The GCC Electronic Trademark Registration System: 2026 Complete Guide
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Trademark System offers businesses a powerful route to protect their brand across six major economies with a single application. Understanding how this system works — and how to use it strategically — can save time, reduce costs, and lock in IP rights across the entire Gulf region before competitors do.
What Is the GCC Trademark System?
The GCC Trademark System was created under the framework of the Gulf Cooperation Council to allow brand owners to register trademarks across all member states through a coordinated, unified process. Rather than filing six separate national applications with six different authorities, the GCC system provides a centralized route that simultaneously covers:
A refusal in one GCC member state does not affect registration in the others. Your mark can be registered in 5 out of 6 countries even if one raises an objection — unlike the Madrid Protocol's "central attack" risk.
How the GCC Electronic System Works
The GCC's electronic trademark registration process allows applicants (or their licensed representatives) to submit a single application that is transmitted to the IP authorities of all designated member states. Here's how the workflow unfolds:
Single Application Filing
File one application through the GCC trademark portal or via a licensed GCC trademark agent. The application covers the mark details, Nice Classification classes, applicant information, and designated member states.
Parallel Transmission to Member States
The application is electronically transmitted to the IP office of each designated GCC country. Each country then conducts its own independent examination.
Individual Country Examination
Each IP authority reviews the mark for formal compliance, absolute grounds (distinctiveness, prohibitions), and relative grounds (conflicts with prior marks in that country). Examination standards and timelines vary by country.
Publication & Opposition
Accepted marks are published in each country's trademark journal. Opposition periods apply per country — typically 30–60 days. Third parties can oppose in any country independently.
Registration Certificates
Upon grant in each country, you receive registration certificates from each national authority. Each certificate is governed by that country's law regarding validity, renewal, and enforcement.
10-Year Validity & Renewal
All GCC member states grant trademark registrations valid for 10 years from filing, renewable in 10-year increments by paying national renewal fees in each country.
GCC System vs. Separate National Filings
Before choosing the GCC route, it helps to understand the trade-offs versus filing individually in each GCC country:
| Factor | GCC System | Individual National Filings |
|---|---|---|
| Applications Required | 1 unified application | Up to 6 separate applications |
| Cost Efficiency | Lower administrative overhead | Higher overall agent fees |
| Examination | Each country still examines independently | Each country examines independently |
| Partial Coverage | Yes — a rejection in one country does not affect others | Yes — each is independent |
| Flexibility | Designate only the countries you need | Full control per country |
| Timeline | Generally parallel — similar to national | Varies by country |
| Prosecution Complexity | May need local agents per country for office actions | Clearly separate per country |
For businesses targeting 3 or more GCC countries, the electronic GCC system is typically more efficient. For companies targeting just 1–2 countries, direct national filings may be simpler and faster in those specific jurisdictions.
Fees & Costs
GCC trademark registration costs depend on the number of countries designated, the number of Nice Classification classes, and professional service fees. Approximate cost components:
| Country | Approximate Official Fee (per class) | Currency |
|---|---|---|
| Saudi Arabia | 3,000–6,000 | SAR |
| UAE | 3,000–5,000 | AED |
| Kuwait | 100–200 | KWD |
| Bahrain | 300–600 | BHD |
| Qatar | 1,500–3,000 | QAR |
| Oman | 200–400 | OMR |
Official fees change periodically and are subject to local VAT/taxes. Professional agent fees, translation costs, and notarization fees are additional. Contact IGBS for a current, accurate cost estimate for your specific situation.
Application Requirements
While requirements vary slightly by country, a standard GCC trademark application typically requires:
- Clear representation of the mark (word, logo, or combined)
- List of goods/services with corresponding Nice Classification classes
- Applicant details: name, nationality, address, and commercial registration (for companies)
- Power of attorney for the appointed agent
- Arabic translation of the description of goods/services for each country
- Priority document if claiming Convention priority (within 6 months of home filing)
- Proof of use (some countries may require this for certain mark types)
All six GCC member states require trademark descriptions and correspondence in Arabic. Foreign applicants must provide certified Arabic translations. IGBS handles this as part of the application process.
Timeline Expectations
GCC trademark registrations proceed at different speeds in different countries. Below are realistic timeline ranges for each member state:
| Country | Typical Filing-to-Registration Timeline | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Saudi Arabia | 12–18 months | Fastest with no office actions |
| UAE | 12–24 months | Multiple class applications take longer |
| Kuwait | 18–36 months | Historically slower processing |
| Bahrain | 12–18 months | Relatively efficient |
| Qatar | 12–18 months | Accelerating with new QIPD systems |
| Oman | 12–24 months | Variable; depends on examination load |
Madrid Protocol vs. GCC System
International brands often wonder whether to use the Madrid Protocol (through WIPO) or the GCC electronic system for Gulf trademark protection. Here are the key differences:
- Madrid Protocol: Single international application through WIPO; requires a base mark (home registration or application); the registration is managed centrally through WIPO but examined locally; if the base mark lapses in the first 5 years, all designations collapse ("central attack")
- GCC System: Does not require a home registration; each country issues independent national registrations; no central attack risk; better suited for businesses whose primary market is the GCC
- For most GCC-focused businesses: Direct GCC/national filings often provide more robust, independent protection without the central attack risk
Use the Madrid Protocol if you have a global portfolio strategy (protecting in 10+ countries). Use direct GCC filings if the Gulf is your primary market and you want independent, robust local protection without dependency on a home country base mark.
Enforcement Across the GCC
Having trademark registrations across the GCC creates a powerful enforcement network:
- Record trademarks with customs in each country for automatic border interception
- Use local registrations as the basis for online IP takedowns on regional e-commerce platforms
- File civil and criminal infringement actions in any country where the mark is registered
- Leverage GCC registrations in cross-border enforcement efforts
IGBS provides brand monitoring services across the GCC to detect infringements early — before they escalate into costly enforcement actions.
How IGBS Handles GCC Trademark Registration
IGBS manages GCC trademark filings end-to-end across all six member states. Our GCC trademark services include:
- Pre-filing trademark clearance searches in all 6 GCC countries
- Application preparation in Arabic and English
- Electronic filing through the GCC portal and national offices
- Office action responses and examination management per country
- Opposition monitoring and defense across the GCC
- Renewal management with multi-country reminder services
- Customs recordal for border protection
- Brand monitoring and enforcement coordination