Egypt operates a first-to-file system. Under IP Law No. 82 of 2002, whoever files a trademark application first acquires the legal right to that mark — regardless of who used the name first, who built the brand, or who is more commercially prominent. This is fundamentally different from common-law countries like the USA where prior use can establish rights. In Egypt, if someone files before you, they own it.

EIPA (the Egyptian Intellectual Property Authority) examiners review every application against two separate grounds for rejection. Absolute grounds concern the mark itself — whether it is descriptive, generic, or deceptive. Relative grounds concern conflicts with prior registrations — whether your mark is identical or confusingly similar to an already-registered trademark in the same or related class. A conflict on relative grounds is the most common reason applications fail, and it is entirely preventable.

A rejected application loses its filing fees in full. EIPA's fees are non-refundable regardless of the reason for rejection. For a single-class application, that is a direct financial loss on top of agent fees. For a multi-class, multi-country filing strategy, the cost of an unresearched conflict can run into tens of thousands of Egyptian pounds.

Important: "I searched Google and found nothing" is not a trademark search. Google shows commercial presence and web indexing — it does not show legal ownership. A registered trademark owner may have no website, no social media, and no visible online presence. The only definitive source is the official registry database.

Beyond the financial risk, proceeding with an uncleared mark exposes your business to infringement claims after launch. Rebranding an established business — new packaging, new signage, updated marketing, revised domain — is vastly more expensive than conducting a search before you begin.

Official Trademark Databases by Country

Each jurisdiction maintains its own authoritative trademark registry. For any market you plan to operate in or export to, you must consult the relevant official database directly. Third-party aggregators are useful supplements but are not substitutes for the primary source.

Jurisdiction Authority Official Search Portal Coverage
Egypt EIPA (Egyptian Intellectual Property Authority) egypo.gov.eg All Egyptian registered and pending marks
Saudi Arabia SAIP (Saudi Authority for Intellectual Property) saip.gov.sa All Saudi registered and pending marks
UAE MOEC (Ministry of Economy) moec.gov.ae All UAE registered and pending marks
GCC GCC Patent Office gccpo.org GCC-wide registered marks
International WIPO BrandDB branddb.wipo.int 140+ countries via Madrid System
Europe (27 states) EUIPO euipo.europa.eu/eSearch All EU member states simultaneously
Multi-jurisdictional TMview tmdn.org/tmview 70+ national offices aggregated

How to Search EIPA

Visit egypo.gov.eg and navigate to the Trademark Search section. You can search by mark name (Arabic or Latin script), by Nice classification class number, or by existing registration number if you are checking a specific mark's status. The database is updated regularly but may have a processing delay of several weeks for newly filed applications. For the most current data, a direct EIPA inquiry through a licensed agent is recommended.

How to Search WIPO BrandDB

The WIPO Global Brand Database at branddb.wipo.int is the most powerful free tool available for multi-country searches. Enter the name you intend to register, then filter results by country and Nice classification class. The database covers marks registered through the Madrid System as well as national databases from participating offices. It supports image-based searches and phonetic similarity matching in some jurisdictions.

Searching the Right Nice Classification Classes

The Nice Classification system divides all goods and services into 45 classes — 34 goods classes and 11 services classes. When you register a trademark, protection applies only within the specific classes you register under. A mark registered in Class 25 (clothing) does not automatically protect you in Class 35 (retail services) or Class 9 (consumer electronics).

This means your search must cover every class relevant to your current and planned business activities. It also means that two businesses can legally hold the same name if they operate in genuinely non-competing classes — the classic example being Apple Inc. (technology, Class 9) and Apple Corps (music, Class 41), which coexisted under a settlement agreement for decades.

Class Coverage Relevant For
9Electronics, software, appsTech companies, consumer electronics brands
25Clothing, footwear, headgearFashion brands, uniform manufacturers
29Processed foods, dairy, oilsFood manufacturers, packaged goods
30Coffee, tea, bakery, spicesCoffee brands, bakeries, condiment makers
32Beverages (non-alcoholic)Juice brands, water brands, soft drinks
35Business services, marketing, retailConsulting firms, advertising agencies, retailers
41Education, training, publishingSchools, content creators, training institutes
42Technology and IT servicesSoftware companies, SaaS providers
43Restaurants, cafes, cateringF&B brands, hospitality businesses
44Medical and healthcare servicesClinics, hospitals, pharmaceutical brands

Best practice: Always search adjacent classes in addition to your primary class. Aramex, for example, is registered across 15 Nice classes to prevent competitors from registering the same name in adjacent service areas. The cost of multi-class protection is far lower than the legal cost of a later dispute.

How to Evaluate Search Results

Finding a search result does not automatically mean your application will be rejected. The critical question is the degree of similarity — and similarity is assessed on three dimensions: visual appearance, phonetic sound, and conceptual meaning. Understanding how examiners and courts evaluate these dimensions lets you accurately assess your risk.

1

100% Identical Match

If an identical name or logo is already registered in the same class, abandon the mark or contact the existing owner to negotiate an assignment or coexistence agreement. EIPA will reject the application with certainty. Proceeding wastes fees and delays your launch.

2

70–95% Similar — Danger Zone

Confusing similarity includes phonetic resemblance (e.g., "Nike" vs. "Nyke"), visual resemblance (similar logo design or color scheme), and conceptual equivalence (e.g., "Moon" and "Qamar" — the Arabic word for moon — are legally considered similar in meaning). If you find a match in this range, get a specialist's clearance opinion before filing.

3

Similar Name, Different Class

This may be acceptable — but requires careful evaluation of whether the classes are commercially related. A food brand and a clothing brand can share a name; a food brand and a restaurant chain likely cannot, as consumers may reasonably assume a connection. Consult a specialist.

4

Registered But Unused for 5+ Years

Under Egypt's IP Law, a trademark can be cancelled by court petition for non-use over five consecutive years without legitimate justification. If a conflicting mark appears abandoned, you may be able to petition for its cancellation before filing your own application. This is a legal proceeding that requires documentation and counsel — do not proceed without professional advice.

7-Step Trademark Search Checklist

Before submitting any trademark application, work through each of these steps in order. Document your findings — the date you searched, the database used, and screenshots of results — so you have a clear record if questions arise later.

  1. Search the local registry — EIPA for Egypt, SAIP for Saudi Arabia, MOEC for the UAE, depending on your target market.
  2. Search WIPO BrandDB — run the same search at branddb.wipo.int to catch international registrations and Madrid System marks that may conflict in your target countries.
  3. Search in all relevant Nice classes — do not limit your search to one class. Cover your primary class and every adjacent class connected to your business activities.
  4. Search for phonetically similar names — try alternate spellings, transliterations, and near-homophones. An examiner will flag "Zeera" when you apply for "Zira" if both operate in the same class.
  5. Search for visually similar logos — use Google Images reverse image search and TMview's image search functionality to identify logos that could be considered confusingly similar to yours in design, color, or structure.
  6. Document every result with screenshots and dates — a search dated today is evidence; a search you remember doing is not. Keep organized folders with dated records of each search session.
  7. Consult an IP specialist to review ambiguous results — a professional clearance opinion from a licensed IP agent is worth its cost. They have access to pending applications not yet visible in public databases and can assess relative-grounds risk with legal precision.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Google shows commercial presence, not legal ownership. A business can exist online for years without ever registering its trademark. The only authoritative source for trademark ownership is the official registry — EIPA for Egypt, SAIP for Saudi Arabia, MOEC for the UAE, and WIPO BrandDB for international marks. A Google search is useful for basic due diligence but it is not a substitute for a proper trademark search.
Generally, trademark rights are territorial. If a mark is registered in France but not Egypt, it does not automatically block your application at EIPA. However, if that foreign mark is internationally well-known (as defined under Article 6bis of the Paris Convention), EIPA may still reject your application. Famous marks like Coca-Cola or Louis Vuitton are protected in Egypt even without local registration. For ordinary marks, a foreign registration alone is not sufficient grounds for Egyptian rejection.
A basic trademark search conducted by a licensed IP agent in Egypt typically costs between EGP 1,500 and EGP 4,000 per class, depending on the depth of analysis. This covers the official EIPA database search, a phonetic similarity check, and a written clearance report. A comprehensive search covering multiple classes and countries will cost more but is strongly recommended before committing to a brand name and filing fees.
Under Egypt's IP Law No. 82 of 2002, a registered trademark can be cancelled by a third party if it has not been used for five consecutive years without a legitimate reason. If you find a registered mark that appears abandoned, you may be able to petition for cancellation on grounds of non-use before EIPA's Trademark Appeals Committee. This is a legal proceeding that requires documentation and an IP lawyer. Do not file your application and assume the unused mark won't be enforced — get a legal opinion first.
It depends on your business scope. If you plan to operate or export only within Egypt, an EIPA search may be sufficient. However, if you intend to expand to Saudi Arabia, the UAE, or international markets, you should search each target jurisdiction before filing. Filing fees are non-refundable in most countries, so a conflict discovered after filing in multiple jurisdictions can be costly. A single search on WIPO BrandDB covers many countries simultaneously and is a good starting point for multi-market brands.

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