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Using IP as collateral in Zimbabwe is now a realistic financing option for businesses that hold registered trademarks, patents or copyrights, yet the practical steps to securitise these assets remain poorly understood by both borrowers and lenders. Zimbabwe’s Movable Property Security Interests Act, read alongside the Trade Marks Act [Chapter 26:04] and the Patents Act [Chapter 26:03], provides the statutory framework that allows intellectual property rights to function as loan security. With renewed momentum from ARIPO-aligned reforms and growing recognition that intangible assets often represent the most valuable items on a company’s balance sheet, industry observers expect IP-backed lending to gain significant traction across the region in 2026 and beyond.
This guide sets out the legal basis, procedural steps, valuation requirements and enforcement realities that Zimbabwean SMEs, founders, in-house counsel and commercial lenders need to navigate.
Quick checklist, IP as collateral in Zimbabwe:
Yes. Intellectual property rights that are recognised as movable property under Zimbabwean law can be pledged as collateral to secure debt. The legal basis rests on several interlocking statutes and the common-law treatment of intangible assets as capable of being charged or assigned by way of security.
The Movable Property Security Interests Act (MPSIA) is the central statute enabling security interests over movable property in Zimbabwe. The Act’s broad definition of movable property extends to intangible assets, which means that registered trademarks, patents, industrial designs and copyright-derived income streams can fall within its scope. Where a security interest is created over IP under the MPSIA framework, registration of that interest with the designated registrar is essential to establish priority against competing claims.
Alongside the MPSIA, the Trade Marks Act [Chapter 26:04] governs the registration, assignment and transmission of trade marks. The Act permits registered trade marks to be assigned and transmitted, the same mechanisms that support their use as the subject of a security charge. Similarly, the Patents Act [Chapter 26:03] provides for the registration and protection of patents for inventions that are new, inventive and industrially applicable, and permits assignments and licences to be recorded on the patents register.
The Companies and Intellectual Property Office of Zimbabwe (CIPZ), previously referred to as ZIPO, administers national registrations for trademarks, patents, industrial designs and related IP rights. It is the primary office where charges over registered IP are noted. For regional protection, Zimbabwe is a member state of ARIPO (the African Regional Intellectual Property Organization, headquartered in Harare), which offers additional filing routes under the Harare Protocol (patents) and the Banjul Protocol (trademarks).
The practical effect is that a borrower can grant a lender a charge or security assignment over registered IP, file the prescribed notices with CIPZ and the MPSIA registry, and thereby create an enforceable, priority-ranked security interest. Industry observers expect ongoing ARIPO and national reform activity in 2026 to further clarify procedures and strengthen lender confidence in IP-backed lending.
Not all intellectual property carries equal weight in a lender’s credit assessment. Commercial banks and alternative lenders evaluate IP collateral based on enforceability, revenue-generation history, exclusivity and territorial scope. The stronger these factors, the more comfortable a lender will be advancing funds against the asset. Below is a breakdown of the principal IP types and the concerns lenders typically raise.
Patents registered under the Patents Act [Chapter 26:03] are among the most valued forms of IP collateral because they confer a time-limited monopoly over an invention. Lenders considering patents as collateral Zimbabwe transactions will focus on several critical factors:
Registered trade marks are often the most commercially valuable IP assets for consumer-facing businesses. Under the Trade Marks Act, registration confers exclusive rights and prohibits third parties from using identical or confusingly similar marks. Lenders evaluating a trademark charge will typically check:
Copyrights and industrial designs can also serve as collateral, though they present additional challenges. Copyright in Zimbabwe arises automatically upon creation of an eligible work, meaning there is no formal registration certificate for a lender to verify. This makes it harder to value and to demonstrate clear title. In practice, lenders prefer to take a security assignment over the copyright itself or, alternatively, an assignment of identifiable royalty income streams, an approach that provides a more concrete enforcement mechanism. Unregistered IP rights such as trade secrets or confidential information are generally considered too uncertain for standalone collateral use; lenders typically require these to be bundled with registered rights and supported by additional contractual protections.
To securitise intellectual property in Zimbabwe effectively, both borrower and lender must follow a structured process that moves from due diligence through documentation to formal registration. The following step-by-step guide covers the core procedure for creating and perfecting a security interest over IP.
To register a security interest over a trademark in Zimbabwe, the lender or its agent files a prescribed notice or charge form with CIPZ, referencing the trade mark registration number, the parties and the nature of the charge. CIPZ records the interest against the relevant entry on the trade marks register. Early indications suggest that processing times vary depending on the office’s workload, but practitioners typically advise allowing several weeks for the entry to appear on the public register. Conducting a pre-filing search to confirm there are no prior charges is essential.
Where the trademark was filed through the Banjul Protocol at ARIPO, a parallel recording at ARIPO headquarters in Harare should also be considered to ensure the charge is enforceable across designated member states.
The process for patents follows a similar pattern. The charge or assignment is filed with CIPZ against the patent registration number under the Patents Act [Chapter 26:03]. For patents granted via ARIPO’s Harare Protocol, a corresponding notification to ARIPO ensures the security interest is noted at the regional level. Lenders should request a freedom-to-operate opinion and a patent validity assessment before accepting a patent as collateral, as these affect both the asset’s enforceability and its realisation value on default.
Since copyright in Zimbabwe is not subject to a formal registration system, securing copyright-based collateral typically relies on a written security assignment of the copyright itself or, more commonly, an assignment of royalty receivables. An assignment of royalty income can be registered as a security interest under the MPSIA framework where it constitutes an interest in movable property. Lenders should require the borrower to direct all licensees to pay royalties into a designated account controlled or monitored by the lender, providing practical enforcement leverage even where the copyright assignment mechanism is less transparent than a registered trademark charge.
Valuing intellectual property is one of the most significant barriers to IP-backed lending in Zimbabwe, and across Africa more broadly. Unlike real estate or equipment, IP does not have a readily observable market price. Lenders require a credible, independently prepared valuation report before they will advance funds. Three principal valuation methods are accepted in practice:
Lender evidence checklist, typical documentation required:
| Evidence item | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Independent valuation report (income approach preferred) | Establishes the IP’s monetary value for lending purposes |
| Audited financial statements (last 3 years) | Demonstrates revenue and profitability linked to the IP |
| Royalty and licensing income history | Evidences predictable cash flows from IP exploitation |
| IP registration certificates and renewal records | Confirms legal ownership and current registration status |
| Freedom-to-operate / non-infringement opinion (patents) | Assesses litigation risk that could impair the asset |
| Market analysis / brand recognition survey (trademarks) | Supports brand-value claims underpinning the collateral |
| Details of existing licences and sub-licences | Maps third-party obligations and income sources |
| IP portfolio schedule (all registrations, jurisdictions, expiry dates) | Gives the lender a complete view of scope and territorial coverage |
IP financing for SMEs in Zimbabwe often founders at the valuation stage simply because businesses have not maintained the documentation that lenders need. The practical advice is to start assembling valuation evidence well before approaching a lender, audited accounts, licensing records and use evidence should be treated as ongoing compliance obligations rather than last-minute exercises.
The security agreement is the contractual backbone of any IP-as-collateral arrangement. Poorly drafted documents can render a security interest unenforceable or leave gaps that competing creditors exploit. The following clauses and drafting notes address the most critical provisions.
Practical red flags for negotiation: Borrowers should resist clauses that allow the lender to sell the IP below market value without a competitive process. Lenders, meanwhile, should insist on broad enforcement rights that include receiver appointment, direct licensing and cross-default provisions linking the IP security to other facilities. Both parties should agree on a dispute-resolution mechanism, arbitration seated in Harare is common, and specify governing law as Zimbabwean law to avoid jurisdictional uncertainty.
The value of any security interest ultimately depends on whether the lender can enforce it when the borrower defaults. For IP collateral in Zimbabwe, enforcement engages both the contractual remedies in the security agreement and the statutory framework under the MPSIA and applicable insolvency legislation.
Key enforcement remedies available to a secured lender:
Priority in insolvency. A properly registered security interest under the MPSIA should give the secured creditor priority over unsecured creditors in the borrower’s insolvency. However, the treatment of IP security interests in formal insolvency proceedings in Zimbabwe can be complex, and lenders should ensure that all registration and perfection steps are completed before any financial distress becomes apparent. The likely practical effect of incomplete registration is that the lender’s interest may be treated as unsecured.
Cross-border enforcement. For IP rights registered through ARIPO or under international systems (Madrid Protocol for trademarks, PCT for patents), enforcement in other member states requires an understanding of each jurisdiction’s local procedures. An ARIPO-registered trademark charge noted at ARIPO headquarters does not automatically create enforceable priority in every designated state, local enforcement steps may still be required. Lenders with cross-border exposure should consider multi-jurisdictional IP protection strategies and take local advice in each relevant territory.
| Registration Route | Office / Registrar | Practical Notes (Time, Lender Preference) |
|---|---|---|
| National (Zimbabwe) | Companies and Intellectual Property Office of Zimbabwe (CIPZ) | Best for national rights; fastest route to perfect a security interest for local enforcement; lenders require registration plus public notice. This is the baseline requirement for any IP as collateral Zimbabwe transaction. |
| ARIPO (Regional, Harare) | ARIPO regional filing under Banjul Protocol (trademarks) or Harare Protocol (patents) | Provides regional protection across designated member states; lenders require clarity on territorial scope; processing typically takes longer than national filings. Parallel recording at ARIPO is recommended for rights originally filed regionally. |
| International (Madrid / PCT) | WIPO systems, Madrid Protocol (trademarks), Patent Cooperation Treaty (patents) | Useful for multi-jurisdictional IP portfolios; lenders want evidence that national-phase entries have been completed in key commercial markets. Does not replace the need for local CIPZ and MPSIA registrations. |
IP-backed lending in Zimbabwe is legally possible and increasingly commercially relevant as businesses recognise the untapped value locked in their trademarks, patents and copyrights. The key to a successful transaction lies in disciplined execution: confirm registration status, obtain credible valuations, draft comprehensive security documents, perfect the interest through CIPZ and MPSIA filings, and plan for enforcement scenarios from the outset. Businesses that treat their intellectual property portfolio as a strategic financial asset, rather than a legal afterthought, are best positioned to unlock IP financing for SMEs in Zimbabwe and the broader ARIPO region.
For businesses considering this route, specialist legal guidance from a practitioner experienced in both IP law and Zimbabwean secured transactions is essential to structure a transaction that protects both borrower and lender.
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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