Back to Blog

How to Register a Logo as a Trademark

Your logo is often the most recognizable element of your brand. Learning how to register a logo as a trademark is essential for protecting this valuable visual asset and preventing competitors from copying or imitating your distinctive design. A registered logo trademark gives you powerful legal tools to enforce your rights and build lasting brand equity. PerspireIP helps businesses navigate the specific requirements and considerations involved in registering logos as trademarks.

Why Logo Trademark Registration Matters

A logo trademark registration provides you with a legal monopoly on the use of your logo design in connection with your goods and services. Without registration, your rights are limited to the geographic area where you use the logo, and enforcement is significantly more difficult and expensive. Registration creates a public record of your ownership, deters infringers, and gives you the ® symbol to signal your protected status.

Logo trademarks are particularly valuable because visual brand elements can be just as recognizable — or more so — than word marks. The McDonald’s golden arches, the Nike swoosh, and the Apple logo are all logo trademarks worth billions of dollars. Protecting your logo early establishes ownership rights before competitors can copy your design or register a confusingly similar logo.

Types of Logo Marks: Standard Character vs Design Mark

When you register a logo as a trademark, you need to understand the difference between a standard character mark and a design mark (also called a special form mark). A standard character mark protects the text of your brand name regardless of font, style, or color. A design mark protects the specific visual representation of your logo, including its graphical elements, stylization, and color scheme.

If your logo includes both text and design elements, you may want to file separate applications for the word mark (standard character) and the combined logo mark (design mark). This dual-filing strategy provides broader protection because the standard character registration covers any stylized version of the name, while the design mark registration covers the specific logo design.

Preparing Your Logo for Trademark Registration

To register a logo as a trademark, you must submit a clear representation of the logo in your application. The USPTO requires that the image be clear, sharp, and suitable for reproduction at various sizes. File format requirements include JPG files at specific size and resolution requirements. Poor quality images lead to requirements from the examiner and can slow down your application.

  • Submit a high-quality JPG image of your logo meeting USPTO specifications
  • Ensure the logo is complete and final — you cannot substantially change it after filing
  • Decide whether to claim color as a feature of the mark or file in black and white
  • Prepare a written description of the mark if it contains design elements
  • Identify all literal elements (words or letters) that appear in the logo

Should You File in Color or Black and White?

One important decision when you register a logo as a trademark is whether to file the logo in color or in black and white. Filing in color means your trademark registration specifically covers the logo in those colors, which can limit your protection because variations in color might be considered different marks. Filing in black and white provides broader protection because it covers the design in any color combination.

PerspireIP typically recommends filing one black-and-white application for the broadest design protection and, if color is a distinctive and important feature of your brand identity, also filing a color application. This dual-filing strategy maximizes both the breadth and specificity of your logo trademark protection.

The Description of the Mark

When you register a logo as a trademark and the logo contains design elements, the USPTO requires a written description of the mark. This description must accurately identify all significant visual elements of the logo. For a logo that contains a stylized bird and the word “Fly,” the description might read: “The mark consists of a stylized bird in flight positioned above the word FLY in bold capital letters.”

If you are claiming color as a feature of the mark, the description must also identify the colors and where they appear: “The mark consists of a blue circle containing a white stylized letter M. The color blue is claimed as a feature of the mark.” PerspireIP drafts precise mark descriptions that accurately capture your logo and satisfy USPTO requirements.

Design Search Codes for Logo Trademarks

When you register a logo as a trademark, the USPTO assigns design search codes to your mark based on its visual elements. These codes, drawn from the USPTO Design Search Code Manual, are used to search for similar design marks in the trademark database. The examiner uses these codes to identify potentially conflicting logos registered in the same or related classes.

Design search codes cover categories like geometric shapes, humans and human characteristics, animals, plants, celestial bodies, buildings and structures, and many others. A thorough pre-filing logo trademark search must include searches across all relevant design codes to identify potential conflicts that a word search alone would miss.

Specimen Requirements for Logo Trademarks

Like any trademark application, a use-in-commerce logo trademark application requires a specimen showing the logo in actual commercial use. For goods, the specimen might be a photograph of the product packaging bearing the logo. For services, it might be a screenshot of your website displaying the logo in connection with the described services.

The specimen must show the logo substantially as it appears in the application. If the logo on the specimen looks significantly different from the logo image in the application, the examiner may issue a specimen refusal. PerspireIP reviews specimens before submission to ensure they meet USPTO requirements and accurately reflect the mark as filed.

Protecting Your Logo Internationally

Once you have registered your logo as a trademark in the United States, you should consider international protection if you do business globally. The Madrid Protocol allows you to extend your US logo trademark registration to over 130 countries through a single international filing. International logo trademark protection is particularly important in countries with first-to-file trademark systems, where a bad actor could register your logo design before you expand into that market.

Common Pitfalls in Logo Trademark Applications

Logo trademark applications have unique pitfalls that applicants should understand before filing. One common mistake is submitting a logo that is still in draft form rather than the final version. Once a trademark application is filed, you generally cannot make substantial changes to the mark without filing a new application. If your logo evolves after filing — which often happens with startups whose brand identity is still maturing — you may end up with a registration for an old version of your logo that no longer matches your current branding.

Another common pitfall is filing a logo trademark application that includes elements you do not own. If your logo incorporates a stock image, a photograph, a font, or other third-party creative elements, the copyright in those elements belongs to their creator, not to you. Using third-party elements in your logo without appropriate licenses can create both copyright infringement issues and complications in your trademark application. PerspireIP recommends that clients confirm they own or have licensed all elements of their logo before filing a trademark application.

Claiming color as a feature of the mark when the logo is primarily used in black and white — or vice versa — is another frequent error. The color version and the black-and-white version of a logo are generally considered different marks for trademark purposes. If you file a color mark application but primarily use the logo in black and white (or across various color schemes), your specimen may not match your mark as filed, potentially leading to a refusal. PerspireIP helps clients align their filing strategy with their actual commercial use to avoid these mismatches.

Finally, failing to clear the design elements of a logo through a comprehensive design mark search is a critical mistake. Many applicants search for their brand name but neglect to search for visually similar logos. As a result, their logo trademark application may be refused due to likelihood of confusion with a design mark they never knew existed. PerspireIP conducts full design code searches as part of every logo trademark clearance, ensuring that no visual conflict goes undetected before filing.

Logo Trademark Protection Beyond Registration

Registering your logo as a trademark is an important first step, but ongoing protection requires active monitoring, consistent use, and strategic enforcement. After registration, you should use your logo consistently across all brand touchpoints, always accompanied by the ® symbol to signal your protected status. Any significant changes to the logo should trigger a new trademark search and potentially a new application to protect the updated design.

Logo monitoring should track both identical and similar logo uses across all relevant channels, including USPTO applications, competitor websites, social media, e-commerce platforms, and physical retail environments. PerspireIP’s logo trademark monitoring services use image recognition technology to identify visual similarities that keyword-based monitoring would miss, giving clients comprehensive protection against logo imitation across digital and physical channels.

Copyright protection for your logo complements trademark protection by covering direct copying of the artistic elements of your logo design. While trademark law requires proof of likelihood of confusion, copyright law prohibits copying regardless of consumer confusion. For logos that are sufficiently original to qualify for copyright protection, registering the logo with the US Copyright Office creates a second line of legal defense against imitators and provides access to statutory damages that can be more easily quantified than trademark damages. PerspireIP recommends copyright registration for all logos that qualify, as part of a complete brand protection strategy.

Conclusion

Registering your logo as a trademark is one of the most important steps you can take to protect your brand’s visual identity. From choosing between color and black-and-white filing to preparing the perfect specimen, each decision matters. PerspireIP provides expert guidance through every stage of the logo trademark registration process, ensuring your visual brand receives the strong, enforceable protection it deserves. Contact PerspireIP today to begin protecting your logo trademark.