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Macao SAR Trademark Case Study 2026: Collective & Certification Mark Registration Rules and Opposition Proceeding Compliance

IPcrossark
قانون
2026-06-18 03:21:47

 

Regulated by Decree-Law No.56/95/M (Industrial Property Regime) and supervised by

the Intellectual Property Division of Macao Economic and Technological

Development Bureau (DSEDT), Macao SAR establishes independent legal standards for

collective marks and certification marks, two special trademark types rarely adopted by

foreign brands operating in Macao’s tourism, catering and handicraft sectors. Distinct

from ordinary word or device trademarks, collective and certification marks target industrial

associations, trade federations and quality supervision institutions, with unique filing

documents, post-registration management obligations and opposition judgment criteria.

Combined with Macao’s exclusive pre-publication opposition mechanism, many cross-

border industrial groups encounter application rejection or opposition defeat due to

unfamiliar special mark rules. This case study analyzes a failed collective mark registration

dispute, sorts out statutory filing thresholds, opposition evidence standards and daily

maintenance obligations, delivering systematic compliance solutions for global industry

organizations.

 

Case Overview

A cross-border traditional handicraft industry association headquartered in Southeast

Asia intended to register a collective mark covering Class 20 wooden crafts and Class 41

cultural exhibition services in Macao in 2024, aiming to unify brand identification for all

member manufacturers. When submitting documents to DSEDT, the association only

handed in a basic application form and trademark drawing, without attaching the mandatory

internal association usage bylaws that clearly define member qualification, mark usage

standards and infringement disposal rules. The application passed formal examination and was

published in the Macao Official Gazette, entering the statutory 2-month opposition period.

A local Macao handicraft chamber of commerce filed an opposition, arguing the applicant

failed to provide complete collective mark management regulations, which violated Article 8

of Decree-Law No.56/95/M. The overseas association only submitted membership rosters and

overseas sales data as defense materials, lacking standardized internal usage governance

documents required by Macao IP law. DSEDT’s trademark examination division sustained the

opposition and fully rejected the collective mark application. The industry group had to

reorganize internal charter clauses, supplement notarized bylaw translations and refile half a

year later, incurring extra agency fees and delayed market layout progress.Core Legal and

Procedural Insights

 

First, strict documentary thresholds for collective marks and certification marks.

According to Macao industrial property statutes, applicants for collective marks (industry

associations, federations) must submit complete organization bylaws specifying eligible

users, mark usage conditions and liability clauses for unauthorized use. For certification

marks owned by quality supervision bodies, additional product quality testing standards and

inspection procedures must be attached. Ordinary service contracts or membership lists

cannot replace these mandatory regulatory documents. Any missing core charter materials

will become a valid ground for third-party opposition. Second, Macao adopts a unique

pre-substantive-examination opposition system. Unlike mainland China that conducts full

substantive review before publication, DSEDT publishes all eligible applications first and

resolves oppositions prior to substantive examination. Examiners will not actively search for

prior conflicting rights; it is the responsibility of rights holders to file oppositions within

the 60-day publication window to block confusingly similar special marks. The opposition

filing fee is MOP 800, and the applicant must submit a full reply within 30 calendar

days upon receiving opposition notice. Third, continuous post-registration supervision

obligations apply to special marks. After registration, any revision of collective mark usage

bylaws or certification mark quality standards must be notified to DSEDT within 30 days

with notarized updated documents. Failure to report amendments constitutes a ground

for mark invalidation. Besides, collective and certification marks are equally subject to the

rigid 3-year consecutive non-use revocation rule; mere internal membership record-keeping

without real commercial market application cannot avoid revocation proceedings.

Fourth, territoriality of reputation evidence in opposition defense. Global industry influence

or overseas certification credentials carry limited weight in Macao opposition hearings. To

defeat oppositions, applicants must provide localized evidence such as Macao member

store display photos, local cultural exhibition records and Macao consumer market survey

reports to prove the mark’s stable local identification function. Pure offshore operation data

will not be recognized as persuasive defense evidence.Practical Compliance Guidance for

Global Industry Organizations

 

Classify mark types accurately before filing: ordinary retail brands choose standard

word/device trademarks, while trade associations and industrial federations select

collective marks, and product quality testing institutions apply for certification marks. Never

mix up application materials for different special mark categories. Prepare standardized statutory

supporting documents in advance. Draft complete internal usage bylaws, clarify user access

thresholds and infringement disposal rules, and complete Chinese-Portuguese notarized

translation for all foreign organization charters before submission. Set dual monitoring

mechanisms for the 2-month publication opposition period and the 3-year continuous use

inspection node. Regularly browse the Macao Official Gazette industrial property bulletin to

track

competing collective or certification mark applications. Reserve full localized commercial use

evidence after registration, including Macao member product packaging, offline exhibition

posters and local distributor cooperation agreements, to resist both opposition and

subsequent non-use revocation risks. Appoint a Macao locally licensed IP agent to handle

all special mark filings, opposition replies and charter amendment filings, to avoid

procedural defects caused by unfamiliar local document formalities.Conclusion

 

Macao’s special trademark system covering collective marks and certification marks provides

standardized brand management tools for industrial organizations, yet carries stricter

documentary and post-registration supervision requirements than ordinary trademarks. This

collective mark opposition case fully demonstrates that incomplete internal governance

documents and insufficient localized evidence are major compliance obstacles for overseas

industry groups. For cross-border trade federations and quality certification bodies

expanding into Macao’s characteristic consumer market, strictly complying with DSEDT’s

special mark filing rules, retaining complete charter and local use materials, and actively

monitoring publication opposition windows are essential to secure stable long-term special

trademark protection in Macao SAR.

 

 

Hyperlink List

DSEDT Official Guide for Collective & Certification Mark Registration

https://www.dsedt.gov.mo/public/data/ip/noa/attach/61773df614aa0113d504d2ebb6dbb9e8bd38b38a/tc/reg_collective_mar_tc.pdf

Macao DSEDT Trademark Opposition Procedure & Fee Standard Page:

https://www.dsedt.gov.mo/zh_CN/web/public/pg_ip_faq?_refresh=true