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Knowing how to enforce a trademark in Malaysia is essential for any brand owner that discovers unauthorised use of its mark, whether on marketplace listings, retail shelves, or imported goods arriving at Port Klang. Malaysian law offers three parallel enforcement routes, civil proceedings in the High Court, criminal prosecution for counterfeit offences, and customs border measures to intercept infringing imports, all governed principally by the Trademarks Act 2019 (Act 815) and administered by the Intellectual Property Corporation of Malaysia (MyIPO).
This guide sets out each route as a numbered, practitioner-facing playbook, incorporating the procedural clarifications introduced in MyIPO’s Guidelines‑of‑Trademark‑2019‑VA1‑2026 (published February 2026), together with document checklists, realistic cost estimates and a worked timeline so that rights-holders can move from discovery to resolution with confidence.
Trademark enforcement Malaysia operates on a registration-first model. The Trademarks Act 2019 (Act 815) grants the registered proprietor, and, in specified circumstances, an exclusive licensee, the right to bring civil infringement proceedings, lodge criminal complaints, and request customs detention of suspected infringing goods. MyIPO maintains the Register of Trademarks and publishes procedural guidance, most recently the VA1‑2026 amendment to its 2019 Guidelines.
Three distinct enforcement channels are available, and they may be used in combination:
Proprietors of unregistered marks are not without remedy, but their path is narrower. A passing-off action at common law remains available; however, proving goodwill, misrepresentation and damage without a registration certificate is substantially more burdensome. For this reason, registration with MyIPO is the critical prerequisite for effective trademark enforcement Malaysia.
Before initiating any enforcement action, a rights-holder must confirm standing, territorial scope and the currency of its registration. The checklist below summarises the threshold requirements.
Under the Trademarks Act 2019 (Act 815), the registered proprietor of a trademark has the primary right to sue for infringement. An exclusive licensee may also have standing to commence proceedings, provided the licence has been recorded on the Register and the terms of the licence do not exclude such rights. Non-exclusive licensees generally cannot sue in their own name but may join proceedings brought by the proprietor.
A valid, subsisting registration on the MyIPO Register is the foundation of statutory enforcement. The registration must cover the classes of goods or services in respect of which infringement is alleged, and it must remain in force (i.e., not expired or cancelled). Before taking action, confirm the registration status by obtaining a current TM Search Report or status printout from the MyIPO online system.
Malaysian trademark rights are territorial. An infringement must occur in, or be directed at, Malaysia. For e-commerce sellers based overseas but targeting Malaysian consumers, for instance, through Shopee Malaysia or Lazada Malaysia listings, trademark infringement Malaysia provisions still apply where the infringing goods or services are offered or accessible within the jurisdiction.
There is no single statutory limitation period unique to trademark infringement claims under Act 815; general civil limitation rules apply. As a practical matter, enforcement should commence as soon as the infringement is discovered to minimise damage and preserve evidence. Conduct preliminary clearance searches, confirm the mark’s registration status, and verify that the allegedly infringing use falls within the scope of the registered classes before instructing counsel.
Enforcement typically follows a graduated sequence: preserve evidence and issue pre-action correspondence, engage customs if imports are involved, then escalate to court proceedings (civil, criminal, or both) as warranted. The numbered steps below set out each stage in practical detail.
The moment infringing activity is discovered, evidence preservation must begin. Every hour of delay risks the infringer destroying stock, removing online listings, or altering packaging. The following actions should be taken within the first 48 to 72 hours:
With evidence secured, issue a cease-and-desist (C&D) letter. A well-drafted cease and desist letter Malaysia should include: identification of the registered mark and registration number; a description of the infringing conduct; a demand that the infringer cease all use within a specified period (typically 7 to 14 days); a request for the destruction or surrender of infringing stock; and a statement that court proceedings will follow if the demand is not met. Keep a record of delivery (registered post or courier tracking) and any response received.
Where the infringement involves goods imported into Malaysia, customs seizure Malaysia procedures allow the rights-holder to request that Royal Malaysian Customs detain suspected infringing consignments at the point of entry. The process, refined by MyIPO’s VA1‑2026 guidance on border measures, works as follows:
Practical tip: request a product-sample inspection at the earliest opportunity so that independent verification of infringement can be completed before any statutory release deadline.
Civil enforcement is the primary route for seeking financial compensation and permanent injunctive relief. Trademark infringement proceedings are filed in the High Court of Malaya (or the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak, depending on jurisdiction).
The typical litigation sequence is:
Where the infringement amounts to deliberate counterfeiting, for example, applying an identical mark to goods with the intent to deceive, the criminal route may be pursued in parallel with, or instead of, civil proceedings. A criminal trademark offence under Part XV of the Trademarks Act 2019 (Act 815) can attract substantial penalties, including fines and imprisonment.
The criminal enforcement process involves:
Criminal proceedings do not typically result in damages for the rights-holder, so they are best used alongside a civil claim or where the primary objective is deterrence and removal of counterfeit goods from the market.
Obtaining a judgment or conviction is only effective if the outcome is enforced. Post-judgment steps include:
A well-prepared evidence bundle is the foundation of every enforcement action, whether directed at customs, the civil courts, or the police. Assembling the documents below at the outset avoids delays and strengthens the merits of the case. The evidence needed will differ slightly depending on the enforcement route, but the core bundle is common to all three.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Certificate of Registration (TM) | Issued by MyIPO. Include the registration number, registered classes, and registration/renewal dates. Provide a certified PDF copy. |
| TM Search Report / status printout | Current printout from MyIPO’s online system confirming the mark’s active status and the classes covered. |
| Evidence of genuine use | Photographs, product samples, invoices, and packaging showing the mark as used in commerce. Date- and time-stamped; accompanied by a witness affidavit. |
| Infringing-use evidence | Samples of the infringing goods or services, photographs, test-buy receipts, and side-by-side comparisons with genuine products. |
| Screenshots / URL printouts | Timestamped website snapshots, marketplace listings, and seller profile pages. Preserve HTML source files. |
| Sales and financial records | Sales ledgers, invoices, and purchase orders demonstrating the proprietor’s revenue and the market impact of the infringement. Redact confidential supplier or customer information as required. |
| Import documentation | Bills of lading, airway bills, and commercial invoices for suspected infringing shipments. Essential for customs seizure Malaysia applications. |
| Chain-of-custody log | Prepared by the investigator or instructing solicitor. Records who collected each sample, the date and method of collection, and storage conditions. |
| Affidavits / witness statements | Signed affidavits from the company officer, private investigator, and (where applicable) a consumer-survey expert. |
| Expert report (if applicable) | Market survey or expert opinion on consumer confusion or product authenticity. Attach the expert’s CV and methodology. |
| Cease-and-desist correspondence | Copies of all pre-action letters, with proof of delivery and any reply received from the infringer. |
Organise the bundle with a numbered index page and clear file names (e.g., “Exhibit A, Certificate of Registration”, “Exhibit B, Test-buy photographs”). For customs applications, bundle the import documentation and MyIPO declaration as a separate sub-folder. For court filings, ensure all affidavits comply with the Rules of Court 2012 and that exhibits are properly marked and paginated.
Timelines in trademark enforcement Malaysia cases vary according to the complexity of the dispute, the responsiveness of the infringer, and court scheduling. The table below provides an illustrative enforcement procedure timeline for a typical case, from discovery through to post-judgment enforcement.
| Stage | Typical Timeframe | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Discovery and evidence preservation | Immediately, within 48–72 hours | Begin forensic captures and test-buys as soon as infringement is identified. |
| Issue cease-and-desist letter | Within 7–14 days of discovery | State a response deadline (commonly 7–14 days). Retain proof of delivery. |
| Customs detention application processed | 1–6 weeks | Detention of goods may occur immediately upon arrival; administrative processing varies. |
| Interlocutory injunction application heard | 2–6 weeks from filing | Truly urgent matters may be heard ex parte within days. Court scheduling determines the exact date. |
| Full High Court trial (filing to judgment) | 6–18 months | Complex multi-party cases or those involving extensive expert evidence may exceed 18 months. |
| Criminal investigation and prosecution | Several months to 2+ years | Dependent on investigation complexity and prosecution scheduling. |
| Post-judgment enforcement | Ongoing after judgment | Writ of seizure and sale, garnishee orders, or supervised destruction, timing depends on asset location. |
Two practical deadline considerations deserve emphasis. First, once customs detains goods, the rights-holder must normally commence legal proceedings within a prescribed period (as set by Customs) to prevent automatic release. Second, applications for interlocutory injunctions should be filed promptly after the C&D period expires; courts are less sympathetic to delay, and an unexplained gap between discovery and the application undermines the claim of urgency. Malaysian practitioners familiar with the recent legislative amendments in Malaysia will recognise the importance of tracking regulatory deadlines closely.
The cost of enforcing a trademark in Malaysia depends on whether the matter resolves at the cease-and-desist stage or proceeds to a contested High Court trial. The indicative 2026 cost ranges below (in MYR) are based on typical practitioner fees and should be treated as estimates, actual costs will vary by firm, case complexity, and the volume of evidence involved.
| Item | Indicative Range (MYR) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Cease-and-desist letter (law firm drafted) | 300 – 1,500 | Depends on the complexity of the letter and the firm’s hourly rate. |
| MyIPO / customs administrative costs | 0 – 1,000 | Administrative and form-filing fees where applicable. |
| Customs liaison / agent preparation fees | 1,000 – 6,000 | Preparing the dossier and coordinating with Royal Malaysian Customs. |
| Interlocutory injunction (filing + counsel) | 5,000 – 30,000+ | Includes court filing fees, counsel’s briefing fees, and hearing preparation. |
| Full High Court trial (counsel + pleadings + expert) | 50,000 – 500,000+ | Wide range; driven by trial length, number of witnesses, and expert evidence. |
| Expert report (market survey) | 10,000 – 80,000 | Survey design, consumer fieldwork, and written report. |
| Forensic evidence preservation | 1,000 – 10,000 | Web captures, server-image preservation, and digital forensics. |
| Criminal complaint assistance (counsel + investigator) | 3,000 – 20,000 | Preparing the complaint, coordinating with KPDN / police, and raid attendance. |
Disclaimer: all figures are indicative estimates for 2026. Actual costs depend on the complexity of each matter, the seniority of counsel engaged, and disbursements. Obtain a tailored quote from Malaysian IP counsel before committing to enforcement.
On the question of recoverability, Malaysian courts may award party-and-party costs to the successful plaintiff, but these rarely cover the full solicitor-and-client costs incurred. The gap between recoverable costs and actual expenditure is a routine commercial consideration in damages or account-of-profits litigation. Where the court awards damages or an account of profits, these remedies compensate the rights-holder for the economic harm caused by the infringement, they are distinct from cost recovery.
In February 2026, MyIPO published the Guidelines‑of‑Trademark‑2019‑VA1‑2026, an amendment to the original 2019 procedural guidelines issued under the Trademarks Act 2019 (Act 815). The VA1‑2026 update introduced several clarifications relevant to enforcement practitioners:
Industry observers expect that the VA1‑2026 changes will streamline customs coordination and reduce processing uncertainty, particularly for rights-holders making their first border-measure application. Practitioners should ensure that any enforcement dossier prepared from February 2026 onwards complies with the updated format requirements set out in the VA1‑2026 guidance. The Chambers Practice Guide for Trade Marks & Copyright 2026 (Malaysia) provides additional commentary on how these changes sit within the broader 2026 Malaysian legal reform landscape.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Parvathi Kandasamy at MESSRS K.SILADASS & PARTNERS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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