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If you need to know how to trademark a name in Belgium, the first thing to understand is that Belgium does not operate its own national trademark register, instead, trademark protection is obtained through either the Benelux Office for Intellectual Property (BOIP), which covers Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg as a single territory, or through the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO), which grants a single registration enforceable across all EU Member States. The route you choose depends on where you sell, your budget, and how quickly you need protection.
This guide walks through every step, from preliminary searches and class selection to filing, fees, opposition windows and common refusals, so that founders, in-house counsel and brand managers can make an informed decision and protect their brand with confidence.
The most common path for a Belgian business that only needs Benelux coverage is to file directly with BOIP. The process can be broken down into seven core steps.
Before filing, you must confirm that your proposed name does not conflict with an existing mark. A thorough BOIP trademark search involves checking multiple databases:
Industry observers recommend budgeting time for this phase, a name that clears a basic word-mark search may still conflict with figurative marks, transliterations, or well-known unregistered marks in Belgium.
BOIP accepts applications online in English, Dutch or French. When filing you will need to provide:
After BOIP completes a formalities examination, the application is published. A two-month Benelux opposition period then opens during which any third party holding an earlier right may file an opposition. If no opposition is filed, or if an opposition is resolved in the applicant’s favour, the mark proceeds to registration. The entire timeline from filing to registration, assuming no objections, typically runs approximately four to five months.
Deciding between a Benelux trademark registration through BOIP and an EU trade mark (EUTM) through EUIPO is the single most important strategic question a Belgian filer faces. A third option, the Madrid System administered by WIPO, allows you to extend a home registration to designated countries worldwide. The right choice turns on three factors: geography, budget and enforcement scope.
| Feature | BOIP (Benelux) | EUIPO (EUTM) |
|---|---|---|
| Territorial scope | Belgium + Netherlands + Luxembourg | All 27 EU Member States |
| Filing languages | Dutch, French or English | Any EU language (+ one of five EUIPO working languages) |
| Opposition period after publication | 2 months | 3 months |
| Typical filing-to-registration timeline (no opposition) | Approximately 4–5 months | Approximately 5–6 months |
| Registration duration | 10 years (renewable) | 10 years (renewable) |
| Main advantage | Lower cost; faster for Benelux-only businesses | Single registration covers entire EU market |
| Main disadvantage | No protection outside Benelux | Higher cost if only Belgium is needed; vulnerable to opposition in any Member State |
A common misconception is that copyright can protect a business name. Under Belgian and EU law, copyright protects original works of authorship, literary texts, artwork, software code, but it does not protect names, slogans or short phrases as such. If your goal is to prevent competitors from using your brand name, trademark registration through BOIP or EUIPO is the correct legal tool. A logo design may attract copyright protection for its artistic elements, but that does not stop a third party from using the same name in a different typeface.
Understanding the full cost picture is essential for budgeting, especially for startups. Fees fall into two categories: official fees payable to the trademark office and professional fees charged by attorneys or trademark agents.
| Fee type | Amount (EUR) |
|---|---|
| Basic filing fee, one class (online) | 244 |
| Each additional class | 27 |
| Renewal (10 years), one class | 244 |
| Renewal, each additional class | 27 |
| Opposition fee | 1,000 |
Source: BOIP official fee schedule. Fees should be verified on the BOIP website at the time of filing, as they are subject to periodic revision.
| Fee type | Amount (EUR) |
|---|---|
| Basic application fee, one class (e-filing) | 850 |
| Second class | 50 |
| Third and each subsequent class | 150 |
| Renewal (10 years), one class | 850 |
| Renewal, each additional class | 50 / 150 |
| Opposition fee | 320 |
Source: EUIPO official fee schedule. Check the EUIPO fees page for the most current figures.
Consider a Brussels-based tech startup that needs to protect its brand name for software (Class 9) and SaaS services (Class 42):
Professional fees for a Belgian trademark attorney typically range from €500 to €1,500 per filing, depending on the complexity of the specification and whether a comprehensive clearance search is included. The likely practical effect for bootstrapped founders is that a single BOIP filing in two classes, including attorney fees, can often come in under €1,000 total, while an EUTM with professional support will typically land between €1,500 and €2,500. These ranges vary by firm, scope of search and number of classes.
Every trademark application must specify the goods or services it covers, organised according to the Nice Classification system. There are 34 classes for goods (Classes 1–34) and 11 classes for services (Classes 35–45). Choosing the right trademark classes in Belgium is critical: too narrow and you leave gaps competitors can exploit; too broad and you risk refusal for lack of genuine intent to use, or invite oppositions from existing mark holders in those classes.
| Startup type | Suggested primary class(es) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS platform | Class 9 (downloadable software); Class 42 (SaaS, cloud computing) | Include both if the product is available as a download and as a hosted service. |
| Mobile app (consumer) | Class 9 (app software); Class 35 (advertising services, if ad-supported) | Add Class 42 if the app also provides data-processing services. |
| Food & beverage brand | Class 29 (processed foods); Class 30 (coffee, tea, snacks); Class 32 (non-alcoholic beverages) | Choose based on actual product line; each additional class adds a fee. |
| Fashion / clothing | Class 25 (clothing, footwear, headgear); Class 35 (retail services) | Class 18 (bags, leather goods) may also be relevant. |
| Management consulting | Class 35 (business management consulting) | Often one class suffices. |
| Fintech / payments | Class 9 (software); Class 36 (financial services); Class 42 (platform technology) | Three classes may be necessary, budget accordingly. |
Understanding the filing process and realistic timelines helps you plan product launches and marketing campaigns around your Belgium trademark application.
| Stage | BOIP (Benelux) | EUIPO (EUTM) |
|---|---|---|
| Formalities examination | Approximately 1–2 weeks | Approximately 1 month |
| Substantive/absolute-grounds examination | Included in formalities review | Approximately 1–2 months |
| Publication | Shortly after examination | After examination clearance |
| Opposition period | 2 months from publication | 3 months from publication |
| Registration (if no opposition) | Approximately 4–5 months total | Approximately 5–6 months total |
Note: if an opposition is filed, timelines extend significantly, contested proceedings at EUIPO can run twelve months or more. At BOIP, opposition proceedings are generally resolved within several months, though complex cases may take longer.
Not every application sails through to registration. Understanding the grounds for refusal and the opposition process helps you prepare a stronger filing and react quickly if challenged.
Both BOIP and EUIPO will refuse marks on absolute grounds, including:
Even if a mark passes the office’s absolute-grounds examination, third parties holding earlier rights may oppose it. The Benelux opposition period is two months from publication; the EUIPO opposition period is three months. An opponent must demonstrate a likelihood of confusion based on similarity of the marks and the goods or services covered. Typical grounds include an identical or confusingly similar earlier trademark registered for the same or related classes.
Industry observers consistently identify the same errors among first-time filers. Avoiding these pitfalls saves time, money and legal risk when you trademark a name in Belgium.
Knowing how to trademark a name in Belgium comes down to choosing the right filing route, selecting accurate classes, and staying ahead of opposition risks. Whether you file through BOIP for Benelux coverage or EUIPO for EU-wide protection, the procedural steps are straightforward once you have completed a thorough clearance search and budgeted for both official and professional fees. For tailored advice on your specific brand and markets, consult a qualified intellectual property lawyer.
This article provides general information and does not constitute legal advice. For tailored guidance on your trademark filing, contact a qualified IP lawyer.
Last updated: 15 June 2026
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Stephanie Sarlet at Pitch.law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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