International Trademark Registration: The Madrid Protocol & WIPO Guide for 2026
Trademark rights are territorial — a registration in Egypt protects you only in Egypt. If your brand operates, exports, or plans to expand internationally, you need a deliberate global trademark strategy. The Madrid Protocol offers one of the most efficient paths to worldwide brand protection, covering 130+ countries through a single application.
Why International Trademark Protection Is Critical
In today's connected economy, a brand's reach is rarely limited to one country. E-commerce, digital marketing, and global supply chains mean your products and brand name are visible — and potentially used — across borders. Without international trademark registrations:
- Local businesses can legitimately register your mark in their country before you do
- You cannot stop counterfeiters from selling your product in unprotected markets
- Entering a new market may require costly litigation or licensing to use your own brand name
- Your brand equity in one market cannot be legally leveraged in another
Trademark squatting — where opportunists register well-known foreign brands in a local market before the real owner does — is a growing problem. Proactive international registration is the only reliable defense. IGBS regularly helps brands reclaim or defend against squatted marks.
What Is the Madrid Protocol?
The Madrid Protocol (formally the Protocol Relating to the Madrid Agreement Concerning the International Registration of Marks) is an international treaty administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). As of 2026, it has 130+ member countries, covering the vast majority of the world's economies.
The Madrid System allows a trademark owner to:
- File one international application in one language (English, French, or Spanish)
- Pay one set of fees to WIPO
- Designate any number of member countries for protection
- Manage the entire portfolio through WIPO's centralized registry
WIPO then transmits the application to the IP offices of each designated country, which conduct their own examination. A successful international registration provides a bundle of national rights — one for each country that grants protection.
Who Can Use the Madrid Protocol?
To file an international application under the Madrid Protocol, you must:
- Be a national of, or have a domicile or real commercial establishment in, a Madrid member country
- Have an existing trademark registration or application (the "base mark") in your home country
- File through your home country's IP office (the "office of origin"), which certifies the application and forwards it to WIPO
Egypt acceded to the Madrid Protocol, meaning Egyptian trademark owners can use the Madrid System to extend their brand protection internationally based on an Egyptian trademark registration or application at the Egyptian Patent Office (EIPA).
The Madrid Protocol Process Step by Step
Establish Your Base Mark
File or register a trademark in your home country (e.g., Egypt through EIPA). Your international application must be based on this home registration or application. The goods/services and mark in the international application cannot be broader than those in the base mark.
Prepare the International Application (MM2)
Complete WIPO Form MM2 specifying: the mark, the list of goods/services (in Nice Classification), and the designated countries. The application must be submitted through your home country IP office, which certifies it and forwards to WIPO.
WIPO Formal Examination
WIPO reviews the application for formal requirements: correct fees, proper mark representation, and compliance with the Nice Classification. If formalities pass, WIPO records the international registration and sends notification to designated countries.
National Examination by Designated Countries
Each designated country's IP office conducts its own substantive examination. They have 12 months (or 18 months for countries that opted for the longer period, including many MENA countries) to raise a provisional refusal. If no refusal is raised, protection is automatically granted.
Respond to Provisional Refusals
If a country raises a provisional refusal (based on absolute or relative grounds), you have the opportunity to respond directly to that country's IP office — typically requiring a local representative in that country. A provisional refusal in one country does not affect other designations.
Grant of Protection
Countries that do not raise a provisional refusal (or where refusals are overcome) grant protection. Each country's protection is a national trademark registration governed by local law. The international registration is then maintained centrally through WIPO.
Costs & Fees
Madrid Protocol costs have two components: WIPO fees and individual country designation fees.
| Fee Component | Amount (CHF) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Basic Fee (B&W mark) | CHF 653 | Per application, one class |
| Basic Fee (color mark) | CHF 903 | Per application, one class |
| Additional class fee | CHF 100 | Per class from class 2 onward |
| Individual country fees | Varies | Most countries charge per class; some high (e.g., USA ~CHF 250/class, China ~CHF 180/class) |
| Complementary fee (some countries) | Varies | Countries not using individual designation fees |
| Renewal (10 years) | Same structure | Paid to WIPO centrally |
A single-class B&W mark designated in 10 countries (including USA, EU, China, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt) typically incurs WIPO fees of CHF 2,500–4,000+, depending on which countries are designated. Professional service fees are additional.
The Central Attack Risk
The Madrid Protocol's main structural vulnerability is known as "central attack." If your base mark (home country registration or application) is cancelled, withdrawn, or refused within the first 5 years of the international registration:
- The entire international registration falls automatically
- All country designations are cancelled simultaneously
- You lose protection in every country at once
After 5 years, the international registration becomes independent of the base mark, so central attack risk expires at that point.
Strategies include: (1) ensuring your home mark is well-established before filing internationally; (2) filing direct national applications in your most critical markets (not relying on Madrid alone); (3) converting the international registration to national applications if the base mark is threatened ("transformation"). IGBS advises clients on these strategies based on their specific portfolio and risk profile.
Madrid Protocol vs. Direct National Filings
| Factor | Madrid Protocol | Direct National Filings |
|---|---|---|
| Number of applications | 1 through WIPO | One per country |
| Languages required | English, French, or Spanish | Local language per country |
| Cost for many countries | Lower overall fees | Higher (per-country agents, translations) |
| Flexibility | Bound to base mark scope | Fully independent per country |
| Central attack risk | Yes (first 5 years) | No — fully independent |
| Prosecution complexity | Local agents needed per country for refusals | Separate agent per country |
| Renewal management | Centralized through WIPO | Separate renewal per country |
| Best for | 10+ countries; global portfolio strategy | Focused coverage in key markets; first 5 years risk avoidance |
Key Member Countries for MENA Businesses
For businesses based in Egypt or the MENA region, these Madrid member countries are particularly strategically important:
| Region | Member Countries | Note |
|---|---|---|
| GCC | Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman | All 6 GCC countries are Madrid members |
| North Africa | Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Libya | Egypt is a member; others vary |
| Europe | All EU member states + UK, Switzerland, Norway | EU can be designated as a bloc (EUIPO) |
| USA | United States | USPTO applies its own strict standards |
| Asia | China, Japan, South Korea, India | Major markets; high designation fees |
| Africa | OAPI (17 African countries as a bloc), ARIPO members | Regional African IP organizations |
Expanding After Initial Filing: Subsequent Designations
One of the Madrid Protocol's most practical features is the ability to add new countries to an existing international registration at any time — called a subsequent designation. This allows you to:
- Start with priority markets and expand to new countries as your business grows
- Add countries entering your supply chain or distribution network
- Respond quickly to market opportunities without filing a brand-new application
The subsequent designation receives a new filing date (the date of the subsequent designation, not the original application date), so it should be done before a competing mark is filed in the new country.
How IGBS Manages International Trademark Portfolios
IGBS is an international IP firm with direct Madrid Protocol filing experience and networks across the MENA region and globally. Our international trademark services include:
- Global trademark clearance searches before filing
- Madrid Protocol application preparation and filing (through EIPA as office of origin)
- Direct national filing strategy for markets where Madrid is not available or advisable
- Monitoring of designated countries for provisional refusals
- Local agent coordination for office action responses in each country
- Subsequent designation management as your business expands
- Centralized renewal tracking across all jurisdictions
- International brand monitoring and enforcement coordination
Building an international trademark portfolio requires strategy, not just paperwork. IGBS helps you decide which countries to prioritize, whether to use Madrid or direct filings (or both), and how to structure your portfolio to minimize costs and risk over a 10-year horizon.