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The introduction of trademark consent letters in Japan has fundamentally changed how foreign brands navigate trademark clearance, coexistence and registration in one of Asia’s most commercially significant IP jurisdictions. On April 1, 2024, the revised Trademark Act took effect, formally enabling the Japan Patent Office (JPO) to accept Letters of Consent (LoCs) as part of the examination process for marks cited against prior registrations under Article 4(1)(xi). By April 7, 2025, METI announced the first trademark registration granted under the new consent letter system, and by December 1, 2025, the JPO had received 153 LoC-related applications, evidence that the mechanism is now operational and commercially consequential.
This guide provides in-house counsel, IP managers and brand licensing teams with a complete decision-to-execution playbook: when to use an LoC, how to draft one that passes JPO scrutiny, what licensing clauses to update, and how to enforce registered marks across Japan’s major online marketplaces.
For decades, Japan was one of the few major trademark jurisdictions that did not accept consent letters during examination. If a JPO examiner cited a prior similar mark as grounds for refusal under Article 4(1)(xi) of the Trademark Act, the applicant had no mechanism to submit a letter from the prior rights-holder consenting to coexistence. That changed with the revised Trademark Act Japan, which became effective on April 1, 2024. The reform aligned Japan more closely with the practice of the United States, the European Union and most other major filing jurisdictions.
The practical significance for foreign brands in 2026 is substantial. Industry observers expect the volume of LoC applications to accelerate as brand teams recognise the speed and cost advantages over oppositions, appeals and negotiated assignments. The first registration under the consent letter system Japan, announced by METI on April 7, 2025, demonstrated that the JPO is operationally ready to process LoCs. The 153 cumulative applications logged by December 1, 2025 suggest growing confidence among applicants and their counsel.
Before investing resources in an LoC strategy, brand teams should run through a quick decision checklist:
The consent letter system Japan now operates under is anchored in the amendment to Article 4(1)(xi) of the Trademark Act, which governs refusals based on similarity to prior registered marks. Under the revised provision, an applicant may submit a Letter of Consent from the owner of the cited prior mark as part of the examination response. The JPO then evaluates the LoC alongside other factors to determine whether registration should proceed.
| Date | Milestone | Source |
|---|---|---|
| April 1, 2024 | Revised Trademark Act takes effect; JPO begins accepting LoCs | JPO / METI |
| April 7, 2025 | METI announces first trademark registration granted under the LoC system | METI press release |
| December 1, 2025 | JPO records 153 cumulative LoC-related applications | TMI Eyes / JPO statistics |
A JPO consent letter does not guarantee registration. Examiners retain discretion to refuse an application even when a valid LoC is submitted, particularly where the marks are so similar, or the goods and services so closely related, that consumer confusion remains likely despite the prior owner’s consent. This discretionary model distinguishes Japan from jurisdictions where a consent letter creates a stronger presumption in favour of the applicant.
In practice, the JPO evaluates the following criteria when reviewing a submitted LoC:
Trademark clearance Japan strategies must now include the LoC option in every cost-benefit analysis. However, an LoC is not always the best path. The decision depends on the commercial relationship between the parties, the degree of mark similarity, the strength of the prior mark and the urgency of registration. The table below compares the primary options available to foreign brand teams.
| Option | When Appropriate | Main Tradeoffs / Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Letter of Consent (LoC) | Prior owner is amenable; low commercial conflict; quicker path to registration needed | Faster and more commercial, but JPO may still refuse; requires careful drafting and cooperation from the prior owner |
| Coexistence Agreement | Both parties can delineate distinct uses, channels or markets | Strong commercial certainty but requires detailed delimitation of goods, services and territories, may be harder to police over time |
| Opposition / Litigation | Prior owner is hostile or mark strength is genuinely unclear | Costly and time-consuming; may produce definitive court or JPO Trial Board decisions |
| Licensing Arrangement | Ongoing commercial relationship already exists or is desirable | Addresses both registration (via LoC clause) and commercial use; requires ongoing quality control and compliance management |
An LoC submitted during examination addresses the Article 4(1)(xi) citation but does not immunise the resulting registration against post-registration challenges. A third party may still file an opposition within two months of the publication of registration, or seek cancellation on separate grounds such as non-use, fraud or public interest. The practical effect of an LoC, however, is that it removes the most common basis for refusal and signals to potential challengers that the prior owner endorses coexistence, which can discourage opportunistic oppositions.
Drafting an LoC that meets JPO requirements demands precision. A loosely worded or overly broad consent is likely to be disregarded or to invite an examiner’s request for clarification, delaying the application. The following section sets out the JPO checklist for acceptance and provides an annotated sample.
Based on published JPO guidance and practitioner analysis, the following elements should be present in every LoC submitted to the JPO:
No. Both JPO guidance and comparative analysis by INTA confirm that a blanket consent, for example, “we consent to all future trademark registrations by [Applicant]”, is not acceptable. The LoC must be specific to the particular mark, designated goods/services and application at issue. Open-ended or generalised language lacks the precision needed for the examiner to assess confusion risk and may be treated as insufficient evidence of informed consent.
The following is an illustrative LoC structure. It should be adapted by qualified counsel to the specific facts of each matter.
[Letterhead of Prior Mark Owner]
To: Commissioner, Japan Patent Office
Re: Consent to Registration of Trademark Application No. [●] filed by [Applicant Name]
We, [Full Legal Name of Prior Mark Owner], the registered owner of Japanese Trademark Registration No. [●] for the mark [●] covering [designated goods/services in Classes ●], hereby consent to the registration and use by [Applicant Full Legal Name] of the mark [●] as applied for under Application No. [●] for [specific goods/services in Classes ●].
We confirm that we do not consider that the coexistence of the two marks on the register for the respective goods/services identified above will give rise to consumer confusion.
[This consent is limited to the specific mark and goods/services identified above and does not extend to any other marks, goods, services or applications.]
Signed: ______ Name: ______ Title: ______ Date: ______
The bracketed limitation clause is particularly important. Omitting it may create an inference of broader consent than intended, which could complicate future enforcement or portfolio management.
Where the LoC arises from an existing or planned commercial relationship, the underlying trademark licensing Japan agreement should incorporate specific provisions that address consent letter mechanics, quality control and cross-border brand protection Japan considerations. The following twelve clauses are recommended for inclusion in any licence agreement that may involve LoC cooperation.
Sample clause, LoC cooperation: “Licensor shall, within fifteen (15) business days of Licensee’s written request, execute and deliver a Letter of Consent in a form acceptable to the Japan Patent Office, consenting to the registration of the Licensed Mark for the Licensed Goods/Services. Licensor shall cooperate with certified translation and any additional documentation reasonably required for JPO acceptance.”
Securing registration, whether through an LoC or otherwise, is only the first step. Online brand enforcement Japan requires a structured, platform-by-platform policing programme. Japan’s e-commerce landscape is dominated by Amazon Japan, Rakuten, Yahoo! Auctions and Mercari, each of which operates its own intellectual property rights enforcement programme.
The recommended workflow for each platform follows a four-step pattern:
Whether preparing evidence for marketplace takedowns or for submission to JPO examiners in support of an LoC or distinctiveness argument, the following items should be assembled and maintained on an ongoing basis:
An LoC submitted during registration can serve a secondary enforcement purpose. The limitation clause in a well-drafted LoC delineates the scope of authorised coexistence. Any use by a third party that falls outside that scope can be cited as evidence that the infringing use was never authorised, strengthening the brand owner’s position in marketplace disputes and, if necessary, in court proceedings.
The consent letter system Japan has introduced is a powerful tool, but it has clear boundaries. The JPO may still refuse registration despite a valid LoC if the examiner concludes that consumer confusion is likely on the totality of the evidence. This is a substantive assessment, not a procedural formality, and it means that LoC submissions should always be accompanied by supporting evidence of market distinction.
Post-registration, the LoC does not eliminate opposition or cancellation risk. Third parties, not just the prior mark owner, may file oppositions within two months of publication, or seek cancellation on grounds such as non-use (after three consecutive years) or prior rights. The likely practical effect of an LoC, however, is twofold: it significantly reduces the risk of examiner refusal at the application stage, and it signals to potential challengers that the most obvious ground for objection has been addressed cooperatively.
Early adoption data supports cautious optimism. The METI announcement of the first LoC-based registration on April 7, 2025 confirmed that the system is functioning as intended. The 153 cumulative applications recorded by December 1, 2025 suggest steady uptake, although it remains early to draw conclusions about acceptance rates or examiner behaviour patterns. Industry observers expect the JPO to publish more detailed guidance as the case base grows through 2026.
For foreign brand teams ready to operationalise the LoC system, the following 60–90 day implementation timeline provides a structured approach:
Teams that lack in-house Japan IP expertise should engage qualified Japanese trademark counsel to review all LoC drafts, licensing amendments and enforcement strategies before submission or execution.
The trademark consent letters Japan framework is no longer theoretical, it is operational, tested and increasingly relied upon by brand owners and their counsel. Foreign companies with trademark portfolios touching Japan should take three immediate steps. First, audit all open Japan filings and clearance searches to identify applications where an LoC could resolve a prior-mark citation. Second, update trademark licensing agreements with explicit LoC cooperation clauses, certified translation obligations and evidence-sharing commitments. Third, operationalise an online enforcement programme across Amazon Japan, Rakuten, Yahoo! Auctions and Mercari, using the evidence checklist and workflow set out in this guide.
The brands that move earliest to integrate the consent letter system into their Japan IP strategy will secure faster registrations, stronger coexistence positions and more effective cross-border brand protection Japan outcomes.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Chie Kasahara at Atsumi & Sakai, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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