
Regulated by Decree-Law No.56/95/M (Industrial Property Legal Regime) and
administered by the Intellectual Property Division of Macao Economic and
Technological Development Bureau (DSEDT), Macao operates an independent trademark
system separated from mainland China and Hong Kong SAR. As a member of the Paris
Convention and Madrid Protocol, Macao accepts two filing channels: direct national
filing at DSEDT and international trademark extension via WIPO Madrid System. A
distinctive statutory rule unique to Macao is the 3-year consecutive non-use revocation
mechanism, which differs sharply from the 5-year non-use standard in Hong Kong and
many Southeast Asian jurisdictions. This case study dissects a typical trademark revocation
dispute triggered by insufficient local commercial use, clarifies filing formalities, Madrid
extension limits and compliance maintenance rules for cross-border brands targeting Macao’s
tourism and retail market.
A Singaporean luxury cosmetics group submitted a multi-class trademark application
covering Class 3 cosmetics and Class 35 retail services to DSEDT in 2020 and obtained
official registration after publication without opposition. The brand only operated online
cross-border delivery to Macao individual customers via overseas e-commerce platforms,
without setting up local physical stores, authorized distributors, offline pop-up counters or l
ocalized Macao social media promotion. No local invoices, packaging labels or on-site
commercial display records were archived within Macao territory. In early 2024, a local
Macao beauty competitor filed a revocation application under Article 231 of the Industrial
Property Legal Regime, claiming the mark had suffered three full years of genuine non-use.
The Singaporean applicant submitted offshore logistics slips and overseas sales screenshots
as defensive evidence, yet DSEDT’s trademark examination department ruled that
cross-border remote delivery without localized commercial layout could not constitute statutory
valid use. The trademark was fully revoked in August 2024. Having lost exclusive rights, the
brand faced identical counterfeit goods flooding Macao’s tourist shopping districts and severe
loss of regional market share.
Macao’s trademark legal system features independent regulatory authority and unique 3-year
non-use revocation provisions, creating prominent compliance barriers for overseas brands
that only conduct remote cross-border sales without local operation. This revocation case fully
demonstrates that trademark registration alone cannot sustain long-term exclusive brand rights.
For international enterprises expanding into Macao’s tourism and consumer market, abiding
by DSEDT filing specifications, maintaining continuous localized commercial use and
reserving standardized use evidence are indispensable measures to block bad-faith squatting
and counterfeit infringement, securing stable intellectual property advantages in the Macao
SAR market.
Hyperlink List:
● DSEDT Official Trademark Registration FAQ & Compliance Guidelines (English Version):
https://www.dsedt.gov.mo/en/web/public/pg_ip_faq
● WIPO WIPOLEX Full Text of Macao Decree-Law No.56/95/M Industrial Property Regime: