⚠ Trademark Examination Report Received?

How to Resolve a Trademark Objection in India

Received an objection on your trademark application? You have only 30 days to respond, or your application is abandoned forever. Get an expert-drafted reply filed on the IP India portal — starting at just Rs.4,999.

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  • Review of Examination Report
  • Reply Drafting (Section 9 & 11)
  • User Affidavit Preparation
  • Filing via Form TM-M on IP India
  • Hearing Representation if Needed
  • Expert CA / TM Attorney Support
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1 Place Order
2 Share Examination Report
3 Expert Reply Drafting
4 Filed on IP India Portal
5 Tracked Till Journal Publication

What Is a Trademark Objection and Why Did You Receive One?

After you file a trademark application with IP India, it goes through an examination stage. If the Trademark Examiner finds any issue — whether your mark is too generic, too similar to an existing mark, or your paperwork is incomplete — they issue an Examination Report raising an objection under Section 9 or Section 11 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999. This is a normal part of the process and does not mean your application is rejected.

However, a trademark objection comes with a strict response window. This guide explains exactly why objections are raised, how to draft a winning reply, what documents you need, and how SetupFiling.in helps you respond correctly — for a professional fee of just Rs.4,999.

⚠ Critical Deadline: You have only 30 days from the date of the examination report to file your reply. If you miss this deadline, your application is marked Abandoned — permanently losing your application number and priority date.

30 Days
Time limit to file a reply to an examination report
70%+
Trademark applications in India receive at least one objection
2
Main objection types — absolute (Sec 9) and relative (Sec 11) grounds
₹4,999
Professional fee for expert objection reply via setupfiling.in

9 Most Common Grounds for Trademark Objection in India

Understanding why your application was objected to is the first step toward drafting a strong reply. Here are the grounds most frequently cited in trademark registration examination reports.

1. Lack of Distinctiveness — Section 9(1)(a)

The examiner believes your mark cannot distinguish your goods or services from those of others. This is common with very simple words, single letters, or basic shapes that fail to function as a brand identifier in the eyes of an average consumer.

2. Descriptive of Goods or Services — Section 9(1)(b)

If your mark merely describes the quality, quantity, intended purpose, value, or geographical origin of your goods or services — for example, a word like “Fresh” for a dairy brand — the examiner may object on the ground that it is descriptive and not registrable as-is.

3. Generic or Common to the Trade — Section 9(1)(c)

Marks that consist of words customary in the trade or generic for a category of goods (for example, calling a bakery brand “Bakery”) are objected to, since allowing one business to monopolise such terms would be unfair to all traders.

4. Deceptive as to Nature or Origin — Section 9(2)(a)

If your mark could deceive or confuse the public about the nature, quality, or geographical origin of your goods or services — for instance, using a foreign place name for a product not made there — the examiner may raise this objection.

5. Hurts Religious Sentiments or Is Scandalous — Section 9(2)(b)/(d)

Marks containing matter likely to hurt religious sentiments of any class of Indian citizens, or comprising scandalous or obscene content, are objected to under public policy grounds and cannot be registered regardless of distinctiveness.

6. Similar or Identical to an Existing Mark — Section 11(1)

The most common objection. The examiner’s automated search has found an identical or deceptively similar trademark already registered or pending for similar goods or services, creating a likelihood of confusion among consumers.

7. Conflict with a Well-Known Trademark — Section 11(2)

If your mark is similar to a trademark that IP India recognises as “well-known”, an objection can be raised even if the well-known mark is registered for entirely different goods or services, due to the broader protection such marks enjoy.

8. Missing or Incorrect User Affidavit

If you claimed “proposed to be used” but are already using the mark, or claimed prior use without filing the required affidavit and supporting evidence, the examiner objects asking for a properly notarised user affidavit with proof of use.

9. Incorrect Form TM-48 or Classification

Procedural objections arise when the Power of Attorney (Form TM-48) is missing, incorrectly signed, or the goods and services have been filed under the wrong trademark class — requiring correction before the application can proceed.

Absolute Grounds vs Relative Grounds of Objection

Trademark objections fall into two broad categories under the Trade Marks Act, 1999. Knowing which one applies to you determines the entire strategy of your reply.

AspectAbsolute Grounds — Section 9Relative Grounds — Section 11
What it concernsThe inherent qualities of your own markConflict with another party’s existing or well-known mark
Typical reasonMark is descriptive, generic, non-distinctive, or against public policyMark is identical or deceptively similar to a cited mark
Key evidence requiredProof of extensive use, sales figures, advertising spend, acquired distinctivenessSide-by-side comparison, differences in goods/services, honest concurrent use evidence
Common reply strategyArgue acquired distinctiveness through long and continuous useArgue dissimilarity of marks, different trade channels, or obtain a No Objection Certificate (NOC)
Can amendment help?Sometimes — disclaimers on non-distinctive portions may helpLimited — the conflicting mark generally remains the core issue
Outcome if reply succeedsMark proceeds to publication in the Trademark JournalMark proceeds to publication, subject to opposition by the cited mark’s owner

What Happens if You Get These Objections — and How to Handle Them

These are the most frequent situations Indian businesses face after filing a trademark application, and how a correct reply resolves each one.

Objection for a Similar Existing Mark (Section 11)

The examination report cites an earlier mark that looks or sounds similar to yours. A correctly drafted reply highlights the differences in spelling, pronunciation, logo design, target customers, or trade channels, and may include a letter of consent or honest concurrent use evidence to overcome the objection.

Objection for a Descriptive or Generic Mark (Section 9)

If your brand name describes your product, the reply must demonstrate “acquired distinctiveness” — meaning customers now associate the term specifically with your business due to years of use, advertising, sales volume, and media coverage. This requires solid documentary evidence.

Objection for Missing User Affidavit

If you marked your application as “proposed to be used” but were already selling under the brand, or claimed a date of first use without proof, the examiner objects. The fix is a notarised user affidavit stating the correct date of use, supported by invoices, packaging, or website archives.

No Reply Filed Within 30 Days — Application Abandoned

Many applicants miss the 30-day deadline simply because they did not check the IP India portal for updates. The application status changes to “Abandoned”, the application number is lost permanently, and a fresh application with fresh government fees becomes the only option.

Hearing Notice Received After Reply

If the examiner is not satisfied with the written reply, a hearing date is fixed before the Trademark Registrar. Our attorneys appear on your behalf (in person or via video conferencing) with a strengthened set of arguments and additional evidence to secure approval. Learn more about our trademark hearing support.

How to Resolve Your Trademark Objection — 5 Simple Steps

Resolving a trademark objection is a 100% online process through SetupFiling.in. We handle the legal drafting, evidence compilation, and filing within your 30-day window.

1

Place Your Order — Rs.4,999 Professional Fee

Pay online via the secure Razorpay Payment gateway. Your case is instantly assigned to a dedicated trademark expert who begins reviewing your examination report the same day.

2

Share Your Examination Report and Documents

Send us your trademark application number, the examination report copy, and any evidence of use such as invoices, packaging, website screenshots, or advertisements via WhatsApp or email.

3

Expert Review of Objection Grounds

Our trademark attorneys identify whether the objection is on absolute grounds (Section 9), relative grounds (Section 11), or procedural, and build the strongest possible legal arguments and evidence package for your specific case.

4

Drafting and Filing of Reply via Form TM-M

We prepare a detailed written reply, attach the user affidavit and supporting evidence, and file it on the official IP India portal within your 30-day deadline using Form TM-M.

5

Track Status and Attend Hearing if Required

We monitor your application status on your behalf. If the examiner schedules a hearing, our attorneys represent you and argue the case to move your mark toward publication in the Trademark Journal.

🔴 What happens after the reply is accepted? Once the examiner is satisfied, your mark is published in the Trademark Journal for a 4-month opposition period. If no third party opposes it, your registration certificate is issued, and you gain full statutory rights to use the ® symbol.

Documents You Need to Reply to a Trademark Objection

The documentation depends on the type of objection raised, but here is what is commonly required.

DocumentRequired ForPurpose
Examination Report CopyAll objection repliesIdentifies exact grounds of objection and the cited conflicting marks, if any
User Affidavit (Form, notarised)Marks already in commercial useDeclares the genuine date from which the mark has been used in trade
Proof of Use — Invoices, BillsSection 9 (distinctiveness) and use-based affidavitsDemonstrates continuous commercial use and acquired distinctiveness
Advertising & Promotional MaterialSection 9 (distinctiveness) objectionsShows market presence, brand recognition, and consumer association
Comparison Chart / Distinguishing EvidenceSection 11 (similarity) objectionsHighlights visual, phonetic, and conceptual differences from the cited mark
Letter of Consent / NOC (if applicable)Section 11 objections where cited mark owner agreesRemoves the conflict by obtaining written consent from the cited mark’s owner
Signed Form TM-48When filing through an agent (SetupFiling.in)Authorises our attorneys to file the reply and represent you at hearings

What Happens Once Your Trademark Objection Reply Is Accepted?

Successfully overcoming an objection moves your application significantly closer to registration. Here is what changes next.

Application Moves to Publication

Your mark is published in the Trademark Journal, making it publicly viewable on the IP India website and opening the 4-month window for third-party opposition.

Opposition Window Begins

Third parties have 4 months to oppose your mark if they believe it conflicts with their rights. If no opposition is filed, your application proceeds to registration automatically.

Registration Certificate Issued

Once the opposition period passes without any challenge, IP India issues your Trademark Registration certificate, granting you exclusive nationwide rights under the Trade Marks Act, 1999.

Right to Use the ® Symbol

After receiving your certificate, you can legally use the ® symbol on your branding, packaging, website, and marketing — signalling a fully protected, registered brand to customers and competitors.

Full Right to Sue for Infringement

With registration complete, you gain the statutory right to take immediate civil and criminal action against anyone using an identical or deceptively similar mark, without needing to prove passing off.

10-Year Renewable Protection

Your registration is valid for 10 years from the filing date and can be renewed indefinitely. Plan ahead with our trademark renewal service so protection never lapses.

What If You Receive a Trademark Hearing Notice or Opposition?

In some cases, a written reply alone is not enough. SetupFiling.in provides complete end-to-end support so your application keeps moving forward.

Trademark Hearing Representation

If your written reply does not fully satisfy the examiner, a hearing before the Trademark Registrar is scheduled. Our attorneys appear on your behalf with a strengthened case under our Trademark Hearing service.

Trademark Renewal Reminders

Once registered, your trademark must be renewed every 10 years to maintain protection. Our Trademark Renewal service ensures you never miss a renewal deadline.

Logo & Brand Name Registration

If your objection relates to a word mark, registering your logo as a separate trademark can sometimes provide an additional layer of protection while your word mark application is resolved.

Frequently Asked Questions on Resolving Trademark Objections

Direct answers to the most common questions about trademark objections, replies, and the examination process in India.

A trademark objection is raised by the Trademark Examiner at IP India during the examination stage of your application. It is communicated through an Examination Report on the official portal and is based on Section 9 (absolute grounds, such as lack of distinctiveness) or Section 11 (relative grounds, such as conflict with an existing similar mark) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999.
The most common reasons are: your mark is identical or similar to an existing registered or pending trademark, your mark is descriptive or generic for your goods or services, your application is missing a user affidavit for marks already in use, an incorrect or incomplete Form TM-48, or wrong classification of goods and services under your trademark application.
You must file your reply within 30 days from the date the examination report is issued on the IP India portal. The reply is filed online using Form TM-M, supported by written submissions, evidence of use, and legal arguments addressing each objection raised by the examiner.
If no reply is filed within 30 days, the Trademark Registry marks the application status as Abandoned. You lose your application number and priority date permanently, and must file a fresh application with new government fees — risking that someone else registers a similar mark in the meantime.
Yes. If the Trademark Examiner is satisfied with your written reply and the supporting evidence submitted, the application proceeds directly to publication in the Trademark Journal without any hearing. A trademark hearing is only required if the examiner is not satisfied with the written response.
You typically need a copy of the examination report, evidence of prior or continuous use such as invoices, advertisements, packaging and sales figures, a duly notarised user affidavit, comparison details distinguishing your mark from the cited mark, and a signed Form TM-48 authorising your agent to file the reply.
A trademark objection is raised internally by the Trademark Examiner during the examination stage of your own application. A trademark opposition is filed later by a third party who disagrees with your mark after it has been published in the Trademark Journal, within a 4-month opposition window.
Through SetupFiling.in, the professional fee for drafting and filing a trademark objection reply is Rs.4,999. No additional government fee applies for filing the reply since your trademark application is already filed. The government fee of Rs.4,500 applies only when filing a new trademark application.
After the reply is filed, the examiner reviews it. If satisfied, your mark is moved to publication in the Trademark Journal, starting a 4-month opposition window. If the examiner is not satisfied, a hearing date is scheduled where you or your representative can argue the case in person or online.
Yes, in certain cases. If the objection relates to the goods, services, or class description, you can file Form TM-M to amend the application. However, amendments cannot expand the scope of goods or services, or change the trademark itself in a way that alters its core identity.

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