.

By: CTMAA Expert Team
CNIPA-registered trademark professionals and cross‑border IP specialists with extensive experience advising US and EU companies — including the cases mentioned above.
Reviewed by: Kevin Kang Founder & Trademark Strategy Lead – 15+ years in China trademark strategy for foreign brands, personally involved in the 2022 German supplement case.

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