Since 2010, the Global Law Experts annual awards have been celebrating excellence, innovation and performance across the legal communities from around the world.
posted 1 hour ago
Foreign brands entering or already selling in China face a binary filing choice: designate China through the Madrid System from a single international registration, or file a direct national application with the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA). The question of Madrid vs national filing China 2026 has become more consequential since CNIPA published updated guidance on 17 March 2026 tightening documentary-consistency checks and altering service practice for Madrid territorial extensions. This article delivers a dimension-by-dimension comparison, cost, timing, enforceability, conversion risk, evidence burden, and agent liability, together with a clear decision framework so that founders, in-house IP managers, and outside counsel can file in China or via Madrid with confidence.
The Madrid System, administered by WIPO, lets an applicant file a single international application based on a “basic” national application or registration in a contracting origin country, then designate one or more member states, including China, for protection. CNIPA conducts its own substantive examination of the designation, but the administrative wrapper stays centralised: one renewal date, one record of ownership, one point of contact at WIPO.
The route appeals to portfolio owners managing marks across multiple jurisdictions. A European consumer-electronics brand expanding into ten markets simultaneously, for example, can designate China alongside India, Japan, and the EU through one filing, paying WIPO’s basic fee plus individual designation fees rather than engaging local agents in every country. Centralised renewals cut administrative overhead further.
The limitations, however, are significant for China specifically. A Madrid designation depends on the underlying basic application or registration for the first five years (the “central-attack” dependency). If the basic mark is cancelled or narrowed during that window, the China designation falls with it. More critically for 2026, CNIPA’s March 17 guidance introduces stricter documentary-consistency requirements for Madrid designations, raising the operational risk that a designation will face provisional refusal or delayed service. Brands that rely on Madrid alone in China without monitoring CNIPA communications risk gaps in protection precisely when enforcement matters most, during market launch, customs seizure requests, or administrative takedown proceedings.
Madrid suits brands testing China through third-party e-commerce distributors with limited local exposure, or those with a genuinely multi-country filing programme where centralised administration outweighs the China-specific enforcement premium a direct filing provides.
A direct national filing is lodged at CNIPA through a locally qualified trademark agent. The applicant receives a CNIPA filing number immediately, and prosecution proceeds entirely under Chinese law and CNIPA’s examination guidelines. There is no dependency on a foreign “basic” registration, the China right stands on its own from day one.
The chief advantage is procedural control. The local agent manages all substantive communications, evidence submissions, and potential negotiations with the examiner directly. For enforcement purposes, customs recordal with China Customs, administrative complaints to local market-supervision bureaux, or civil litigation in the People’s Courts, a direct CNIPA registration is the clearest, most widely accepted instrument. Industry observers note that customs officers and local enforcement authorities are more familiar with, and responsive to, direct CNIPA registrations than Madrid-originated certificates.
The downsides are cost and administrative scalability. Each country requires a separate national filing, a separate agent relationship, and a separate renewal cycle. A brand filing in fifteen jurisdictions pays fifteen sets of official fees and agent charges. For China alone, however, a direct filing is typically less expensive than the combined WIPO basic fee plus designation fee, and the applicant avoids the transformation costs that may arise if a Madrid designation runs into trouble at CNIPA.
Direct CNIPA filing is the default recommendation for any brand with imminent manufacturing, retail, or licensing operations in China, for high-risk sectors (luxury goods, pharmaceuticals, FMCG, electronics), and for any mark the brand expects to enforce aggressively, whether through customs seizures, marketplace takedowns, or court injunctions. When enforcement certainty in China outweighs global portfolio convenience, file direct.
The table below compares the two routes across the dimensions that matter most to foreign brand owners making this decision in 2026.
| Dimension | Madrid Designation (to China) | Direct CNIPA National Filing |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility / prerequisites | Requires a valid basic application or registration in a Madrid-contracting origin country; applicant must match the basic-mark holder. | Any foreign entity can file directly through a locally qualified agent; no dependence on a foreign basic application. |
| Filing route & authority | International application through WIPO → designation of China → CNIPA conducts substantive exam. | Direct filing to CNIPA; local substantive examination and registration. |
| Typical timeline to first office action | WIPO formalities (2–6 weeks) + CNIPA substantive exam (~9–18 months); variable under 2026 practice. | Standard CNIPA exam (~9–18 months to first action); earlier direct CNIPA file number. |
| Cost structure | WIPO basic fee + designation fees + agent/translation. Upfront cheaper for multi-country families; conversion costs possible later. | CNIPA official fee (per class) + local agent fee. Higher cumulative cost for many countries; simpler fee predictability for China alone. |
| Enforceability in China | Enforceable once admitted by CNIPA; 2026 practice increases documentary-consistency checks, potentially delaying enforcement readiness. | Straightforwardly enforceable as a national right once registered; clearest path for customs, administrative, and civil enforcement. |
| Refusal / conversion risk | Provisional refusal triggers option to respond or request transformation into a national application; transformation risks priority-date complications and added costs. 2026 CNIPA notices alter service/transform procedures. | No transformation step; responses handled directly with local counsel and CNIPA. |
| Evidence & use requirements | Evidence coordination more complex across jurisdictions; CNIPA may require additional documentary proof consistent with 2026 guidance. | Evidence handled locally in Chinese; simpler to match CNIPA expectations. |
| Procedural control | Less direct control; centralised but less flexible for China-specific prosecution strategy. | Full procedural control, prosecution, settlement, and enforcement decisions made locally. |
| Global portfolio burden | Low: one international filing + designations; centralised renewals. | Higher: independent national filings and renewals in each country. |
| Best for | Portfolio owners testing multiple markets quickly with limited China-specific exposure; portfolio-maintenance efficiency. | Brands prioritising China enforcement, with imminent market/manufacturing presence, or in high-risk industries needing maximum enforceability certainty. |
Below we unpack the dimensions that matter when deciding between a Madrid designation and a direct CNIPA filing in 2026.
The fee structures diverge in composition more than in total magnitude when filing for China alone. The Madrid route layers WIPO’s basic fee on top of a China-specific individual designation fee, plus any agent and translation charges. A direct CNIPA filing eliminates the WIPO layer entirely; costs consist of CNIPA’s official per-class fee plus the local agent’s service charge.
| Fee Component | Madrid (Designating China) | Direct CNIPA Filing |
|---|---|---|
| WIPO basic fee (single class, black-and-white mark) | ~CHF 653 (per WIPO schedule; plus per-class supplementary fees) | N/A |
| WIPO individual designation fee for China | Variable, individual fee applies (see WIPO fee calculator) | N/A |
| CNIPA official fee (per class) | CNIPA processing charges may apply on subsequent handling | CNY 270 per class (standard e-filing; confirm on CNIPA schedule) |
| Agent / translation fees (typical range) | USD 200–800 (international agent + IR translation) | USD 200–800 (local agent filing + Chinese translation) |
| Indicative first-year total (one mark, one class) | ~USD 900–1,500 | ~USD 170–500 (plus counsel if separate) |
For a single China-only mark, direct CNIPA filing is materially cheaper. Madrid’s cost advantage emerges only when the same international application designates several additional countries, spreading the WIPO basic fee across a larger portfolio. Budget for potential transformation costs if the Madrid designation is refused, these can equal or exceed the savings.
Substantive examination timelines at CNIPA are broadly comparable regardless of filing route: approximately 9–18 months from the point CNIPA begins its review to a first office action, depending on the class and current backlog. The difference lies in what happens before that clock starts.
Where time to registered rights matters, for instance, ahead of a product launch or to support an urgent customs recordal, the direct route’s absence of a WIPO processing layer can save weeks or months.
A Madrid designation that CNIPA admits creates enforceable trademark rights in China. In principle, the legal effect is equivalent to a direct CNIPA registration. In practice, however, several enforcement mechanisms work more smoothly with a direct registration.
The likely practical effect of CNIPA’s 2026 updates is a marginal increase in enforcement friction for Madrid-only registrations, not a legal bar, but an operational one that matters when speed of enforcement is critical.
Under the Madrid Protocol, if an international registration is cancelled (wholly or in part) within five years of the international registration date, or if a CNIPA provisional refusal cannot be overcome, the holder may request “transformation” into a direct national application at CNIPA, preserving the international registration date as the filing date, provided the request is made within three months of cancellation.
CNIPA’s 17 March 2026 guidance introduces tighter documentary-consistency checks on transformation requests. Early indications suggest that applicants who delay transformation or submit inconsistent specifications face a higher risk of losing the benefit of the original filing date. The practical advice is clear:
CNIPA expects evidence of trademark use in China to be submitted in Chinese, often with notarisation and, for foreign-sourced documents, consularisation or apostille. These expectations apply regardless of whether the registration originated through Madrid or a direct filing.
The complication for Madrid holders arises in coordination. Use evidence must be gathered from China-side operations (sales invoices, marketing materials, distributor agreements) and formatted to CNIPA standards, then submitted through the appropriate channel. For Madrid registrations, the evidentiary chain may need to bridge WIPO records and local Chinese documentation, adding a step that direct filers avoid. CNIPA’s 2026 guidance signals increased scrutiny of documentary consistency for Madrid-originated marks, making it more important than ever for Madrid holders to maintain local evidentiary files as if they held a direct registration.
Foreign applicants filing directly with CNIPA must appoint a locally licensed trademark agent. That agent bears responsibility for receiving all CNIPA communications, filing responses within statutory deadlines, and maintaining accurate records. The agent relationship is direct and the accountability chain is short.
For Madrid designations, CNIPA notifications may be routed through WIPO to the international representative or the applicant’s office of origin, rather than to a Chinese agent. CNIPA’s March 2026 service-practice updates have altered how and to whom certain notifications are delivered for Madrid designations. Industry observers expect that this change increases the risk of missed notifications, particularly provisional-refusal deadlines, for applicants who lack a dedicated Chinese monitoring agent alongside their international representative.
The recommended safeguard: regardless of filing route, appoint a qualified Chinese agent to monitor CNIPA databases, receive forwarded communications, and ensure no deadline lapses. The modest cost of a local watching brief is trivial compared to the consequences of a missed refusal response.
On 17 March 2026, CNIPA published updated administrative guidance addressing three areas that directly affect the Madrid vs national filing China 2026 calculus:
Separately, China’s proposed draft Trademark Law amendments (under public consultation in 2026) signal broader changes to use requirements and agent liability, according to analysis published by China Briefing. While not yet enacted, these proposals reinforce the trend toward stricter evidentiary and procedural standards, a trend that benefits applicants with direct CNIPA registrations and local counsel already in place.
The net effect: Madrid remains a legally valid route to China protection, but the operational risk of relying on it without local support has increased. Brands that filed Madrid designations before March 2026 should audit their China portfolio for compliance with the new documentary-consistency standards and confirm that a local agent is monitoring CNIPA communications on their behalf.
| If Your Priority Is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Fast, low-admin multi-country coverage and portfolio centralisation | Madrid designation, but accept transformation risk and budget for potential conversion costs. |
| Maximum enforceability in China (customs, administrative takedown, civil suits) | Direct CNIPA national filing, strongest, clearest enforcement path. |
| Testing the China market via third-party sellers or limited local exposure | Madrid may be acceptable as a lower-touch route. |
| Launching own operations, manufacturing, or licensing in China | File direct with CNIPA; avoid Madrid-only reliance. |
| Operating in high-risk sectors (luxury, pharma, FMCG, electronics) | File direct with CNIPA, enforcement speed and certainty are non-negotiable. |
| Limited budget but need multi-country portfolio coverage | Hybrid: Madrid for broad coverage + direct CNIPA for highest-value marks. |
Choose Madrid when:
Choose direct CNIPA filing when:
The hybrid approach: For many foreign brands in 2026, the optimal strategy is to file a Madrid international application for broad portfolio coverage across multiple countries while simultaneously filing a direct CNIPA application for the brand’s highest-value or highest-risk marks in China. This captures the administrative efficiency of Madrid without sacrificing enforcement certainty where it matters most.
Not every Madrid vs CNIPA decision requires outside counsel, but several situations demand it. Engage a qualified China trademark lawyer immediately when:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rainy Barlow at ABION CHINA, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 12 minutes ago
posted 35 minutes ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.