What Is Trademark Squatting?

Trademark squatting — also called trademark piracy — is when a third party deliberately files a trademark registration for a brand name, logo, or slogan they know belongs to someone else. The motive is almost always one of three things: extortion (demanding payment to transfer the registration), market blocking (stopping a foreign brand from entering a country), or competitive sabotage (a former distributor locking out the rightful owner).

It is a systemic problem across the Middle East and North Africa. Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE all operate on a first-to-file system, meaning the first party to register a trademark in that country gains the legal right — regardless of who created the brand or how long they have been using it commercially. If you have been operating under a brand name but have not registered it, you are vulnerable.

The damage is real: IGBS has handled cases where multinational brands discovered that their trademark had been registered locally by a distributor who parted ways with them, and were forced into lengthy cancellation proceedings or paid significant sums to reclaim their own brand identity.

First-to-file means exactly that: In Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, trademark rights belong to whoever registers first — not whoever built the brand first. Use alone does not create legal protection. If you have not registered, you are exposed.

How Squatting Happens During Your Registration Period

Even brands actively filing for registration are not safe during the process. Trademark registration takes 18–36 months in Egypt and Saudi Arabia. During that window, your application is visible in official records — and opportunistic parties monitor trademark databases specifically looking for valuable pending applications to file in adjacent classes or territories.

The most common scenarios IGBS sees:

  • Distributor squatting: A former agent or distributor files the trademark in their own name — either to retain leverage in a renegotiation or to continue selling after the relationship ends
  • Class gap squatting: You filed in Class 25 (clothing) but not Class 35 (retail services). A squatter files in Class 35 to claim the brand in that channel
  • Country gap squatting: You registered in Egypt but not Saudi Arabia. A squatter files in Saudi Arabia, knowing you plan to expand there
  • Pre-filing squatting: Before you file at all, someone monitors your business and pre-emptively registers your brand name in your target market
  • Variation squatting: You registered "BrandX" but not "Brand X" or "BrandX Pro" — a squatter registers the variations to extort you

Your Legal Options

When you discover that someone has filed or registered a trademark on your brand, you have several available remedies. The right path depends on whether the conflicting mark is still pending (published for opposition) or already registered.

Option 1: File a Trademark Opposition (Mark Still Pending)

If the squatter's application has been published in the official gazette but not yet registered, you can file a formal trademark opposition — a legal challenge that halts the registration process and triggers a proceeding before the trademark office.

CountryAuthorityOpposition WindowKey Grounds
EgyptEIPA (Egyptian Intellectual Property Authority)90 days from Official Gazette publicationPrior use, likelihood of confusion, bad faith, well-known mark status
Saudi ArabiaSAIP (Saudi Authority for Intellectual Property)60 days from Official Gazette publicationPrior use, confusion, bad faith, international reputation
UAEMOEC (Ministry of Economy)30 days from Official Gazette publicationPrior registration, confusion, well-known marks, bad faith

Missing the opposition window does not end your options, but it is significantly better to act during this period — it is faster, cheaper, and decided at the administrative level rather than in court.

Option 2: File a Cancellation Action (Mark Already Registered)

If the squatter's trademark is already registered, you need to file a cancellation action — a legal proceeding asking the trademark office or courts to invalidate the registration. In Egypt, cancellation actions are filed with the EIPA and, if escalated, at the Economic Courts. In Saudi Arabia, the IP Court handles trademark cancellations.

Cancellation on grounds of bad faith is available in all three countries. Courts will look at whether the registrant knew your mark existed, whether they had a legitimate reason to file, and whether they are actually using the mark commercially.

Option 3: Assert Well-Known Mark Status

Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE are all signatories to the Paris Convention, which requires member states to protect internationally well-known marks even without local registration. If your brand has significant international recognition — global media coverage, established presence in multiple countries, strong consumer awareness in the target market — you may be able to invoke well-known mark protection to block or cancel the squatter's registration.

This is a higher bar to clear than a standard opposition, but it can be powerful for established international brands entering the region for the first time.

The Evidence You Need

Whether you are filing an opposition or a cancellation action, your case rests on the quality and age of your evidence. Courts and trademark offices are looking for proof that you used the mark before the squatter filed. Start gathering everything immediately:

  • Dated invoices and contracts showing commercial sales or services under the brand name
  • Marketing materials with dates — print ads, digital campaigns, product packaging, exhibition stands
  • Domain registration records showing when you registered your website domain
  • Social media account creation dates and archived posts showing your brand in use
  • Corporate registration documents if your company name matches the brand
  • Customs records showing import/export of goods under your brand name
  • Third-party references — press coverage, distributor agreements, customer testimonials

Document everything now, not when you need it. Courts want to see a consistent, dated commercial use of your mark. The more evidence you have from before the squatter's filing date, the stronger your case. IGBS recommends that all active brands maintain a "trademark evidence file" and update it regularly.

Step-by-Step Action Plan

If you have just discovered that someone has filed your trademark, follow these steps immediately:

1
Verify the filing date and statusSearch the trademark databases for Egypt (EIPA), Saudi Arabia (SAIP), or UAE (MOEC) to confirm the exact filing date, publication date, and current status. Has the opposition window passed?
2
Calculate your deadlineIf the mark has been published, your opposition window is running. Egypt gives 90 days, Saudi Arabia 60 days, UAE 30 days. Missing this deadline forces you into the slower and costlier cancellation route.
3
Gather your prior-use evidenceImmediately start compiling dated proof of your commercial use of the mark — invoices, contracts, marketing materials, domain records, social media. The filer's date is your benchmark: you need evidence from before that date.
4
Contact a licensed IP firmTrademark opposition and cancellation proceedings are formal legal processes. Errors in the opposition filing, missed procedural deadlines, or weak evidence submissions can lose a winnable case. Engage a firm like IGBS with a proven track record in these proceedings.
5
File the opposition or cancellationYour IP firm submits the formal opposition or cancellation with supporting evidence. The trademark office will notify the registrant, who can respond. Both sides then have the opportunity to submit arguments before a decision is issued.
6
File defensively in all target marketsWhile your opposition is in progress, file your own trademark in every country where you operate or plan to operate. Winning an opposition in Egypt does not protect you in Saudi Arabia. IGBS can coordinate multi-country filing strategies.

How to Prevent Squatting Before It Happens

The single most effective defense against trademark squatting is registering your trademark early — ideally before or alongside your market entry. A few additional strategies that significantly reduce your exposure:

  • File in all target markets simultaneously — do not wait until you start generating revenue in a country. File on intent-to-use if the jurisdiction allows it
  • Cover adjacent Nice classes — if you make consumer electronics, also register in retail services (Class 35) and advertising (Class 35). Think about how competitors might position against you
  • Register common variations and transliterations — if your brand is in English, register the Arabic transliteration in MENA markets where it is likely to appear on product labeling
  • Include trademark clauses in distributor agreements — explicitly prohibit distributors from filing trademarks in their own name and require them to support your trademark applications
  • Set up monitoring alerts — trademark watching services notify you when similar marks are filed in your target markets so you can act within the opposition window

Distributor agreements are the most commonly overlooked risk. Before appointing any regional distributor in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, or the UAE, add explicit IP clauses to the agreement. IGBS has seen multiple cases where long-term distributors filed trademark registrations in their own name — transforming a trusted partner into a trademark adversary.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Once a trademark application is published in Egypt's Official Gazette, you have 90 days to file a formal opposition with EIPA. Grounds include likelihood of confusion with your prior-used mark, bad faith filing, and prior commercial use in Egypt. IGBS handles trademark oppositions and cancellation actions across Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE.
Trademark squatting (also called trademark piracy) is when a third party deliberately files a trademark registration for a brand name or logo they know belongs to someone else — usually to extort the rightful owner, block their market entry, or resell the registration. It is especially common in first-to-file countries like Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE where use does not automatically create rights.
In Saudi Arabia, trademark applications are published in the Official Gazette by SAIP. Third parties have 60 days from the publication date to file a formal opposition. Missing this deadline does not eliminate all options — you can still file a cancellation action after registration — but acting within the opposition window is significantly faster and cheaper.
Yes. In Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, a trademark registered in bad faith can be challenged through a cancellation action even after full registration. Bad faith means the filer knew your mark existed and filed anyway to block you or extract payment. Courts can declare the registration void and award damages. Strong prior-use evidence is critical to winning.
Act immediately. If the application is still in the publication period, file an opposition with SAIP within 60 days. If already registered, file a cancellation action with the IP Court. Document all evidence of your prior use: dated invoices, contracts, social media posts, advertising. Contact IGBS for an urgent assessment — the earlier you act, the better your chances and the lower your legal costs.

Discovered a Squatter on Your Trademark?

IGBS has handled trademark opposition and cancellation proceedings across Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and 20+ countries. We will assess your position and tell you exactly what options you have — fast.

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