Understanding Office Actions
What to do when a trademark examiner raises issues with your application. Types of refusals and proven response strategies.
What Is a Trademark Office Action?
An office action is an official communication from the trademark examiner assigned to review your application. It identifies issues that need to be resolved before your trademark can proceed to registration.
Receiving an office action doesn't mean your application has been rejected. It means the examiner needs additional information, clarification, or amendments before they can approve it. Many office actions are routine and can be successfully overcome.
Important: Office Actions Are Not Rejections
Think of an office action as a conversation with the examiner. They're telling you what needs to change for your application to succeed. With the right response, most office actions can be overcome.
Types of Trademark Refusals
Office actions fall into two categories: procedural (easy to fix) and substantive (requires legal arguments).
Procedural Refusals
Specimen Issues
The proof of use you submitted doesn't meet requirements — wrong format, doesn't show the mark in commerce, or is digitally altered.
Description of Goods/Services
The description of your goods or services is too vague, too broad, or uses incorrect terminology.
Classification Error
Your goods or services are assigned to the wrong Nice class, or need to be reclassified.
Disclaimer Required
The examiner requires you to disclaim exclusive rights to a descriptive or generic element of your mark.
Substantive Refusals
Likelihood of Confusion
The examiner found a similar existing mark that could cause consumer confusion with yours.
Merely Descriptive
The mark merely describes a feature, quality, or characteristic of the goods/services.
Deceptively Misdescriptive
The mark could mislead consumers about the nature, quality, or geographic origin of the goods/services.
Geographic Descriptiveness
The mark primarily describes the geographic origin of the goods/services.
How to Respond to an Office Action
Follow these steps to craft an effective response within the deadline.
Read Carefully
Review the entire office action to understand every issue raised. Note the response deadline — missing it means abandonment.
Identify the Issues
Categorise each issue as procedural or substantive. Procedural issues are typically straightforward; substantive ones need legal arguments.
Gather Evidence
Collect supporting evidence: new specimens, market research, consumer surveys, dictionary definitions, or examples of coexisting marks.
Draft Your Response
Address every issue raised — not just some. For substantive refusals, build clear legal arguments supported by evidence and case law.
Submit Before Deadline
File your response through the official system well before the deadline. Include all required forms, amendments, and supporting documents.
Success Strategies
Never Miss a Deadline
Set calendar reminders immediately. Late responses result in abandonment with no refund of filing fees.
Get Professional Help
Trademark attorneys have experience crafting arguments that work. Their expertise significantly increases success rates.
Use Strong Evidence
Back every argument with evidence — market data, consumer perception studies, examples of coexisting marks in the marketplace.
Consider Amendments
Sometimes amending your description, disclaiming a term, or narrowing your goods/services is the fastest path to registration.
Office Action FAQs
What is a trademark office action?
An office action is an official letter from the trademark examiner identifying issues with your application that must be resolved before registration can proceed. It's not a rejection — it's a request for clarification or amendment.
How long do I have to respond to an office action?
In the US (USPTO), you typically have 3 months to respond, extendable to 6 months. In Australia (IP Australia), you generally have 15 months. Timelines vary by country, so check your specific jurisdiction.
What happens if I don't respond to an office action?
If you fail to respond within the deadline, your trademark application will be abandoned or deemed lapsed. You would need to file a new application and pay new filing fees to try again.
Can I respond to an office action myself?
Yes, you can respond yourself, but office actions often involve complex legal arguments. Professional assistance significantly increases the chance of overcoming the refusal. Marko connects you with experienced trademark attorneys who can craft effective responses.
What is the success rate for overcoming office actions?
Success rates vary depending on the type of refusal. Procedural issues (missing information, specimen problems) have high success rates when properly addressed. Substantive refusals (likelihood of confusion, descriptiveness) are more challenging but can often be overcome with strong legal arguments.
Need Help With an Office Action?
Our experienced trademark attorneys can review your office action and prepare a professional response.