Trademark Registration for Ludhiana Businesses
Ludhiana, Punjab’s largest city and one of India’s most important industrial cities, is a major manufacturing hub known for its hosiery and knitwear production, bicycle manufacturing, machine tools, and auto components. The city is often described as the Manchester of India on account of its textile and manufacturing output. Ludhiana’s export-oriented industries make trademark protection an essential investment for businesses competing in national and international markets.
S.S. Rana & Co. is one of India’s oldest and most respected intellectual property law firms, practising IP law since 1989. Our trademark attorneys handle registration for Ludhiana-based businesses, covering brand names, logos, slogans, product shapes, label marks, and sound marks. We serve clients ranging from knitwear exporters and bicycle manufacturers to machine tool producers and FMCG companies operating from Ludhiana’s industrial estates.
A trademark application filed in India confers nationwide rights. Registration protects your brand name and logo across all states and territories, including Punjab, and gives the proprietor the exclusive legal right to use the mark in connection with the registered goods or services. Without registration, a brand owner is limited to common law passing-off remedies and legal remedy of trademark infringement is not available.
OUR SERVICES
Trademark Registration Services for Ludhiana Businesses
S.S. Rana and Co. provides the full spectrum of trademark services, from initial brand clearance through to registration, renewal, enforcement, and international expansion.
Trademark Search and Clearance
Comprehensive availability search on the IP India database and WIPO Global Brand Database across identical and deceptively similar marks in all relevant Nice classes. Written legal opinion on risk before filing.
Application Filing and Prosecution
Electronic filing with the Trade Marks Registry, classification advice under the Nice Classification, and end-to-end prosecution including examination reply drafting, hearing representation, and registration certificate procurement.
Examination Report Replies
Drafting of legally argued replies to examination reports, citing objections under Sections 9 and 11 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, addressing lack of distinctiveness, deceptive similarity, and other grounds of refusal.
Opposition and Rectification Proceedings
Representation in inter partes proceedings, filing notices of opposition against conflicting third-party marks, defending against opposition, and rectification petitions before the registry and High Court.
International Trademark Filing
Filing of international applications under the Madrid Protocol via WIPO, covering 130-plus member countries through a single application. Direct national and regional filings via Paris Convention, EUIPO, GCC, and ARIPO also handled. The Firm is also a single point of contact for filing trademark applications in the SAARC region.
Renewal, Watch and Portfolio Management
Trademark renewal before the 10-year statutory deadline, ongoing trademark watch services to monitor new conflicting filings, and full portfolio management for multi-mark, multi-class portfolios.
Enforcement and Infringement Action
Cease and desist notices, Customs IP rights recordal, and trademark infringement litigation before the Gujarat High Court and Commercial Courts, including applications for interim injunctions.
Well-Known Trademark Applications
Preparation and filing of applications for recognition of a trademark as a Well-Known Mark under Section 11(6) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, conferring protection across all classes.
PROCESS GUIDE
How to Register a Trademark in India: Step-by-Step
Trademark registration in India is governed by the Trade Marks Act, 1999 and the Trade Marks Rules, 2017. The process is conducted electronically through the IP India e-filing portal.
- Trademark Search: A thorough search of the IP India database is carried out to assess whether any identical or deceptively similar marks exist in the same or related Nice classes. A written legal opinion is provided before the application is filed.
- Classification of Goods and Services: Every trademark application must specify the goods or services covered, classified under the Nice Classification (10th edition), which groups goods and services into 45 classes. Correct classification is essential as an incorrectly classified application can limit the scope of protection or be refused at the stage of examination.
- Preparation and Electronic Filing: The application is filed electronically through the IP India e-filing portal. The prescribed government fee is paid online at the time of filing. On successful filing, a unique application number is generated; the application date constitutes the priority date for the applicant’s rights.
- Examination by the Trade Marks Registry: The Trade Marks Registry examines the application on absolute and relative grounds of refusal. If the examiner raises objections under Sections 9 or Section 11, an examination report is issued, typically within 12 to 18 months. The applicant has 30 days from receipt of the report to file a reply.
- Advertisement in the Trade Marks Journal: If the examiner is satisfied, the mark is advertised in the Trade Marks Journal, published on the IP India website weekly. Advertisement opens a four-month window during which third parties may file a notice of opposition.
- Opposition Period: During the four-month post-advertisement period, any person may oppose the registration of the trademark. If no opposition is filed in the prescribed period, or opposition concludes in the applicant’s favour, the mark proceeds to registration.
- Registration and Certificate: The Trade Marks Registry issues a certificate of registration. The mark is registered as of the date of the original application, valid for 10 years and renewable indefinitely in successive 10-year periods.
GOVERNMENT FEES
Trademark Registration Fees in India
The following fees are official government charges payable to the Trade Marks Registry of India, prescribed under the Trade Marks Rules, 2017. They are separate from the professional fees of S.S. Rana and Co., which are quoted on request.
| Applicant Category | Filing Method | Fee per Class | Statutory Basis |
| Individual / DPIIT Startup / Small Enterprise | E-filing (online) | Rs 4,500 | Trade Marks Rules 2017, Third Schedule |
| Individual / DPIIT Startup / Small Enterprise | Physical filing | Rs 5,000 | Trade Marks Rules 2017, Third Schedule |
| Company / LLP / Partnership | E-filing (online) | Rs 9,000 | Trade Marks Rules 2017, Third Schedule |
| Company / LLP / Partnership | Physical filing | Rs 10,000 | Trade Marks Rules 2017, Third Schedule |
Ludhiana’s Trade Marks Registry and Key Sectors
The Trade Marks Registry
The Trade Marks Registry office with territorial jurisdiction over Punjab is located at Intellectual Property India, New Delhi Office, Boudhik Sampada Bhawan, Plot No. 32, Sector 14, Dwarka, New Delhi – 110 075. All applications are filed electronically through the IP India e-filing portal.
Industry Sectors Commonly Requiring Trademark Protection in Ludhiana
- Hosiery and Knitwear: Ludhiana is India’s largest knitwear and hosiery manufacturing centre. Garment and knitwear brands are sold across India and exported globally. Trademark protection for knitwear brand names and labels is typically required in Class 25.
- Bicycle Manufacturing: Ludhiana produces a significant share of India’s bicycles. Bicycle brand names and component marks require trademark protection in Class 12.
- Machine Tools and Auto Components: Ludhiana’s machine tool and auto component manufacturers require trademark protection for product brands in Classes 7 and 12.
- Textiles and Woollen Fabrics: Punjab’s textile sector, with Ludhiana as a major centre for woollen fabrics and blended yarns, generates trademark requirements for fabric brand names in Classes 23, 24 and 25.
- Fasteners and Hardware: Ludhiana is a significant producer of fasteners, bolts, and industrial hardware. Brand names for hardware manufacturers require trademark protection in Classes 6 and 7.
The Punjab and Haryana High Court and IP Enforcement
The Punjab and Haryana High Court, located in Chandigarh, exercises jurisdiction over trademark infringement and passing-off matters arising in Punjab, including Ludhiana. The court has a Commercial Division that handles IP disputes under the Commercial Courts Act, 2015. S.S. Rana & Co. engages senior advocates appearing before the Punjab and Haryana High Court for enforcement matters, working in coordination with the firm’s prosecution team.
Trademark Registration in Ludhiana – Frequently Asked Questions
Trademarks-Ludhiana-faq
The Trade Marks Registry office with territorial jurisdiction over Punjab is located at Intellectual Property India, New Delhi Office, Boudhik Sampada Bhawan, Plot No. 32, Sector 14, Dwarka, New Delhi – 110 075. All applications are now filed electronically through the IP India e-filing portal.
The official government fee is Rs 9,000 per class per application for companies, LLPs, and partnerships when filed electronically. Individuals, DPIIT-recognised startups, and small enterprises pay Rs 4,500 per class per application when filing electronically. These fees are prescribed under the Third Schedule of the Trade Marks Rules, 2017 and are separate from professional fees.
After electronic filing, the application is examined, typically within 12 to 18 months. In straightforward matters with no objections or oppositions, registration is typically achieved within 18 to 24 months from filing. The registered trademark is valid for 10 years from the date of application and is renewable indefinitely.
Required: (1) clear representation of the trademark; (2) applicant’s full legal name and address; (3) entity type; (4) description of goods or services classified under the Nice Classification; (5) signed Power of Attorney in favour of the authorised trademark attorney; and (6) for companies and LLPs, a copy of the certificate of incorporation. Startups claiming the concessional fee must also submit a valid DPIIT recognition certificate.
The TM symbol may be used by any business claiming trademark rights regardless of registration status. Use of TM provides no statutory protection by itself under Indian law. The R symbol may only be used after the Trade Marks Registry has issued a certificate of registration. Under Section 107 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999, falsely representing a trademark as registered is a criminal offence punishable with imprisonment of up to three years, or a fine, or both.
After examination, the Trade Marks Registry may issue an examination report citing objections under Section 9 (absolute grounds: lack of distinctiveness, descriptiveness) or Section 11 (relative grounds: deceptive similarity with earlier marks). The applicant must file a written reply within 30 days of receiving the report through the IP India e-filing portal. If the reply is not accepted, a hearing is scheduled. S.S. Rana and Co. drafts examination report replies and represents applicants at hearings.
Yes. The Madrid Protocol, administered by WIPO, allows a single international application to designate 130-plus member countries. India acceded to the Madrid Protocol in 2013. Alternatively, Paris Convention direct national filings or regional systems such as EUIPO (European Union), GCC (Gulf), ARIPO (Africa) may be appropriate for specific target markets. S.S. Rana and Co.’s Global IP Filing team advises on the most cost-effective multi-country strategy.