Trademark Monitoring Services

Ongoing Protection
for Your Brand

Registering your trademark is only the first step. Protecting it requires continuous monitoring to ensure that no third party attempts to register or use a confusingly similar mark.

Our trademark monitoring service helps you stay informed of potential conflicts so you can take timely action and maintain the strength of your brand.

Trademark monitoring support
Why It Matters

Why Trademark
Monitoring Matters

The USPTO does not automatically enforce your trademark rights. If a similar mark is filed or used, it is your responsibility to identify and address the issue.

Conflicting marks may be approved without your knowledge

Your brand identity may be weakened over time

Enforcement becomes more difficult if action is delayed

What Our Monitoring Covers

We monitor newly filed and existing trademark records to identify marks that may be identical or confusingly similar in name, sound, appearance, or meaning — especially within related classes of goods or services.

Identical or confusingly similar in name
Similar in sound, appearance, or meaning
Filed within related classes
Ongoing alert notifications

How the Service Works

  1. 1

    Watch Setup

    We configure monitoring parameters based on your registered or applied-for trademark.

  2. 2

    Ongoing Review

    Our system reviews newly filed applications and relevant trademark activity on a continuous basis.

  3. 3

    Alerts & Reporting

    If a potentially conflicting mark is identified, you receive a notification with details for review.

  4. 4

    Guidance on Next Steps

    We provide general guidance on available options, including whether opposition or further action may be appropriate.

Packages

Trademark Monitoring Packages

Monitoring is an early detection tool designed to help you take timely action where necessary. It does not automatically prevent third-party filings or use.

Monthly Monitoring Plan

$150 / month

Ongoing USPTO monitoring with alert notifications and summary reporting.

  • Monitoring of USPTO filings
  • Detection of identical or potentially conflicting marks
  • Ongoing alert notifications
  • Summary reports with relevant findings
  • Optional add-ons: attorney review, Notice of Opposition support, cease & desist letter preparation
Start Monthly Monitoring

6‑Month Global Monitoring Plan

$1,000 (one‑time)

Global monitoring across multiple jurisdictions with comprehensive reports.

  • Monitoring across multiple international jurisdictions
  • Detection of identical or confusingly similar marks globally
  • Priority alert notifications
  • Comprehensive monitoring reports
  • Optional add-ons: international attorney review, opposition/enforcement guidance, cease & desist letter preparation
Start Global Monitoring

6‑Month Monitoring Plan (USA)

$699 (one‑time)

Six months of USPTO monitoring with priority alerts, detailed reporting, and attorney review.

  • Continuous monitoring of USPTO filings for 6 months
  • Identification of similar or conflicting marks across relevant classes
  • Priority alert notifications
  • Detailed monitoring reports
  • Attorney review and legal assessment
  • Notice of Opposition filing support
  • Cease and desist letter drafting
Start USA Monitoring
FAQ

Frequently Asked
Questions

To maintain an active registration, the registrant must submit specific maintenance documents to the USPTO at designated intervals. Missing these filing deadlines will result in registration cancellation.
If you suspect someone is infringing on your trademark, consult with an attorney to evaluate your options. Typical actions include issuing a cease and desist letter or initiating legal proceedings.
Generally, substantial modifications to the mark are prohibited after filing. Minor amendments may be permissible, but significant alterations typically require submitting a new application.
Yes, trademarks constitute intellectual property and can be purchased, sold, licensed, or transferred. These transactions should be formally recorded with the USPTO.
Trademark infringement is the unauthorized use of a trademark or service mark on or in connection with goods and/or services in a manner that is likely to cause confusion, deception, or mistake regarding the source of those goods and/or services.
Factors include the mark's strength, goods proximity, mark similarity, evidence of actual confusion, marketing channels utilized, goods type and purchaser care level, defendant's intent in selecting the mark, and likelihood of product line expansion.
Trademark dilution occurs when a famous mark's distinctiveness is weakened or damaged by another party's use of a similar mark, regardless of whether confusion is likely.

Stay Protected

Enroll in our Trademark Monitoring Service today or contact us to customize a monitoring plan that fits your needs.