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Protect your brand from copycats. File a Notice of Opposition or aggressively defend your trademark application against third-party oppositions with our expert IP litigators.
Trademark opposition is a crucial, adversarial legal proceeding that occurs after a trademark is accepted by the Registry and published in the Trademark Journal. For four months post-publication, any third party can file a 'Notice of Opposition' to block the registration if they believe the new mark infringes upon their existing rights, lacks distinctiveness, or was filed in bad faith. Whether you need to offensively file an opposition to protect your established market share from a copycat, or defensively counter an opposition filed against your pending application, our elite team of IP litigators provides aggressive, strategic legal representation to secure victory.
The eligibility criteria differ depending on whether you are the Opponent (the one filing the opposition) or the Applicant (the one defending their trademark). **To File an Opposition (Opponent):** The Trade Marks Act is incredibly broad here. Section 21 states that 'any person' can file a Notice of Opposition within four months from the date the trademark is published in the Trademark Journal. You do not strictly need to be a registered trademark owner. Customers, competitors, public interest groups, or foreign entities can oppose a mark if they believe it is generic, descriptive, deceptive, or filed in bad faith. However, the most successful oppositions are filed by individuals or entities who have prior use of an identical or similar mark, thereby establishing superior common law rights (passing off) or statutory rights. **To Defend an Opposition (Applicant):** Eligibility to defend is automatic but strictly conditional upon compliance. Once the Registry serves the Notice of Opposition to the applicant, they are eligible—and legally required—to file a Counter-Statement. This must be filed within precisely two months from the receipt of the notice. If the applicant fails to file the Counter-Statement within this non-extendable window, they lose all eligibility to defend; the application is deemed 'Abandoned' by default, and the opposition is automatically successful. Subsequent stages (filing evidence under Rules 45, 46, and 47) also require strict adherence to the respective two-month timelines to maintain eligibility in the proceedings.
Starting at
Money-back₹1,499 Professional Fee + ₹4,500 Govt Fee
Professional Fee: ₹1,499 | Govt Fee: ₹4,500 | Total: ₹5,999 (incl. govt fees)
No payment required · specialist calls within 1 business hour
Call 9324090425Dedicated specialist
CA-led, named point of contact
Tracked client portal
Real-time status, end-to-end
Money-back accuracy
Refile-free if our error
Flat-fee pricing
No hidden charges, ever
Starting price
₹5,999
Turnaround
Filing in 7–10 business days; Registration takes 6–18 months
Govt fees
₹4,500 (At actuals)
Validity
Lifetime
Delivery mode
Online + docs pickup
Money-back
Yes (Accuracy Guarantee)
Trademark opposition is a crucial, adversarial legal proceeding that occurs after a trademark is accepted by the Registry and published in the Trademark Journal. For four months post-publication, any third party can file a 'Notice of Opposition' to block the registration if they believe the new mark infringes upon their existing rights, lacks distinctiveness, or was filed in bad faith. Whether you need to offensively file an opposition to protect your established market share from a copycat, or defensively counter an opposition filed against your pending application, our elite team of IP litigators provides aggressive, strategic legal representation to secure victory.
The eligibility criteria differ depending on whether you are the Opponent (the one filing the opposition) or the Applicant (the one defending their trademark). **To File an Opposition (Opponent):** The Trade Marks Act is incredibly broad here. Section 21 states that 'any person' can file a Notice of Opposition within four months from the date the trademark is published in the Trademark Journal. You do not strictly need to be a registered trademark owner. Customers, competitors, public interest groups, or foreign entities can oppose a mark if they believe it is generic, descriptive, deceptive, or filed in bad faith. However, the most successful oppositions are filed by individuals or entities who have prior use of an identical or similar mark, thereby establishing superior common law rights (passing off) or statutory rights. **To Defend an Opposition (Applicant):** Eligibility to defend is automatic but strictly conditional upon compliance. Once the Registry serves the Notice of Opposition to the applicant, they are eligible—and legally required—to file a Counter-Statement. This must be filed within precisely two months from the receipt of the notice. If the applicant fails to file the Counter-Statement within this non-extendable window, they lose all eligibility to defend; the application is deemed 'Abandoned' by default, and the opposition is automatically successful. Subsequent stages (filing evidence under Rules 45, 46, and 47) also require strict adherence to the respective two-month timelines to maintain eligibility in the proceedings.
Everything in one transparent fee — no add-ons, no surprises.
What's included
Document preparation
We draft, review and assemble every document your filing requires.
Government filing
Submitted to the correct authority with the right fees, first time.
Status tracking
Real-time updates in your client portal until you get the certificate.
Accuracy guarantee
Refile-for-free if rejected due to our error, plus a fee refund.
Transparent, all-inclusive — no hidden line items.
I-Pro specialist handling, drafting & filing
Statutory fee, passed through at cost
Inclusive of professional + estimated govt fee
Professional Fee: ₹1,499 | Govt Fee: ₹4,500 | Total: ₹5,999 (incl. govt fees)
Gather these before we begin to ensure a smooth filing process.
Predictable steps — zero surprises along the way.
Publication & Watch
Filing Notice of Opposition (Form TM-O)
Filing the Counter-Statement
Evidence in Support of Opposition (Rule 45)
Evidence in Support of Application (Rule 46)
Evidence in Reply (Rule 47)
Show Cause Hearing
Final Order and Judgment