Japan Trademark Registration:
Cost, Fees & Complete Filing Guide
for Foreign Businesses
Everything international companies need to know — official JPO fees, attorney costs,
filing routes (direct vs Madrid Protocol), timeline, and common pitfalls.
⚡ Quick Answer: Japan Trademark Fees at a Glance
※ Exchange rates are approximate. JPO fees are fixed; attorney fees vary by firm. Free preliminary search available. Free consultation →
📋 Table of Contents
- Why Register a Trademark in Japan?
- Types of Costs Involved
- Official JPO Fees — Filing & Registration
- Understanding Nice Classes (and Why They Matter)
- Filing Routes: Direct JPO vs Madrid Protocol
- Requirements for Foreign Applicants
- Step-by-Step: The Registration Process
- Additional Costs That May Arise
- Pre-Filing Checklist for International Businesses
- Note for UK-Based Applicants (Post-Brexit)
- FAQ
1. Why Register a Trademark in Japan?
Japan is the world’s third-largest economy and one of Asia’s most active consumer markets — home to major platforms including Rakuten, Amazon Japan, and Yahoo! Japan Shopping. For any brand operating or expanding into Japan, trademark registration is not optional.
⚠ Japan is a First-to-File Country
Whoever files first wins — regardless of who created or first used the brand. Opportunistic “trademark squatters” actively monitor foreign brands and race to register them ahead of the legitimate owner. File before you launch, not after problems arise.
- Exclusive right to use your brand name, logo or slogan in Japan for specified goods/services
- Legal basis to stop infringers — injunctions, damages, and customs seizures
- Brand registry protection on Japanese e-commerce platforms (Rakuten, Amazon Japan)
- Commercial asset: a registered mark can be licensed, franchised, or sold
- Priority rights when filing in other countries later (Paris Convention, 6-month window)
2. Types of Costs Involved
Japan trademark registration costs fall into four categories:
- Filing fee (official JPO fee)Paid to the Japan Patent Office at the time of application. Amount varies by number of classes.
- Registration fee (official JPO fee)Paid after examination, upon receiving a notice of allowance. Choose 5-year or 10-year term.
- Pre-filing clearance searchSearching J-PlatPat for conflicting marks. Can be done free yourself, or by your attorney (BrandAgent offers this free).
- Attorney / agent feesLegally required for foreign applicants without a Japan address. Fees vary by firm and case complexity.
The “filing fee + registration fee” pair forms the unavoidable base cost. Additional costs — office action responses, appeals — arise only in contested cases.
3. Official JPO Fees — Filing & Registration
All fees below are set by the Japan Patent Office. They are the same regardless of which attorney you use.
| Fee Item | 1 Class · 5-year | 1 Class · 10-year | 2 Classes · 5-year | 2 Classes · 10-year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Filing Fee
Paid at application
|
¥12,000 | ¥12,000 | ¥20,600 | ¥20,600 |
| Registration Fee
Paid upon allowance
|
¥17,200 | ¥32,900 | ¥34,400 | ¥65,800 |
| Total JPO Fees | ¥29,200 | ¥44,900 | ¥55,000 | ¥86,400 |
📌 How fees scale with additional classes
Filing fee: ¥12,000 base (covers 1 class) + ¥8,600 per additional class
Registration fee: ¥17,200 (5-year) or ¥32,900 (10-year) × number of classes
Renewal fee (every 10 years): ¥43,600 per class
The 10-year registration option is more cost-efficient long-term. The renewal fee after 10 years (¥43,600/class) is higher than the initial 10-year registration fee (¥32,900/class), so locking in 10 years at the start saves money over the full lifecycle of your mark.
4. Understanding Nice Classes (and Why They Matter)
Japan uses the Nice Classification system (45 classes: Classes 1–34 for goods, Classes 35–45 for services). Each additional class increases both the filing fee and the registration fee.
- Too few classes: Your brand is only protected for the goods/services listed — competitors can register your mark for uncovered categories
- Too many classes: Unnecessary fees; unused classes are vulnerable to cancellation after 3 years of non-use in Japan
- Practical approach: Cover your core business today, plus one or two adjacent classes for near-term expansion
⚠ Non-Use Cancellation Risk
In Japan, a registered trademark that has not been used for 3 consecutive years can be cancelled by any interested third party. Only register classes you genuinely intend to use, and keep records of use (packaging, advertising, invoices, Japan-targeted websites).
5. Filing Routes: Direct JPO Filing vs Madrid Protocol
Foreign companies have two routes to register a trademark in Japan. Both routes require a local Japanese representative if you have no Japan-based address.
| Factor | 🇯🇵 Direct National Filing (JPO) | 🌐 Madrid Protocol (WIPO) |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Japan-only or Japan-priority registration | Registering in 3+ countries simultaneously |
| Cost | Lower for single-country filing | More cost-effective for multiple countries at once |
| Examiner dialogue | ✔ Direct, flexible communication with JPO | ✘ Communication routed via WIPO; less flexible |
| Provisional refusal risk | ✔ Manageable process with flexible responses | ✘ Frequent; strict 3-month response deadline |
| Timeline | ~10–14 months (smooth cases) | Often similar or longer due to refusals |
| Language | Filed in Japanese by your representative | English application; JP translation required within 16 months |
| Dependency risk | ✔ Independent of home-country registration | ✘ Tied to base application for 5 years (“central attack” risk) |
| Our recommendation | Recommended for most businesses | Consider if filing in 3+ countries simultaneously |
⚠ Madrid Protocol Warning for Japan
The JPO issues provisional refusals in a large share of Madrid Protocol designations — and the response deadline is only 3 months (extendable once by 3 months). Missing this deadline means automatic abandonment. You will still need a Japanese attorney to respond. For high-value or mission-critical marks, direct national filing offers significantly more control.
6. Requirements for Foreign Applicants
Japan’s trademark system is fully open to foreign nationals and companies. There is one key legal requirement:
✔ Legal Requirement for Foreign Applicants
Any applicant without a permanent address or business office in Japan must appoint a Japanese Trademark Attorney (弁理士, Benrishi) to conduct all JPO procedures — including filing, office action responses, and registration fee payment.
- Power of Attorney: Not required for initial filing, but needed for appeals and assignments
- Language: Main application filed in Japanese; English documents must be translated within 16 months of filing
- Katakana / Kanji versions: Strongly recommended — register your brand in both English and Japanese script. Japanese consumers naturally transliterate foreign names into katakana, and a competitor could register that transliteration first
- Priority claim: Filed in your home country (Paris Convention member)? Claim a 6-month priority right for Japan from your home filing date
7. Step-by-Step: The Japan Trademark Registration Process
- Preliminary Clearance Search Search J-PlatPat (JPO’s free database) for identical or similar marks. A professional search by your attorney substantially reduces refusal risk. BrandAgent provides this free of charge.
- Strategy: Decide Classes and Mark Versions Determine Nice Classes to cover. Decide whether to file the English mark, a katakana transliteration, a Japanese translation, or all three. Each version requires a separate application.
- File the Application with the JPO Your Japanese attorney submits the application electronically. The filing date becomes your priority date — critical in Japan’s first-to-file system.
- Formal Examination The JPO checks that the application meets all formal requirements. Typically takes 1–2 months.
- Substantive Examination A JPO examiner reviews distinctiveness (absolute grounds) and conflicts with earlier marks (relative grounds). This phase typically takes 6–12 months.
- Office Action Response (if issued) If the examiner raises objections, your attorney files written arguments and/or amendments within 3 months. Expert representation makes a decisive difference at this stage.
- Publication for Opposition (2 months) Approved marks are published. Any third party may file an opposition during this window.
- Notice of Allowance — Pay Registration Fee Payment must be made within 30 days. Choose 5-year or 10-year term upfront.
- Registration and Certificate Issued The mark is recorded in the JPO register. An electronic certificate is issued. Rights are valid for 10 years from the registration date, renewable indefinitely.
Typical total timeline: 10–14 months for uncontested cases. Complex refusals or opposition proceedings can extend this to 2–3 years.
8. Additional Costs That May Arise
Office Action Response (Refusal Response)
If the JPO issues a refusal notification, your attorney files a written opinion (意見書) and/or amendment (補正書) within 3 months. No official JPO fee applies for the response itself — but attorney preparation costs apply.
BrandAgent charges ¥25,000 (excl. tax) for an office action response.
Appeal against Refusal Decision (審判)
If the initial refusal is upheld, you may appeal to the JPO’s Trial and Appeal Division (拒絶査定不服審判). This is a formal proceeding carrying higher fees and longer timelines. Always discuss the realistic prospects with your attorney before committing to an appeal — weigh the expected cost against the likelihood of success and the commercial value of the mark.
Renewal (every 10 years)
Official JPO renewal fee: ¥43,600 per class. This can be paid in two instalments (first: ¥22,800/class; second: ¥25,500/class). No proof of use is required for renewal, and the number of classes can be reduced at renewal time.
9. Pre-Filing Checklist for International Businesses
✅ Before Filing Your Japan Trademark Application
- Run a clearance search on J-PlatPat for identical and similar marks
- Identify the correct Nice Classes for your current and near-future products/services
- Decide whether to register the English mark, a katakana version, or both (recommended: both)
- Appoint a qualified Japanese trademark attorney (legally required for foreign applicants)
- Check whether you can claim priority from a home-country filing (6-month Paris Convention window)
- Budget for potential office action responses (¥25,000–¥80,000 in attorney fees)
- Choose between Madrid Protocol and direct national filing based on your strategy
- Plan to maintain genuine use of the mark in Japan within 3 years of registration
10. Note for UK-Based Applicants (Post-Brexit)
🇬🇧 UK businesses: what changed after Brexit
Prior to 31 December 2020, EU trademark registrations (EUTMs) automatically covered the UK. This is no longer the case. UK businesses now require a separate UK trademark registration alongside any EU or Japan registrations.
For Japan-specific filings, Brexit has no direct impact — the process and costs are identical for all foreign applicants regardless of nationality. If you hold an international registration via Madrid Protocol, ensure your UK base application or registration remains valid — it underpins your international registration for the first 5 years.
11. Frequently Asked Questions
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