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Last updated: 4 July 2026
Understanding how to register a trademark in Zimbabwe is essential for any business seeking to protect its brand in one of southern Africa’s most dynamic markets. Zimbabwe offers two distinct filing routes, the national route through the Zimbabwe Intellectual Property Office (ZIPO) using the TM1 application form, and the regional route through the African Regional Intellectual Property Organization (ARIPO) under the Banjul Protocol on Marks. The Trade Marks (Amendment) Regulations, 2025, published in Gazette No. 27 on 18 April 2025, introduced revised fee schedules and updated formality requirements that every applicant must now follow.
Meanwhile, the 2026 edition of the Banjul Protocol has refined the regional filing framework, making the choice between national and regional protection more strategically important than ever. This guide walks through every stage of trademark registration in Zimbabwe, from pre-filing searches and TM1 completion to opposition, renewal and the critical ARIPO-versus-ZIPO decision, so businesses can file with confidence.
The first strategic decision for any applicant is whether to pursue trademark registration in Zimbabwe through the national ZIPO route or through ARIPO’s regional system under the Banjul Protocol on Marks (2026 edition). Each path has distinct implications for cost, speed, territorial coverage and enforcement.
Filing directly at ZIPO is typically faster and less expensive when protection is needed in Zimbabwe alone. The applicant deals with a single office, pays fees in local currency, and enforces the resulting registration through Zimbabwean courts. For a small or medium enterprise trading primarily within national borders, the ZIPO trademark route is usually the most efficient choice.
By contrast, ARIPO trademark registration allows an applicant to designate multiple contracting states, including Zimbabwe, in a single application using Form M1. This avoids filing separate applications in each country and can be more cost-effective when protection is needed across several ARIPO member states. However, the regional timeline tends to be longer because ARIPO must examine the application before transmitting it to each designated state for a national acceptance or refusal period.
Trademark registration in Zimbabwe is governed by the Trade Marks Act (Chapter 26:04), which establishes the substantive grounds for registrability, the opposition process, renewal terms and enforcement remedies. The Act is supplemented by the Trade Marks Regulations, which prescribe forms, fees and procedural timelines.
The Trade Marks (Amendment) Regulations, 2025, published in Statutory Instrument 37 of 2025 on 18 April 2025, brought several important updates. The official fee schedule was revised, with increases across filing, search, publication and renewal categories to reflect current economic conditions. Form requirements were tightened, including clearer specifications for digital mark representations and updated certification of documents. These changes took effect on the date of publication in the Gazette.
At the regional level, the 2026 edition of the Banjul Protocol on Marks updated certain ARIPO procedural rules, including refined timelines for the notification of designated states and clarified provisions on the effect of national refusals. Zimbabwe, as a contracting state to the Banjul Protocol, is directly affected by these changes. Any applicant choosing the ARIPO route should ensure their filing complies with the 2026 edition requirements.
Before preparing a TM1 application, conduct a comprehensive trademark search to identify potential conflicts. Three databases should be checked:
A thorough clearance search reduces the risk of objection during examination and opposition, saving both time and fees.
Form TM1 is the prescribed national application form for trademark registration in Zimbabwe. The following information and materials must be provided:
| Item | Required Format | Guidance |
|---|---|---|
| Applicant name and address | Full legal name; physical and postal address | Must match the entity’s registration documents (company certificate or ID for individuals) |
| Mark representation | Clear print reproduction (minimum 5 cm × 5 cm recommended); digital file if filing electronically | For device or combination marks, supply in colour if colour is claimed; word marks should be typed in standard characters |
| Goods/services specification | Classified under the Nice Classification (12th edition in current use) | List the specific goods or services, avoid overly broad descriptions that may attract examination objections |
| Class number(s) | Nice class(es) indicated on the form | Each additional class requires a separate fee payment |
| Priority claim (if any) | Certified copy of the earlier application; details of country, date and number | Paris Convention priority must be claimed within six months of the earliest filing date |
| Power of Attorney | Signed original or notarised copy; no legalisation generally required | Required when filing through an agent or law firm |
Where the applicant appoints an agent, which is mandatory for non-resident applicants, a Power of Attorney must accompany the TM1 or be filed within a prescribed period after filing. The document must be signed by an authorised representative of the applicant. While Zimbabwe does not generally require consular legalisation of the Power of Attorney, it must clearly identify the agent, the applicant and the scope of authority granted.
TM1 applications are filed at ZIPO’s offices in Harare. Payment of the prescribed filing fee is required at the time of filing. Fees may be paid in Zimbabwean dollars (ZWG) or in United States dollars, depending on the prevailing fee schedule published under the Trade Marks (Amendment) Regulations, 2025. Applicants should retain an official receipt and the filing acknowledgment showing the application number and date.
After filing, ZIPO conducts both a formal examination (checking completeness and compliance with the Regulations) and a substantive examination (assessing registrability under the Trade Marks Act). The Registrar may raise objections if the mark is descriptive, deceptive, contrary to public order, or conflicts with an earlier mark. The applicant has an opportunity to respond and overcome objections.
Once accepted, the mark is published in the Zimbabwe IP Journal. Publication opens a statutory opposition window during which any third party may file a notice of opposition.
The opposition period in Zimbabwe runs for two months from the date of publication. Any interested party who believes the mark should not be registered can file a notice of opposition during this period. If no opposition is filed, or if an opposition is decided in the applicant’s favour, ZIPO proceeds to register the mark and issues a certificate of registration.
The fees below are prescribed by the Trade Marks (Amendment) Regulations, 2025, published in Zimbabwe Government Gazette No. 27 of 18 April 2025. Applicants should confirm current amounts directly with ZIPO, as the Registrar may issue further fee circulars.
| Service | Official Fee (indicative, per the 2025 Regulations) |
|---|---|
| Application to register (per class), Form TM1 | As prescribed in the Schedule to SI 37/2025 |
| Preliminary search | As prescribed in the Schedule to SI 37/2025 |
| Publication fee | As prescribed in the Schedule to SI 37/2025 |
| Registration fee | As prescribed in the Schedule to SI 37/2025 |
| Renewal (per class, every 10 years) | As prescribed in the Schedule to SI 37/2025 |
| Late renewal surcharge | As prescribed in the Schedule to SI 37/2025 |
| Recordal of assignment or licence | As prescribed in the Schedule to SI 37/2025 |
Source: Trade Marks (Amendment) Regulations, 2025 (SI 37/2025), Zimbabwe Government Gazette No. 27, 18 April 2025. Applicants should obtain the current fee circular from ZIPO for exact amounts in ZWG or USD.
| ARIPO Service | Fee (USD, indicative) |
|---|---|
| Filing fee (Form M1) | As per ARIPO Schedule of Charges (2026 edition) |
| Designation fee (per designated state) | As per ARIPO Schedule of Charges (2026 edition) |
| Renewal fee (per class, per designated state) | As per ARIPO Schedule of Charges (2026 edition) |
Source: Banjul Protocol on Marks (2026 edition), ARIPO Schedule of Charges. Applicants should verify exact figures on the ARIPO website or by contacting ARIPO directly.
| Stage | Estimated Duration |
|---|---|
| Filing to formal examination | 2–4 weeks |
| Substantive examination | 3–6 months (varies with backlog) |
| Publication in IP Journal | Within weeks of acceptance |
| Opposition period | 2 months from publication |
| Registration and certificate issuance | 1–3 months after close of opposition |
| Total estimated timeline | 8–18 months (unopposed) |
Note: ARIPO regional filings typically take longer because ARIPO must first examine the application before transmitting it to each designated state for national processing. Industry observers estimate 12–24 months for full regional registration through the Banjul Protocol route.
The opposition period in Zimbabwe is a critical stage in the trademark registration process. Under the Trade Marks Act (Chapter 26:04), any person may file a notice of opposition within two months of the date of publication of the accepted mark. The notice must set out the grounds of opposition, typically prior rights, likelihood of confusion, descriptiveness or bad faith.
The applicant then has an opportunity to file a counter-statement. Both parties may submit evidence by way of statutory declarations. The Registrar (or the IP Tribunal, if designated) hears the matter and issues a decision. Either party may appeal to the courts.
Where a mark is registered through ARIPO and Zimbabwe is a designated state, ZIPO retains the right to refuse the designation within the prescribed period under the Banjul Protocol. If no refusal is communicated, the ARIPO registration takes effect in Zimbabwe. Enforcement of both ZIPO and ARIPO registrations is through the Zimbabwean courts, including applications for injunctions, delivery up of infringing goods and damages.
| Issue | ZIPO (National) | ARIPO (Regional) |
|---|---|---|
| Opposition period | 2 months from publication | National office refusal period as prescribed by Banjul Protocol |
| Opposition forum | ZIPO Registrar / IP Tribunal | National office procedures apply to each designated state |
| Appeal | Zimbabwean courts | National courts of the relevant designated state |
A trademark registration in Zimbabwe is valid for an initial period of ten years from the date of registration. Trademark renewal in Zimbabwe must be sought before the expiry of each ten-year term. The Trade Marks Act provides for a grace period after expiry during which the mark may still be renewed upon payment of the standard renewal fee plus a prescribed late surcharge.
If the mark is not renewed within the grace period, it may be removed from the register. Restoration of a lapsed mark is possible in limited circumstances, subject to application and evidence showing the failure to renew was unintentional.
Recordals of changes, including assignments of ownership, licence agreements and changes of name or address, should be filed promptly at ZIPO. Unrecorded assignments may not be enforceable against third parties, and unrecorded licences can create complications in infringement proceedings.
Experienced practitioners emphasise the following points when advising on how to register a trademark in Zimbabwe:
Applicants who choose the ARIPO trademark registration route file using Form M1 under the Banjul Protocol on Marks (2026 edition). The process differs from the national ZIPO filing in several respects:
ARIPO’s office is located in Harare, Zimbabwe, which can be advantageous for applicants who wish to engage directly with the regional body. Contact details are available on the official ARIPO website.
| Issue | ZIPO (National Route) | ARIPO (Regional, Banjul Protocol) |
|---|---|---|
| Territorial reach | Zimbabwe only | Multiple ARIPO contracting states (one application) |
| Filing form | TM1 (national) | M1 (regional) with state designations |
| Filing fees | Per-class fee as prescribed by SI 37/2025 | Filing fee + designation fee per state (ARIPO Schedule of Charges) |
| Typical timeline to registration | 8–18 months (unopposed) | 12–24 months (ARIPO examination + national notification periods) |
| Opposition | 2-month period following publication at ZIPO | National refusal period at each designated state; opposition under local law |
| Enforcement | Zimbabwean courts (straightforward enforcement of national mark) | Zimbabwean courts (ARIPO mark has national effect once accepted) |
| Best for | Zimbabwe-only protection; cost-sensitive applicants | Multi-country brands; exporters targeting several ARIPO member states |
Zimbabwe follows the Nice Classification for the purposes of classifying goods and services in trademark applications. The current 12th edition divides goods into Classes 1–34 and services into Classes 35–45. Correct class selection is fundamental to effective brand protection.
Common examples illustrate the range of registrable marks:
When selecting trademark classes in Zimbabwe, applicants should focus on the goods or services they actually sell or plan to sell within the foreseeable future. Filing in unnecessary classes increases costs without adding practical value, while omitting a relevant class can leave the brand exposed to competing registrations. Consulting the Nice Classification headings and the alphabetical list of goods and services is the starting point; qualified IP counsel can advise on edge cases where a product or service straddles multiple classes.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nancy Samuriwo at Samuriwo Attorneys, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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