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Practical Answer — China Trademark Before Manufacturing

China Trademark Filing Checklist Before Manufacturing

By Peter Lin, Founder, China IP Gateway · July 2026

This is a practical pre-filing review checklist, not a filing guide. Use it to identify what questions to address before a trademark review or filing discussion.

In short

Before manufacturing in China, overseas brands should assess: which marks need China protection (English, Chinese-character, logo), which classes and subclasses are relevant, the correct applicant entity, whether factory or packaging supplier exposure has already occurred, and whether anyone else has already filed. This checklist helps identify what a trademark review should cover before filing begins.

English mark

Is the English brand name clear and ready to file?
Have you done a China availability search for the English mark?
Are there existing registrations or pending applications for the same or similar mark in China?
Is the English mark used in its word form, stylised form, or both?

Chinese-character mark

Does your brand have a Chinese-character version or transliteration?
If not, should one be developed and registered before factory disclosure?
Have you checked whether a Chinese-character equivalent of your brand name has already been filed by someone else?
Is a phonetic transliteration, semantic translation, or both relevant for your product category?

Logo mark

Do you have a logo or device mark that should be filed separately?
In China, word marks and logo marks are typically filed separately
Is the logo finalised and ready to file?
Is the logo or device associated with packaging, labels, or product design that will be visible to Chinese suppliers?

Class and subclass

What is the correct Nice class for your primary product or service?
China uses a subclass system — the relevant subclass within the class matters
Does your product fall in a subclass where competitors or squatters are active?
Are there secondary classes that are relevant (e.g., Class 35 for retail/e-commerce, Class 40 for manufacturing services)?

Applicant name

Who is the correct applicant — individual or legal entity?
Is the applicant entity registered and able to file in China?
Is the same entity the actual owner of the brand and the one that will use the mark?
Have identification or incorporation documents been prepared for the filing?

Before supplier exposure

Has your brand name or packaging been shared with any Chinese factory, agent, or distributor?
If yes, was an NNN agreement in place before disclosure?
Has your brand name appeared on any Chinese marketplace, shipping label, or Alibaba listing?
Is filing recommended before the next supplier contact, sample, or production stage?

Before packaging or sample disclosure

Will the brand name or logo appear on sample packaging shared with a Chinese supplier?
Will packaging files, label artwork, or product images be shared before a trademark application is filed?
If packaging will be reviewed by a packaging vendor or supplier, has a trademark filing been started?

What if someone has already filed your brand?

If a Chinese supplier, factory, distributor, or unrelated party has already filed your brand at CNIPA, the options depend on the filing stage and available evidence:

Still pending or in publication period

Opposition may be available — timing is critical

Already registered

Invalidation on bad-faith grounds, or non-use cancellation after 3+ years

Gaps in class or subclass coverage

Parallel filing in your own name may still be possible

Chinese-character mark not filed by the squatter

Your Chinese-character mark may still be available for registration

How China IP Gateway can help

China IP Gateway can help overseas brands work through this checklist — reviewing the English mark, Chinese-character mark, logo, class and subclass, applicant structure, and supplier exposure timeline before a filing decision is made. The starting point is a trademark availability review, not a rushed filing. This checklist is designed to support a review conversation, not replace it.

Outcomes depend on the facts, search results, and CNIPA examination. No registration is guaranteed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I file a China trademark before contacting any Chinese factory?

For most overseas brands, yes. China uses a first-to-file trademark system. Once your brand name, logo, or packaging is visible to Chinese factories, distributors, sourcing agents, or trading companies, the risk of third-party filing increases. Filing before meaningful factory disclosure reduces this risk. The specific timing depends on your stage, budget, and disclosure plan.

Do I need to file both the English mark and a Chinese-character version?

Not always — but for many overseas brands entering the Chinese market or working with Chinese manufacturers, having only the English mark creates an exposure gap. Chinese consumers, retailers, and supply chain partners often use a Chinese-character name for a foreign brand. If you do not file it, someone else may. Whether a Chinese-character mark is needed depends on your distribution model, product category, and brand visibility in China.

Which class should I file in China?

The class and subclass depend on your product type and business model. China's trademark system is subclass-sensitive — filing in the right class but the wrong subclass may not protect the specific goods you need. The goal is targeted coverage based on how your brand is actually used, not the broadest available option. A trademark review before filing helps identify the right scope.

What if a Chinese supplier or factory has already filed my trademark?

Check the CNIPA record first: applicant name, filing date, class, subclass, and current status. If the mark is still pending, opposition may be available. If already registered, invalidation or non-use cancellation may apply. In some cases, parallel filing in different classes or subclasses may also be possible. Each path depends on the specific record and evidence.

Should I file in my own name or my company's name?

This depends on your business structure. For most overseas companies, the trademark applicant should be the legal entity that owns the brand — typically the company, not an individual. For individuals or sole traders, filing in the correct name with the correct identification documents is important. Using the wrong applicant entity can create complications for enforcement, licensing, or assignments later.

Should I choose the cheapest China trademark filing option?

The cheapest option may miss important issues such as applicant name, English mark, Chinese-character mark, logo, class and subclass coverage, and supplier exposure timing. The better first question is whether the filing strategy matches how the brand will be used or exposed in China — not how to file at the lowest cost. A trademark that is filed in the wrong class, under the wrong applicant, or without a Chinese-character version may leave the brand exposed in exactly the situations that matter most.

Written by

Peter Lin

Founder & China Supplier Control Lead, China IP Gateway

Peter Lin works with overseas brands on China trademark review, Chinese-character mark strategy, subclass guidance, and supplier-side brand exposure before and during China manufacturing engagement.

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