By Andrew Rapacke, Managing Partner, Registered Patent Attorney
A private-label seller woke up to find her Amazon listing locked. A competitor had filed for her brand name at the USPTO, claimed ownership through the Brand Registry, and convinced Amazon that she was the rightful manufacturer. She was banned from selling the product she’d spent two years building, forced to rebrand from scratch because she hadn’t filed a single trademark application.
This isn’t a hypothetical nightmare scenario. It’s a documented case that illustrates what happens when sellers ignore intellectual property protection in the world’s most competitive marketplace. Amazon now controls approximately 40% of all U.S. e-commerce, hosting over 1.1 million active third-party sellers in the U.S. (and 1.9 million globally) as of 2025. As the largest online retailer, the Amazon Marketplace offers unmatched opportunities for businesses to reach new customers and grow their brands.
With independent sellers responsible for roughly 60% of Amazon sales, the platform has become a battleground where brand protection determines who survives. Medium businesses make up a significant segment of Amazon sellers, contributing substantial sales volume and facing unique challenges in protecting their intellectual property. With so many customers shopping on Amazon, the revenue potential and reach for sellers is enormous.
If you’re an Amazon seller dealing with counterfeit products, hijacked listings, or Brand Registry complications, understanding trademark law isn’t optional; it’s the difference between controlling your business and watching competitors steal it. At Rapacke Law Group, we focus specifically on helping sellers secure their intellectual property rights, enroll in Amazon Brand Registry, and take action against infringers who threaten their revenue. We align our trademark legal services with your business goals, ensuring our strategies support your long-term growth and brand protection. We handle Amazon trademark issues using the same strategic approach we use to protect innovative software and AI technologies: comprehensive IP protection that safeguards your competitive position. Additionally, we back our trademark services with The RLG Guarantee: Get your trademark approved or pay nothing. We guarantee it.
Brand Registry launched in 2017 and expanded significantly in 2018 to give legitimate brand owners enforcement tools. By 2023, Amazon was investing over $1.2 billion and 15,000 employees in brand protection, seizing more than 7 million counterfeit products that year. Yet a recent university study found nearly 7 in 10 consumers had unknowingly purchased counterfeit items via e-commerce in the past year, proving the counterfeit problem remains widespread despite Amazon’s efforts. Understanding and complying with Amazon’s policies is essential for adequate brand protection and enforcement.
We work with sellers navigating the full range of Amazon’s brand protection tools and programs:
- Brand Registry enrollment and verification (now available even with a pending USPTO trademark application)
- A+ Content (formerly Enhanced Brand Content) compliance
- Amazon Vine eligibility for registered brands
- Transparency program enrollment for product serialization
- Report a Violation tool usage through Brand Registry
- Intellectual Property (IP) notices and enforcement actions within Amazon’s system
Urgent situations we handle:
- Counterfeit listings appearing under your ASIN (product detail page)
- Hijacked ASINs with unauthorized sellers attaching to your product listing
- Misuse of your brand name in competitor titles or keywords (keyword hijacking)
- Brand Registry denials or verification failures that are preventing you from enrolling
Ready to protect your brand? Schedule a free strategy call or send us your Amazon store link and USPTO serial number. We help Amazon sellers protect trademarks and will review your situation within one business day.
Why Trademarks Matter So Much on Amazon
A registered trademark is your gateway to Amazon Brand Registry, and Brand Registry is your gateway to complete control over your product listings on Amazon. Without it, you’re vulnerable to competitors who can attach to your ASINs, manipulate your product detail pages, and undercut your sales without consequence. Brand owners enrolled in Brand Registry can lock down their content and more easily remove infringing listings. Over 700,000 brands worldwide had enrolled in Brand Registry as of 2023, underscoring the critical importance of trademark protection for Amazon sellers. Trademark protection builds trust with consumers by ensuring product authenticity, fostering customer loyalty, and encouraging repeat purchases.
For Amazon sellers, a trademark protects your brand, company name, logo, or slogan as it appears on your product listings, packaging, and marketing materials. The key requirement is that your mark must be distinctive, meaning it identifies your products as yours rather than just describing what they are or do. Understanding trademark requirements and making careful trademark selection are essential for Amazon sellers to ensure compliance, avoid disputes, and strengthen brand protection. On Amazon’s massive marketplace, distinctiveness is vital for standing out and preventing confusion.
Enrolling in Amazon Brand Registry as a registered brand gives trademark owners greater control over product pages and greater credibility. Trademark owners benefit from enhanced protection, the ability to enforce their rights, and improved consumer trust through the Brand Registry program.
What Happens Without an Trademark and Amazon Trademark Lawyer
Selling on Amazon without trademark protection exposes you to serious risks:
| Risk | What Happens |
| Listing hijacking | Other sellers attach to your ASIN and sell inferior products under your listing |
| Unauthorized resellers | Gray-market sellers undercut your prices using your own brand name |
| Brand lockout | A competitor files a trademark for your brand name first, blocking your Brand Registry application |
| Lost reviews | Hijackers ship low-quality items under your listing, leading to bad reviews that hurt your rating |
| No enforcement tools | Without a trademark, you can’t access the Report a Violation system, file infringement claims, or use other advanced enforcement tools on Amazon |
Brand lockout is particularly devastating. Amazon’s Brand Registry policies have created opportunities for unscrupulous parties to extort sellers by grabbing unregistered brand names. In documented cases, private-label sellers have lost control of their Amazon listings after competitors trademarked their brand names and convinced Amazon that they were the rightful manufacturers. Amazon locked the original sellers out of their own product pages, effectively forcing them to rebrand.
As of 2024, Amazon allows Brand Registry enrollment for pending USPTO trademark applications; you no longer need to wait for registration to be complete. This means that even with a pending trademark application, you can begin protecting your brand and using enforcement tools sooner. This policy change makes filing early absolutely critical. If you’re planning a product launch, filing your trademark application before ordering inventory can save you from devastating brand lockouts. Amazon’s IP Accelerator program has connected over 15,000 brands with trademark attorneys to speed up protection.
Tip: Amazon now accepts Brand Registry applications with a USPTO serial number (pending trademark) rather than a complete registration. This means you can get Brand Registry access within weeks of filing, rather than waiting 8–12 months for registration. Once your trademark is registered, you become eligible for additional protections, such as Brand Gating. The strategy is clear: file your trademark application the moment you’re serious about a brand name.
Trademarks vs. Patents vs. Copyrights
Many sellers confuse these three types of intellectual property (IP) rights. Here’s the distinction for Amazon sellers:
- Trademarks protect brand names, logos, and slogans (e.g., your brand name “SUNRISE GEAR”). This is the key to Brand Registry.
- Patents protect inventions and product designs (e.g., a unique mechanism in your kitchen gadget). To enforce patent rights on Amazon, a patent application must be filed, and only a patent holder with a United States patent can take legal action against infringers. If your product includes innovative technology, especially software-enabled features or AI components, patent protection becomes critical for defending against copycats who reverse-engineer your innovation.
- Copyrights protect creative works (e.g., your product photos, graphic designs, or A+ Content text/layout).
All three can be relevant on Amazon; however, trademarks are the foundation for Brand Registry access and brand control on the platform. Without a trademark, you can’t even begin to fully utilize Amazon’s brand protection features. Patents and copyrights offer additional protections (for example, against copying your product design or listing images), and we leverage them when applicable. Still, a trademark is Step 1 for marketplace sellers.
Amazon Brand Registry: Requirements & Strategy
This section walks you through the current Brand Registry requirements for U.S. sellers, step by step. Understanding these requirements before you file prevents delays and denials that can cost you months of lost protection. Comprehensive trademark support is crucial for navigating Brand Registry requirements and ensuring your brand is set up for success.
Since Amazon launched Brand Registry, annual trademark applications by small businesses have roughly doubled (from about 100,000 to 200,000 per year), primarily due to Amazon’s incentives for registration. This dramatic increase reflects the critical importance of trademark protection for competitive positioning on Amazon’s marketplace. In response to massive USPTO backlogs, Amazon began allowing sellers in 2021–2022 to enroll with a pending application, making early filing even more critical. Before filing, it is essential to conduct thorough research to identify potential conflicts, as this can help avoid legal issues and delays in the registration process.
Eligibility Requirements (U.S. Amazon Brand Registry in 2024)
| Requirement | Details |
| Active or pending trademark | Must be filed with the USPTO (or in another approved national trademark office). Amazon now accepts pending USPTO applications (serial number) for Brand Registry. |
| Text elements in the mark | The trademark must include words, letters, or numbers, not just a logo graphic. (Pure design marks with no text do not qualify.) |
| Matching brand name | The brand name on the trademark must exactly match the brand name on your product packaging/listing. Consistency is key. |
| Live Amazon account | You need an active Seller Central or Vendor Central account in good standing to apply. |
In short, you need a trademark (even if just applied for) that matches your branding. Amazon’s text requirement is crucial: your trademark must have textual elements that match your Amazon brand name. If you have only a logo with no words, Amazon will reject it for Registry. (For example, the Nike “swoosh” symbol alone wouldn’t qualify, but a logo that says “NIKE” would.)
Word Marks vs. Design Marks
Amazon accepts both standard character (word) marks and design marks (logos that include text), but they serve different purposes:
Word Marks protect the text of your brand name itself, in any font or style. If you register “SUNRISE GEAR” as a plain word mark, you can display it however you want (any color, any font) and still be protected. This offers broader, more flexible protection across all uses. We typically recommend starting with a word mark for Amazon sellers, as it provides the broadest protection.
Design Marks protect a specific stylized logo as depicted. For example, a distinctive “Sunrise Gear” logo in a particular font with a sun graphic could serve as a design mark. This gives you the right to that exact design. Amazon will accept design marks only if they contain text (letters/numbers). A purely abstract logo with no text won’t qualify for Brand Registry. Design marks are narrower; protection is limited to that logo image. You might add a design mark later for extra security, but it shouldn’t be your first or only trademark on Amazon.
For most sellers, we recommend registering a word mark first for maximum flexibility, then registering a logo mark later, if desired. (Amazon only cares that some part of your trademark matches the brand name on the products. With a word mark, that match is straightforward.)
Evidence Amazon Requires
When you apply for Brand Registry, Amazon typically asks for proof that your trademark is connected to your actual products. You should be prepared to provide:
- Product photos showing the brand name affixed to the product itself (e.g., on the label, tag, or product packaging).
- Packaging photos clearly showing the brand name on the box, bag, or other packaging.
- (If already selling) Links to your live Amazon listings where the brand name is visible on the product images.
- Your USPTO trademark serial number or registration number.
We help clients prepare this documentation before filing the Brand Registry application to avoid verification delays. Amazon’s verification team may send follow-up questions or requests for more pics if anything is unclear. Having crisp, high-resolution photos of your product and packaging, with the branding clearly visible, can make the difference between a 2-day approval and a 2-week back-and-forth. Amazon’s verification team uses these materials to confirm that your brand is genuine and the trademark is actually used on your products.
Realistic Timelines
| Stage | Typical Timeline |
| USPTO trademark filing (prep and submission) | ~1–2 weeks for us to do a proper search and prepare the application. (Can be faster if urgent.) |
| USPTO serial number issuance | Same day as filing. (You get a serial # immediately, which is what Amazon needs for pending verification.) |
| Amazon Brand Registry application | Immediately after filing. We often submit the Amazon application within 24 hours of getting the USPTO serial number. |
| Brand Registry approval | ~3–14 days after Amazon initiates verification. (Amazon emails a code to the trademark owner on file; once that’s confirmed, registry access is granted. Many sellers are getting approved in under a week now.) |
| First USPTO office action (examiner review) | ~3–6 months after filing. (This is the USPTO reviewing the application, separate from Amazon.) |
| Full USPTO registration | ~8–12 months if all goes well (no significant hiccups). It can take longer if there are objections or delays. |
The good news: you don’t need to wait for complete USPTO registration to get on Amazon. Most sellers enroll in the Brand Registry within weeks of filing their trademark. Amazon verifies your pending application directly via the USPTO’s database. However, remember that your legal rights in the broader marketplace are more limited while the mark is just pending.
Pending vs. Registered Trademark for Amazon
Amazon now commonly accepts pending USPTO applications for Brand Registry enrollment; you no longer need a fully registered trademark to access brand protection tools. There are benefits and limitations to each status:
| Status | Benefits for Amazon | Limitations |
| Pending trademark (USPTO filing in progress) | Early Brand Registry access (weeks after filing instead of waiting 8–12 months). Ability to lock listings, use brand tools, and assert your brand on Amazon as soon as you have a serial number. | Legal enforcement outside Amazon is limited until the mark registers. (You can use ™, but can’t sue for infringement in federal court until registered.) Also, there’s a chance the application could be refused, which could complicate things down the road. |
| Registered trademark (USPTO certificate issued) | Full federal trademark rights: nationwide protection, ability to bring infringement lawsuits with statutory damages, customs recordation, etc. Stronger position both on and off Amazon. | Takes ~8–12 months to obtain (in the U.S.), which is a long time to wait if you need Amazon protection now. Costlier if issues arise during prosecution. |
Most clients benefit from obtaining Brand Registry as soon as possible under a pending mark, then proceeding to registration for the full legal benefits. We help you choose the right filing basis for your specific situation:
- Section 1(a) “In Use”: if you are already selling products under the brand in the U.S., we can file based on existing use. This requires providing a specimen (proof of use) at the time of filing.
- Section 1(b) “Intent to Use”: if you haven’t started selling yet but plan to, we file on an intent-to-use basis. This lets you get a serial number and Amazon access now, and you’ll submit proof of use to the USPTO later (via a Statement of Use).
Choosing the correct filing basis and preparing it correctly are essential; improper filings (such as incorrect specimens or descriptions) can delay both USPTO review and Brand Registry enrollment. Our role is to reduce USPTO office actions and avoid refusals, keeping your timeline on track. Amazon’s decision to allow pending applications was in response to significant USPTO backlogs; the goal is to let entrepreneurs protect their brands on Amazon even while the wheels of government turn slowly.
Amazon’s Text Requirement & Choosing the Right Mark
As mentioned, Amazon requires that your trademark include text (letters/numbers). Purely graphic logos or symbols with no text are not eligible. This means when choosing a brand name for Amazon, you should ensure the trademark you file contains the brand name in a word format (even if accompanied by a design).
Additionally, the strength of the mark matters for both USPTO approval and for carving out territory on Amazon:
- Fanciful Marks: Fanciful marks offer the strongest protection and are usually easy to register and police because they’re unique.
- Arbitrary Marks: real words, but unrelated to the product (e.g., “Apple” for computers). Strong protection. Distinctive in context.
- Suggestive Marks: hint at qualities without directly describing (e.g., “Netflix” suggests internet + flicks). Good protection. Usually registrable, though sometimes a gray area.
- Descriptive Marks: describe the product (e.g., “Super Soft Pillows” for pillows). Weak, often rejected unless you can prove acquired distinctiveness. Not recommended as your primary brand; both USPTO and Amazon have issues with these.
- Generic Terms: common name for the product (e.g., just “Pillow” for pillows). Not protectable at all as trademarks. (Amazon wouldn’t let you register “Pillow” as a brand anyway.)
Amazon sellers sometimes try to use highly descriptive names to game search results, but that can backfire legally. In fact, scholars have noted the rise of “nonsense marks,” strings of random letters or words that sellers create simply to have a unique brand that won’t conflict with anyone else. While a completely made-up brand name can be great for legal uniqueness, it should also be something customers can remember and trust. We help you strike that balance between distinctiveness and marketability.
Proof of Use in Commerce & Specimens
“Use in commerce” for U.S. trademark purposes means you have actually sold goods to U.S. customers under the mark. The USPTO requires proof of this use in the form of specimens: examples showing your trademark as the public sees it. For Amazon sellers, acceptable specimens often include:
- Product photos showing the brand name on the product (e.g., a label, engraving).
- Packaging with the brand name (boxes, wrappers, tags, or inserts that include the brand name).
- Screenshots of Amazon listings where the product image shows the brand name on the product. (This can work, especially if your product is clearly branded in the photos, though USPTO sometimes scrutinizes screenshots.)
- Tags or labels attached to the product bearing the brand name.
The USPTO has become stricter about digital specimens in recent years, which means proper documentation from the start saves time and prevents costly refiling. A Photoshop mockup, or simply an Amazon detail page text, is usually not sufficient. They want to see the mark in a context that looks like an actual point-of-sale display or product packaging. We help clients assemble specimens that meet current USPTO guidelines; often, a real photo of the product or package is best. These specimens not only satisfy the government, but also double as evidence for Amazon’s Brand Registry verification (showing your brand on your product).
Filing Basis and Specimens:
- If we file under Section 1(a) (In Use), we must include a specimen with the initial application. That means you need at least one product sale and proof at the time of filing.
- If we file Section 1(b) (Intent to Use), no specimen is needed upfront. Instead, after the USPTO approves the mark (around 8+ months later), you’ll file a Statement of Use with specimens to convert it to a complete registration.
For more guidance on trademark filing strategies, consult Andrew Rapacke, an experienced intellectual property attorney.
| Filing Basis | When Specimens Are Required |
| 1(a) Use in Commerce | Submit specimen(s) with initial application. (Must show actual use in the U.S. as of filing.) |
| 1(b) Intent to Use | No specimen at filing. Must later file a Statement of Use with the specimen once you have begun using the mark, before the mark can register. |
For Amazon sellers launching a new brand, we often use 1(b) intent-to-use to get the application in early, then you provide specimens after you start selling. If you’re already selling, 1(a) can be straightforward with photos of your products. Either way, accurate and compliant specimens support both your USPTO case and your Amazon Brand Registry verification. We’ll ensure you know exactly what photos or screenshots are needed and that they’re up to spec.
How an Amazon Trademark Lawyer Protects Your Brand
As a dedicated IP law firm specializing in tech and eCommerce brands, we offer specialized trademark services and comprehensive support for Amazon sellers, backed by our fixed-fee pricing model and The RLG Guarantee. Our work goes well beyond just filling out a trademark application form. We provide practical legal support tailored to the realities of Amazon’s marketplace, where issues such as copycat listings, hijacked reviews, and Brand Registry disputes require specialized knowledge of Amazon’s systems and policies.
We act as a strategic partner, offering services that extend beyond simple application filing. Our comprehensive brand review helps you understand your brand’s strengths and vulnerabilities, ensuring you are prepared for Amazon Brand Registry and beyond. We use AI-powered monitoring and data analytics to track brand sentiment and identify infringers in real time. Our team assists with account reinstatement by drafting Plans of Action and letters of non-infringement following account suspensions. We also manage enforcement actions, including issuing takedown requests and handling disputes with sellers.
For brands expanding internationally, we assist clients in other countries with their international trademark needs, ensuring your brand is protected wherever you do business.
What We Handle
Amazon sellers face unique challenges that even general trademark lawyers may not anticipate. Some of the issues we regularly help clients navigate:
- Copycat listings using confusingly similar brand names or logos to siphon your sales. (These could be other sellers who make a product that looks like yours and use a lookalike brand name to trick customers.)
- Hijacked reviews caused by sellers attaching low-quality products to your listing (so the bad reviews for their cheap knockoff appear under your product).
- Keyword hijacking: competitors stuffing your brand name into their listing text (e.g., “Compatible with SUNRISE GEAR”) without authorization. This can confuse customers and is against Amazon’s policy.
- Brand Registry account disputes: e.g., Amazon denying your Brand Registry application or someone else somehow getting control of your brand on Amazon.
- Verification failures: issues with the trademark verification code or with Amazon not recognizing your mark (common when names don’t match exactly or when Amazon requires additional proof).
- Retaliatory IP complaints: situations where a competitor files a bogus infringement claim against you (sadly, this happens in Amazon’s competitive environment).
We coordinate your USPTO strategy with your Amazon strategy to ensure seamless protection and prevent mismatches that can derail your Brand Registry enrollment or trigger listing suspensions. For example, we make sure the trademark you file for exactly matches the brand name on your Amazon listing and packaging. Any mismatch can cause Amazon to reject your Brand Registry enrollment or even suspend listings. By planning (choosing the right mark, class of goods, description of goods, etc.), we smooth the path on both fronts.
Attorney-filed trademark applications also have higher success rates at the USPTO than do-it-yourself filings, meaning fewer roadblocks and faster registration. This translates directly into faster, smoother access to Brand Registry for our clients.
For brands expanding beyond Amazon, we also provide counsel on long-term brand strategy. That includes protecting your mark across multiple classes (if you plan to sell different types of products), filing international trademark applications (EU, UK, Canada, Mexico, etc.), and coordinating with counsel in countries where counterfeiting is common (China, for instance). An Amazon-focused strategy can and should fit into your broader IP protection plan as your business grows.
Trademark Infringement & Hijacked Listings on Amazon
Trademark infringement on Amazon takes many forms. At its core, it means someone using your brand name or logo (or a confusingly similar one) in a way that misleads customers, typically to sell products as if they were yours. On Amazon, this can get complicated because listings and the buy box work differently. “Amazon listing hijacking” is a term familiar to many sellers: it refers to an infringer effectively taking over your branded listing with counterfeit or unbranded items, often undercutting your price and stealing the buy box.
Common infringement scenarios we see on Amazon:
| Type | Example |
| Keyword stuffing | A competitor adds “Compatible with SUNRISE GEAR” to their title or backend keywords to attract searches, even though they have no authorization or actual compatibility. This can divert your traffic. |
| Logo copying | Another seller uses a logo that is nearly identical to yours on their product images or packaging, causing customer confusion. |
| ASIN hijacking | An unauthorized seller lists their product (often a counterfeit or knockoff) on your product listing (same ASIN), exploiting your reviews and rankings. Customers think they’re buying your product but end up getting something else. |
| Brand name copying | A competitor uses a name that is a deliberate misspelling of yours (e.g., “SUNRICE GEAR”) or otherwise so close that shoppers might think it’s you. |
Not every mention of your brand by another seller is outright infringement, of course. Permissible uses of your trademark by others can include things like truthful comparative advertising (e.g., “Works with Sunrise Gear tents” might be allowed if it’s true) or legitimate resale of your actual products (the first-sale doctrine in the U.S. allows reselling genuine goods). There’s also “nominative fair use,” where someone might reference your brand to describe compatibility, etc., without implying they are you. We carefully evaluate each situation against U.S. trademark law and Amazon’s policies to determine whether the conduct infringes and what the best course of action is.
Typical enforcement sequence for trademark issues on Amazon:
- Document the infringement: We gather evidence: screenshots of the listing, copies of the product received (if counterfeit, we often advise doing a test buy), dates, seller IDs, etc. Documentation is critical.
- Cease and desist letter: Often, the first step is to send a formal notice to the infringing seller. We outline your rights (with proof of your trademark), explain what they’re doing wrong, and demand they stop. This is sometimes enough, especially for more minor offenders.
- Report a Violation complaint: Through your Brand Registry account, we file an infringement report with Amazon. This goes to Amazon’s internal teams. We present the evidence clearly to show the violation of Amazon’s policies and your IP rights.
- Amazon escalation: If the standard complaint isn’t resolved promptly, we may escalate via Amazon’s internal Brand Registry support or to their Notice Dispute teams. We have methods to get Amazon’s attention on urgent issues (such as counterfeits that affect safety).
- Follow-up and monitoring: We keep an eye out for the infringer resurfacing. Many will comply after being called out, but some might try to pop back up under a new name; we stay vigilant.
- Federal court litigation (if necessary): In severe cases (e.g., a repeat counterfeiter causing substantial damage), we may advise filing a lawsuit. Federal courts provide powerful tools: injunctions, the ability to seize counterfeit inventory, and statutory damages of up to $2 million per counterfeit mark. It’s a last resort, but sometimes needed for willful or organized infringement.
In extreme cases of counterfeit activity, Amazon itself might take action (Amazon’s Counterfeit Crimes Unit has been pursuing bad actors through lawsuits and law enforcement). Amazon reported that since launching the unit in 2020, it has sought more than 21,000 counterfeiters and seized millions of counterfeit products. They work with brands (like you) on these efforts. We can interface with Amazon’s teams and, if your situation calls for it, with law enforcement.
Also, note that the scope of the problem has attracted government attention. In 2023, the U.S. passed the INFORM Consumers Act, which requires online marketplaces (such as Amazon) to verify and disclose the identities of high-volume third-party sellers, making it harder for criminal counterfeiters to operate anonymously. This law (effective June 27, 2023) aims to increase transparency and deter the sale of stolen or counterfeit goods online. We stay on top of these developments; our job is not only to respond to infringements but also to help prevent them through appropriate measures and awareness of new tools (both Amazon’s and legal/regulatory).
Cease and Desist Letters & Amazon Takedown Notices
A cease-and-desist (C&D) letter is often our first line of defense in enforcement, especially for less egregious infringers or other sellers who might not realize they’re crossing a line. It’s a formal letter to the offending party that demands they stop the infringing activity. Key elements typically include:
- Proof of your rights: We state that you own a trademark (and provide the registration or serial number, etc.) to establish your legal standing.
- Clear identification of the infringement: We list specific ASINs, listing titles, and seller names, and explain how they infringe (e.g., “you are using our brand name in your listing of XYZ product without authorization”). Often, we’ll include screenshots or links.
- A professional, unambiguous demand: We explicitly tell them to stop the infringing behavior (remove the listings, cease using the mark, etc.) and that continued violation will result in further action. We keep the tone firm but professional; the goal is compliance, not starting a flame war.
- Deadline and contact: We give them a short window to comply (and/or respond) and provide a way to confirm with us that it’s done. This creates a sense of urgency.
We draft these letters carefully to avoid unnecessary escalation. On Amazon, overly aggressive threats can backfire; a recipient might retaliate by filing their own bogus complaint or leaving negative reviews out of spite. We strike the right balance: enough pressure to let them know we mean business, but not so much that we provoke a fight if one can be avoided. Often, a well-crafted letter from an attorney is enough to make an infringer quietly back off.
In parallel, we use Amazon’s internal enforcement tools. If you’re in Brand Registry, the Report a Violation tool is your direct line to Amazon’s internal IP enforcement team. We draft compelling notices through that system, including all necessary evidence, to get Amazon to remove the offending listings. There are also specialized forms for patent complaints or counterfeits. For urgent, clear-cut counterfeiting (e.g., someone outright copying your product and logo), Amazon has a program to expedite takedowns and even potential seller bans.
Outcomes vary: some matters resolve within hours (we’ve seen Amazon take down a listing in a day when provided incontrovertible evidence). Sometimes, upon receiving our letter, the infringing seller will voluntarily remove their listings to avoid trouble. Other times, it can be a whack-a-mole if the seller is persistent or has multiple accounts. That’s when more robust enforcement (and perhaps legal action or an Amazon escalation) comes into play. We handle ongoing enforcement and monitoring for many clients, essentially acting as their brand watchdog on Amazon.
Beyond Trademarks: Copyright & Patent Issues on Amazon
Many Amazon listing disputes involve overlapping IP rights. While trademarks are our primary focus for Brand Registry, we also advise on copyright and patent issues that can arise with your Amazon content or products. Understanding the differences is important because using the right tool for the right problem makes enforcement more effective:
- Trademarks: Protect brand names, logos, slogans (source identifiers). On Amazon, use trademarks to prevent brand-name misuse, counterfeit branded goods, and lookalike logos.
- Copyrights: Protect original creative works (photos, text, illustrations, software code, etc.). On Amazon, this can cover your product images, your written descriptions or A+ Content, your packaging artwork, instruction manuals, etc.
- Patents: Protect inventions (utility patents) or decorative designs (design patents). On Amazon, this could cover a unique product functionality you invented or a specific ornamental product shape/design.
Not every copycat scenario is a trademark issue. For example, if someone rips off your product photography or copies an entire block of text from your listing, that’s a copyright issue, not a trademark one. If someone starts selling a product that looks exactly like yours, that might be a design patent issue (if you have one), rather than a trademark (they may not be using your brand name at all). Conversely, if someone lists your authentic product without permission, that might not be illegal at all if it’s genuine; it falls under the resale/first sale doctrine (though Amazon has programs like gating to help brand owners with distribution control; more on that later).
We help clients pick the right approach and file the correct type of Amazon complaint for each situation. Amazon has separate submission forms for trademarks, copyrights, patents, and other intellectual property. Using the wrong one can lead to rejection or no action.
Amazon Copyright Infringement: Photos, Text, and Design Elements
Copyright protects original creative expression. On Amazon, the most common copyrighted assets are:
- Product photos: If you took professional images of your product, you own those images. We often see other sellers copy and paste a brand’s pictures into their own listings; that’s copyright infringement.
- A+ Content and infographics: Many brand owners create detailed comparison charts, feature graphics, or brand story modules. These are creative works (a combination of text and graphics) protected by copyright once created.
- Written content: Long-form descriptions, unique bullet points, or your brand story text are protected under copyright law if they represent original creative expression (not generic product descriptions).
- Instruction manuals or PDF guides: If you include a user manual or guide with your product and someone copies it, that’s copyright infringement.
- Packaging design elements: The artwork on your box, for example, or your label design could have both trademark elements (your logo) and copyrightable expression (the layout, graphics, etc.).
What copyright does not protect on Amazon: basic facts or common words (e.g., a simple product spec sheet, or the title “Stainless Steel Water Bottle – 20oz”; that’s too factual/generic to be copyrighted). It also doesn’t protect ideas or functional aspects (that’s patent territory).
If another seller copies your creative content, we can file a copyright infringement notice. Amazon follows a DMCA-like process: it typically removes the content/listing if a proper copyright complaint is filed. (If the other party believes they’re in the right, they can file a counter-notice, etc., but most often in blatant copy cases, they won’t bother.) We ensure the complaint is complete, pointing out exactly which content was copied and attesting to your ownership.
Example: Say you created a unique infographic chart for your listing comparing your product to competitors, and another seller has lifted that image for their own listing. We’d file a copyright complaint with Amazon, showing both listings and the matching image, stating that you (as the original creator) did not authorize its use. Amazon would likely remove the infringing listing’s image or the entire listing.
For high-value content, we suggest actually registering the copyright (e.g., with the U.S. Copyright Office) before pursuing damages outside Amazon. While you automatically own the copyright once you create something, registration is needed to file a lawsuit and seek statutory damages. It’s inexpensive and can be worthwhile for something like a set of product photos that keep getting stolen.
Amazon Patent Infringement: Utility & Design Patents
Patents can be a powerful tool on Amazon, though they are more complex and less common among small sellers. There are two main types:
- Utility Patents: Protect how an invention works or is used. If you have a truly novel product feature or mechanism, a utility patent can give you broad protection (e.g., “the only garlic press that uses a two-gear lever system”).
- Design Patents: Protect the ornamental design of a product (its appearance), provided it’s novel. These are easier to obtain than utility patents and are common in specific categories (e.g., unique bottle shapes or toy designs).
On Amazon, patent issues arise when someone else starts selling a product that falls within the claims of your patent. Amazon has a special Neutral Patent Evaluation process: you can pay a fee, and Amazon appoints a neutral patent attorney to decide whether infringement is likely. If you win, the competitor’s listing gets taken down. If you lose, they can keep selling. It’s faster and cheaper than a whole lawsuit (though you can still sue in court if needed).
We help clients prepare for or respond to these proceedings. It requires clearly mapping the accused product’s features to the patent’s claims.
It’s important to note: not every similar product infringes. For utility patents, every element of at least one independent claim must be present in the accused product. For design patents, the overall visual impression must be “substantially similar” in the eyes of an ordinary observer. We analyze this in depth (often with the help of patent counsel, if needed) before taking action.
We’ve also seen the flip side: sellers wrongfully accused of patent infringement by shady competitors trying to eliminate competition. In those cases, we coordinate with patent attorneys to defend you and, if appropriate, challenge the validity of the patent or show non-infringement.
One strategic point: If you hold patents and have a trademark registered with the Brand Registry, you have a multi-layered defense. The trademark gets you control over branding and listings; the patent can block others from selling even look-alike unbranded versions of your product. We ensure these tools are used in harmony.
Amazon Brand Tools: Gating, Enhanced Brand Content, and More
Once you successfully join Brand Registry, Amazon unlocks a suite of advanced tools to help protect and grow your brand. These advanced tools provide robust brand protection and management features, including the ability to identify and remove counterfeit products, unauthorized sellers, and inaccurate listings. Registered brands can also use Sponsored Brands ads to increase visibility and boost sales. These aren’t just defensive; many are also great for marketing and conversion. Here are some key features available only to brand-registered sellers:
| Tool | Purpose/Benefit |
| Brand Gating | Restrict who can list your branded products on Amazon as “new.” Prevents unauthorized sellers from appearing in the buy box without your approval. |
| A+ Content (Enhanced Brand Content) | Add rich content to your product listings: images, comparison charts, videos, and formatted descriptions that tell your brand story and showcase features. Boosts conversion rates and brand feel. |
| Amazon Stores | Create a multi-page storefront on Amazon with a custom URL (amazon.com/yourbrand). Great for showcasing your whole product line and driving off-Amazon traffic to a curated experience. |
| Transparency Program | Apply unique serialized codes to each unit of your product, which Amazon scans to verify authenticity. This program prevents counterfeits from ever reaching customers by catching fakes at the warehouse. |
| Amazon Vine | An invite-only reviewer program where you can provide units to Vine Voice reviewers who then leave honest reviews. Helps launch new products with initial credible reviews, only for registered brands. |
| Brand Analytics & Search | Access to detailed analytics, including what search terms customers use, market basket analysis, demographics, etc., plus tools to search for your images or scan listings for brand name misuse. These reports help you police infringement and better understand your market. |
| Project Zero | A program for brands to directly remove counterfeit listings themselves (bypassing the normal report-wait Amazon process) once they have demonstrated high accuracy in prior reports. This is advanced, but it can be a game-changer in the fight against fakes. |
We advise clients on qualifying for and using these tools effectively, while staying within Amazon’s policies. Misusing brand tools (for example, using A+ Content to put another company’s trademark in your comparison chart, or making prohibited health claims) can lead to policy violations against you. So it’s essential to both use the tools to your advantage and play by Amazon’s rules.
Brand Gating – Control Over Who Sells Your Products
Brand Gating is a program in which Amazon, upon request, restricts your brand so that other sellers cannot list your products as “new” without approval. This is immensely valuable if you have a problem with unauthorized resellers or counterfeiters, as it forces would-be sellers of your brand to get your permission. (Some legitimate resellers might still be allowed to sell as “Used” or “Collectible” condition, depending on Amazon’s policies, but gating stops the flood of random new sellers.)
Amazon doesn’t automatically gate brands; we have to petition for them. Factors Amazon considers in gating requests include:
- Your history of counterfeit and IP complaints: e.g., have you been dealing with a lot of fakes? (If yes, Amazon sees the need.)
- Customer impact: if counterfeiters have been causing bad reviews or safety issues, that strengthens the case.
- Brand strength and recognition: a well-known brand or one with a registered trademark in multiple countries might have an edge. But even smaller private labels can get gated if issues are demonstrated.
- Supporting documentation: We typically provide a dossier containing examples of infringement, actions taken, letters, investigation results, etc., as evidence.
We help assemble a strong request, which often includes:
- A list of ASINs (your products) that need protection.
- Evidence of past infringements: dates, screenshots, outcomes (like “X number of listings removed for counterfeits in the last 6 months”).
- Your trademark registration certificates.
- Any law enforcement reports or legal actions (if applicable).
- A concise argument as to why gating will improve customer experience (e.g., stop fakes that harm buyers).
Realistically, Amazon may grant gating for some products and brands but not others. It’s not guaranteed. But we have had success when the case is compelling. Even if gated, note that gating isn’t bulletproof; it primarily stops new, unauthorized sellers. It doesn’t automatically remove existing ones (that’s a separate enforcement mechanism), and it doesn’t necessarily stop genuine resales. (Under U.S. law, if someone bought your product legitimately, they can resell it. Amazon gating aims more to stop counterfeit/new diversion, not legit used item sales.)
That said, brand gating significantly reduces the volume of illicit sellers. It’s a proactive defense that, combined with vigilance, can nearly eliminate hijackers on many listings. We guide you through the process and manage the communication with Amazon.
A+ Content and Amazon Stores
A+ Content (previously “Enhanced Brand Content”) lets you elevate your product pages with modules such as comparison tables, additional images and copy, a brand story section, and more. This is only for Brand Registered brands. It’s been shown to increase conversion rates by providing customers with richer information and a more branded experience. We help ensure your A+ pages are not only persuasive but also compliant.
Common legal pitfalls with A+ Content and Stores include:
- Using images you don’t own or have rights to. (For example, grabbing a cool lifestyle photo from Google could trigger a copyright complaint against you. Always use your own images or properly licensed ones.)
- Copying layouts or text from competitors. If you lift entire paragraphs or a comparison chart from another brand, that’s risky (and not very ethical); it could be copyright infringement.
- Including third-party trademarks in your A+ content. Amazon generally forbids putting someone else’s registered trademark in your EBC, unless it’s in a way that’s allowed (e.g., you mention a compatible device name; even then, it can trigger a flag).
- Making unsupported claims (especially health or safety claims). If you sell supplements, for instance, you must be very careful not to violate FDA or Amazon policies by making disease-treatment claims.
We review A+ Content drafts for such issues. Amazon will reject A+ submissions that violate style guides or obvious rules. Still, some things slip through and could later lead to an IP complaint or even a product suspension (for a serious policy violation). Our goal is to help you fully and creatively leverage these marketing tools, without stepping on any landmines.
Amazon Stores: We also help with setting up your Brand Store. It’s like having a mini website within Amazon. The legal side here is usually minimal, since it’s mostly images and text you create, but we ensure your trademark is used correctly and advise on any use of other brands’ names (e.g., some brands compare themselves to others; we caution on that because it can be sensitive).
Transparency, Amazon Vine, and Brand Reporting Tools
The Transparency program deserves special mention in the fight against counterfeits. Each product unit gets a unique code (usually a QR code or a printed code). Amazon scans these during the fulfillment process. If a product without a valid code (or with a duplicate code) is attempted to be shipped, Amazon flags it as potentially counterfeit and can stop it. This prevents fake listings from reaching customers through your listing. It also provides customers with a way to scan and verify authenticity. As of 2024, Amazon reported over 88,000 brands enrolled in Transparency, with more than 2.5 billion units verified as authentic through the program. It’s a powerful tool if counterfeiters pose a significant threat, though it requires integrating the codes into your production process.
Amazon Vine: as mentioned, it is for jumpstarting reviews. Legally, Vine is pretty straightforward, since Amazon handles the solicitation of reviewers (and they are expected to leave honest reviews, with a disclaimer that they received the product for free). We just ensure you’re enrolled correctly and advise you on which products to enroll in (usually new launches or those with low review counts).
Advanced Brand Reporting: Brand Registry provides a Report a Violation dashboard where you can search Amazon for ASINs or listings that may be infringing. You can search by keyword, by image (image search can help find, say, someone using your logo on their product photo), or by bulk ASIN lists. We help clients establish a routine for monitoring these. For example, you might periodically search for your brand name on Amazon to catch any listings that improperly use it. Amazon has even added tools that proactively highlight potential infringements (e.g., if someone uses text similar to your trademark). We encourage a proactive approach: by the time you notice a problem through a complaint or a sales drop, it might already have hurt you. Regular monitoring nips issues in the bud.
Brands that adopt programs like Transparency and consistently utilize these reporting tools often see significant reductions in counterfeit issues over time. According to Amazon, their automated protections (which improve with more data from brands) now proactively block over 99% of suspected infringements before a brand even has to report them. That’s encouraging, but those systems work best when brands are engaged and feeding Amazon the info (e.g., your product data, logos, etc., uploaded via Brand Registry). We help ensure you’re leveraging all these tools to build a nearly counterfeit-proof presence.
The RLG Advantage: Fixed-Fee Trademark Protection
At Rapacke Law Group, we understand that unpredictable legal costs create unnecessary stress for business owners. That’s why we offer transparent, flat-fee pricing for trademark services; you know exactly what you’ll pay before we begin work. No hourly billing surprises, no meter running while you ask questions.
Our flat-fee trademark package includes:
- Comprehensive trademark search and clearance analysis
- Strategic consultation on mark selection and filing strategy
- USPTO application preparation and filing
- Amazon Brand Registry enrollment support
- Unlimited office action responses (included in flat fee)
- Ongoing deadline monitoring and status updates
Please note: government fees for trademark filing are additional charges beyond our base service price and may vary depending on the complexity of your application.
This approach is particularly valuable for Amazon sellers who need quick decisions and clear timelines. You can plan your product launch knowing your legal costs are fixed, not variable.
Why Rapacke Law Group for Amazon Trademark Protection
While many firms handle trademark filings, we bring a unique perspective shaped by our experience protecting innovative technologies. The same strategic thinking we apply to software patents and AI inventions informs how we approach brand protection for Amazon sellers:
Strategic IP Planning: We don’t just file trademarks: we help you build a comprehensive IP strategy that protects your competitive advantage. If your product includes innovative features, we’ll identify opportunities for patent protection alongside your trademark registration.
Tech-Savvy Approach: We understand e-commerce platforms, digital marketplaces, and the technical aspects of online brand enforcement. Whether you’re selling smart home devices, software-enabled products, or traditional goods with innovative features, we speak your language.
Startup-Friendly Process: Our streamlined processes and fixed-fee pricing make professional legal protection accessible for growing businesses. We’ve helped hundreds of entrepreneurs and business owners secure their IP rights without the complexity and expense of traditional hourly billing.
Costs, Timelines, and Working with Rapacke Law Group
We know budget and timing are important to sellers. The Amazon IP Accelerator is a program designed to help expedite the trademark and Brand Registry process, allowing sellers to access brand protection benefits on Amazon more quickly and efficiently. Here, we outline what to expect regarding costs and the process when working with Rapacke Law Group for Amazon brand protection.
Our cost-effective packages are tailored for small and medium businesses seeking affordable brand protection, including a comprehensive brand review and guidance through the trademark registration process.
Realistic Cost Ranges
| Expense | Approximate Cost (USD) |
| USPTO trademark filing fee (per class, TEAS Plus) | $250–$350 per class (government fee). For most private-label sellers, one class is often enough, but if your products span categories, you might need more. |
| RLG flat-fee trademark filing package | One transparent flat fee covering search, application, filing, and Amazon Brand Registry support. Contact us for current pricing; no hourly billing surprises. |
| Additional trademark classes | ~$250 per class USPTO fee + additional flat fee per class. (E.g., protecting your brand in Class 25 for clothing and Class 28 for fitness gear means two fees.) |
| Logo/design mark filing (optional) | If you choose to file a second mark for your logo, it’s essentially another application. We offer package pricing for multiple filings together. |
| Office Action responses | Included in our flat fee. We handle USPTO office actions as part of your trademark package, so there are no surprise bills when the examiner requests clarification. |
| Amazon Brand Registry application assistance | Included in our trademark service package. We guide you through the enrollment process and troubleshoot verification issues at no additional cost. |
The RLG Guarantee for Trademark Applications:
Get your trademark approved or pay nothing. We guarantee it.
We’re so confident we’ll get your mark approved that if your trademark gets rejected by the USPTO, we’ll issue a 100% refund—no questions asked.
What’s included:
- FREE strategy call with our trademark team
- Experienced US attorneys lead registration from start to finish
- One transparent flat-fee covering the entire trademark application process (including office actions)
- Unlimited office action responses
- Full refund if USPTO denies trademark application*
- Full refund or additional searches if the brand has registerability issues (your choice)*
*Terms and conditions apply. Contact us for complete guarantee details.
Before any work begins, you’ll receive a detailed engagement letter outlining the scope and exact fees, so there are no surprises. If you have multiple brands or need international filings, we can structure cost-effective packages for you.
Approximate Timelines Recap
- Initial clearance search & consultation: Typically 5–10 business days to thoroughly search your proposed brand name and discuss results. (If you have a launch in 2 days, we can expedite, but we don’t like to cut corners on searches; finding a conflict later is much worse.)
- Trademark application preparation and filing: Once we have the info and you give the go-ahead, filing is quick, within a day or two. You get the serial number immediately.
- Amazon Brand Registry application: We can do this the same day the trademark is filed, using the serial number. Sometimes we wait 1–2 days for the USPTO data to propagate to Amazon’s system.
- Brand Registry approval: As noted, roughly 3–14 days. If you don’t see movement in 2 weeks, we follow up with Amazon. Often, the bottleneck is the verification code email: Amazon sends the code to the trademark owner’s email (for the USPTO, that’s the public email we list on the application). We ensure you know to look out for it or have us listed so we receive it. Once that code is entered, Brand Registry is usually approved within a day.
- USPTO examination: ~3–6 months after filing, the USPTO will either approve for publication or issue an Office Action (an issue to address). We calendar all deadlines and handle this for you.
- Trademark publication & registration: If no one opposes your mark during the 30-day publication period and you’ve met all requirements, registration happens about 8–12 months from filing (in a use-based application). If you filed on an intent-to-use basis, you’ll file your proof of use, which may slightly extend the registration timeline. We monitor and guide you through every step.
Throughout this, Brand Registry access is typically obtained early (pending mark), so you’re not sitting defenseless for a year. But we also see it through to complete registration, which significantly strengthens your position.
Our Process: From Intake to Brand Registry Approval
Here’s a typical workflow when you engage Rapacke Law Group as your Amazon trademark attorneys:
- Initial consultation: We hop on a call (or email, if you prefer) to discuss your brand, what you’re selling, any timeline concerns, and your goals. If you already have an Amazon store or listing, we’ll look at it. We clarify what name/logo you want to protect and check if you’ve taken any steps yet.
- Intake & information gathering: We’ll have you fill out a short questionnaire or provide details, such as the exact spelling of the brand name, how you’re using it (photos are great here), your product categories, etc. Also, we ask whether you’ve noticed any copycats or issues so far, and whether you have any domain names or other branding we should be aware of.
- Clearance search: Our team conducts a thorough trademark search. This includes USPTO databases, common law sources, marketplaces, and web searches. We’re looking for any existing marks or uses that conflict with yours (for similar goods). For example, if your brand is “Sunrise Gear” for camping equipment, we check whether someone has “Sunrise Outdoors” registered or whether “Sunrise Gear” is used by a company somewhere. This helps avoid wasting time on a mark that won’t fly.
- Strategy discussion: We report back to you with the search results. If we found any risks, we’ll advise; maybe the coast is clear, or there’s a name that’s too close, and we suggest a tweak. We help you weigh the risk of proceeding vs. choosing a different brand name. This is a crucial step to prevent costly rebranding later. It’s far better to find out now that your name might conflict with an older mark than after you’ve ordered 5,000 units with that name on the packaging.
- Trademark application drafting: Once we have the green light, we prepare the USPTO application. We carefully write product descriptions to cover your current and anticipated products without overclaiming (Amazon has specific categories, but, legally, we phrase it for the USPTO). We ensure the owner info is correct (individual or LLC, etc.), the specimen (if filing in-use) is proper, and all details are in order.
- Client review: We typically send you a draft of the application details for your review, especially the mark and goods descriptions, to confirm that everything is accurate.
- Filing with the USPTO: We file electronically and receive a serial number immediately. We send you the confirmation.
- Amazon Brand Registry enrollment: Using that serial number, we or you submit the Brand Registry application on Amazon. Amazon will email a verification code to the trademark owner’s email address (which can be ours as attorneys or yours, depending on what we listed). We then input that code into Amazon’s system to prove you’re authorized. (This step ensures that only the actual trademark applicant/owner can enroll the brand; Amazon won’t let just anyone claim your brand.)
- Brand Registry approval: Within a few days of entering the code, Amazon should approve the brand. You’ll then have access to the Brand Registry dashboard and tools in Seller Central (or Vendor Central). We help verify that you can now add A+ content, report violations, etc. If any issue arises (e.g., Amazon erroneously shows “mark not eligible”), we work with their support team to troubleshoot.
- Ongoing support: After that, our work shifts to monitoring the USPTO process (responding to any Office Actions, keeping you updated every few months on status). We also remain available for any Amazon-specific issues; for example, if, six months later, you encounter a hijacker, you might reach out, and we’d step in to assist with enforcement. We keep a docket of your trademark’s key dates (such as when Statements of Use or renewals are due) and will alert you well in advance.
Communication is key throughout. We typically respond to client inquiries within one business day, often the same day. We use email for most communications (so there’s a written record), but we’re happy to have calls as needed, especially for strategic discussions or when an urgent issue arises.
By having a legal partner handle these details, you can focus on running your Amazon business. Early legal guidance and action give you the strongest position before problems escalate.
When You Should Contact an Amazon Trademark Lawyer
The best time to contact an Amazon trademark attorney is before problems arise, not after competitors have already captured your market share. Here are some trigger events when you should reach out to an Amazon trademark attorney (even if it’s just for a consult):
- Preparing to launch a new private-label product or brand on Amazon? Ideally, talk to us before the product is live (and certainly before you invest in packaging). We can help clear the brand name and file the trademark so you can enroll in Brand Registry as soon as possible. As the saying goes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
- You discover hijackers or counterfeits on your listing: If you see an unfamiliar seller on your listing (and you don’t use authorized distributors), or you receive customer complaints about fake products, contact us. The sooner we act, the less damage done to your brand reputation and seller account health.
- You receive a legal threat or IP complaint: If Amazon notifies you of a trademark complaint (or worse, suspends your listing/account for IP violation), or if some company sends you a cease and desist claiming you are infringing on them, get legal advice immediately. There may be defenses or steps you can take to resolve it without losing your Amazon account.
- Your Brand Registry application was denied or is stuck: Perhaps you tried to DIY, and Amazon said “unable to verify trademark” or “mark not eligible.” We can often fix these issues by correcting the trademark record or by working through Amazon’s escalation channels. Don’t stay stuck in limbo; a quick consult may identify the problem.
- You notice a competitor using your brand name in their listings or ads: Even if it’s minor, like another seller is bidding on your trademark as a Google ad keyword or using it in Amazon PPC ads, we can advise on whether and how to address it. Sometimes a gentle nudge stops it before it becomes bigger.
- Expanding to new marketplaces: If you’re going to start selling in Europe, Canada, or other Amazon marketplaces, you’ll likely need trademark protection in those regions to use Brand Registry there. We coordinate international filings (via partners or the Madrid Protocol) to secure your brand globally.
- You’re considering selling your Amazon business: Having your IP in order (trademarks registered, no outstanding disputes) is crucial for a smooth sale. We help audit and resolve any IP issues so you can maximize your valuation and avoid a deal falling through during IP due diligence.
Waiting until problems escalate is risky. A worst-case scenario: your Amazon account gets suspended for an IP issue, a competitor registers your brand and locks you out (it has happened), or counterfeiters damage your listing so severely that your hard-won reviews and rankings are trashed. These can sometimes be fixed, but it’s far more costly and time-consuming than taking preventive steps.
Even if you’re just in the planning stage and haven’t started selling yet, reach out for a consultation. We can help vet your brand name and strategy before you invest thousands in inventory and branding. It’s a small up-front expense that can save you from the “nightmare scenario” of finding out too late that you don’t actually own your brand name or can’t enforce it.
If you’ve already tried the DIY trademark route and run into trouble, we can often step in and course-correct. For instance, if you filed an application and got a rejection, we could respond effectively if it’s within the deadline. Or if Amazon won’t accept your pending application because something wasn’t right, we resolve it.
Your Next Steps to Amazon Brand Protection Success
Amazon trademark protection isn’t optional; it’s the foundation of your ability to control your business on the platform. Sellers who thrive on Amazon act decisively to secure their IP rights before competitors can exploit vulnerabilities. With over 700,000 brands enrolled in Brand Registry and trademark filings doubling since its launch, the message is clear: professional brand protection has become table stakes for serious Amazon sellers.
The bottom line: A weak trademark application leaves your brand vulnerable to rejection, delays, and marketplace exploitation. A strong, properly executed trademark registration gives you enforceable rights that deter counterfeiters and protect your competitive position. The difference between these outcomes often comes down to strategic guidance at the filing stage, before problems arise.
Every day without trademark protection is a day your competitors can hijack your listings, copy your branding, or even register your brand name. In the U.S., the first-to-file system delays the grant of your priority rights. The seller who files first wins, even if you’ve been using the name longer. This isn’t a theoretical risk. Documented cases show that Amazon sellers have lost control of their listings when a competitor filed a trademark application first.
Take action now: Discover the essential guide to trademark service classes for your business needs.
- Schedule a Free IP Strategy Call to evaluate your brand’s registerability and develop a strategic protection plan tailored to your Amazon business and growth goals.
- Conduct a comprehensive trademark search before investing in inventory, packaging, or marketing materials. Finding conflicts early prevents costly rebranding later.
- File your trademark application using the correct filing basis (1(a) or 1(b)) with properly prepared specimens and goods descriptions that meet both USPTO and Amazon requirements.
- Enroll in Amazon Brand Registry immediately after receiving your USPTO serial number to activate enforcement tools and protect your listings.
- Monitor your brand continuously using Brand Registry’s reporting tools and proactive searches to catch infringement early.
Your trademark is more than a legal formality; it’s a business asset that appreciates over time, protects your market position, and creates enforceable rights that competitors must respect. Just as strong patent protection deters competitors from copying your innovations, strong trademark protection prevents them from hijacking your brand. The investment you make today in proper trademark registration pays dividends for years through reduced enforcement costs, a stronger negotiating position, and the peace of mind that comes from controlling your brand destiny.
Don’t wait until you’re fighting to recover a hijacked listing or explaining to customers why counterfeits are shipped under your brand name. Protect your brand now, while you still have the advantage.
To Your Success,
Andrew Rapacke, Managing Partner
Registered Patent Attorney
Rapacke Law Group
Connect with us:
- LinkedIn: Andrew Rapacke
- Twitter/X: @rapackelaw
- Instagram: @rapackelaw


