1. Pre-Filing Eligibility Review & Mandatory Pre-Search Rules
Before submitting a standalone national French trade mark application to INPI (Institut National de la Propriété Industrielle), all applicants must finish two exclusive pre-registration compliance audits distinct from UK, German, EUIPO and other national trade mark systems covered in prior articles. France adheres to a strict first-to-file system aligned with the Paris Convention; mere prior domestic market use cannot generate enforceable exclusive rights without formal INPI registration, and unregistered brand use only grants limited unfair competition protection under French consumer law rather than absolute trade mark exclusivity.
The first compulsory pre-filing procedure is INPI official national trade mark conflict search via its bilingual French-English online database, covering all active, pending, lapsed and cancelled national French trade marks across metropolitan France and overseas French territories including Reunion and Martinique. Basic word mark searches incur a fixed fee of €45, while full figurative graphic searches with official similarity analysis reports cost €160. The search report identifies identical or confusingly similar prior registered marks covering matching goods and services, serving as core evidence to avoid substantive rejection and lengthy opposition procedures lasting 4–6 months.
Second, applicants must classify goods and services strictly under the 11th Edition of the Nice Classification, the sole valid standard accepted by INPI in 2026. Vague, shortened or outdated descriptive terms from older Nice versions trigger an immediate formal deficiency notice with only one single 15-day correction window, with no permission for partial modification of classification wording. Applicants are split into two legal groups: natural persons or legal entities with a registered address or commercial establishment within French territory, and foreign applicants without local business premises or tax domicile in France. All overseas applicants without a French domestic representative must appoint an INPI-registered industrial property attorney and submit a signed power of attorney upon filing; delayed submission of the POA fully suspends the whole application process until complete legal paperwork is uploaded to INPI’s e-filing portal. Direct self-filing by unrepresented foreign parties is unconditionally rejected under Article L712-2 of the French Intellectual Property Code (CPI).
Joint multi-party filings are legally permitted, yet the final registration certificate lists all co-proprietors with equal undivided ownership rights. If co-owners fail to reach unanimous agreement on renewal, licensing or assignment, only the Paris Court of Industrial Property has exclusive jurisdiction to resolve ownership disputes; INPI does not provide free administrative mediation for conflicts between joint applicants.
INPI operates parallel digital e-filing and offline paper submission routes, with tiered pricing regulated by INPI 2026 Official Fee Circular No. 17, independent of EUIPO fee standards:
1. Online E-Filing (Officially Recommended Channel): Applicants log into INPI’s bilingual digital trade mark portal, upload encrypted application materials and settle fees via French bank transfer, Carte Bancaire or international credit cards. Online filings receive a 30% discount on base filing fees. Single-class online filing fee for individuals and corporations: €220
a. Additional per-class surcharge for multi-class applications: €90 per extra category
2. Offline Paper Filing: Hard-copy TM-FR application forms submitted via post or physical counter at INPI Paris headquarters. All paper filings carry a mandatory 30% surcharge on base official fees, resulting in €286 per single class for all applicants regardless of individual or corporate identity.
Unlike Germany’s optional fast-track scheme, INPI does not launch any official accelerated examination procedure for domestic French trade mark filings; all national applications follow a unified standard procedural timeline without priority processing shortcuts. All administrative official fees are fully non-refundable, even if the application receives substantive rejection or the applicant voluntarily withdraws the case after payment confirmation.
Mandatory full document checklist for single/multi-class national French trade mark applications: fully completed bilingual French-English TM-FR electronic form, high-resolution trade mark specimen (minimum 5cm×5cm, 300 DPI; CMYK colour parameter labels mandatory for colour marks), applicant identity document or corporate SIRET tax registration certificate, signed power of attorney (only required for foreign filers), itemised goods/services list fully compliant with the 11th Nice Classification, certified French translations for all non-French supporting paperwork.
After successful fee payment validation, all trade mark applications advance through four sequential legally binding procedural stages with rigid non-extendable reply windows, structurally different from simplified workflows operated by GCC, Southeast Asian and North American trade mark authorities:
INPI examiners audit document completeness, attorney registration validity, Nice Classification terminology compliance and trade mark specimen technical standards. A single deficiency notification is issued for incomplete materials, granting a one-time 15-day correction window. Failure to fully rectify all listed defects within the deadline results in automatic deemed abandonment with no administrative appeal right. Critically, if materials remain non-compliant after correction, the original filing date is voided and reset to the date of final complete submission, creating high risks of third-party prior filings under France’s first-to-file rule.
Examiners assess absolute refusal grounds under Article L711-3 CPI and relative conflict grounds under Article L711-4 CPI. INPI conducts ex officio searches for prior conflicting marks without separate requests from applicants. If conflicting trade marks or statutory violations are detected, an official Provisional Refusal Report is dispatched to the appointed local industrial property attorney. Applicants must submit a detailed counterstatement with visual distinctiveness comparison evidence within 30 calendar days of notification; complete inaction or overdue replies lead to permanent dismissal of the trade mark application. Appeals against refusal decisions must be filed within 30 days before the INPI Hearing Board
Applications clearing substantive review are published weekly in INPI’s digital Official Bulletin of Industrial Property. The statutory opposition period lasts exactly two calendar months, identical to the UK and Portugal timeline, shorter than Germany’s three-month opposition cycle and far longer than the UAE’s 30–60 day limit. Any natural person or legal entity holding verifiable legitimate commercial interests may submit an opposition form with documentary proof of prior proprietary rights. Opposition hearings are held via remote video conference upon mutual written consent of both opposing parties.
If no oppositions are filed or all opposition claims are fully overruled, INPI issues a grant notice within 25 working days, granting applicants a strict two-month window to settle the separate official registration fee of €65. Upon full payment, a digital electronic registration certificate is automatically sent to the applicant’s registered email address; physical hard-copy certificates carry an additional €32 production surcharge. The trade mark protection term lasts for 10 consecutive years, calculated strictly from the original filing date, not publication or grant date.
After receiving the official registration certificate, trade mark proprietors may apply for three categories of post-registration amendments via official Form TM-MFR, each subject to independent regulatory restrictions not covered in general overviews of the French Intellectual Property Code:
1. Minor Trade Mark Modifications: Minor adjustments to colour saturation, font layout or graphic proportions are permitted. Any material alteration to core distinctive verbal or figurative elements is strictly prohibited; applicants must submit an entirely new TM-FR national application instead of amending the existing registered record.
2. Change of Proprietor Address or Legal Representative: If the trade mark owner relocates its registered SIRET tax address within France or replaces its INPI-licensed industrial property attorney, Form TM-MFR must be filed within one month of the change taking legal effect. Unrecorded address updates render all official INPI notices legally undeliverable, which may trigger five-year non-use cancellation risks due to missed renewal reminder correspondence.
3. Partial Deletion of Goods and Services: Registrants may remove selected sub-items within a registered Nice classification class, but no new goods or service descriptive phrases can be added to an existing registration at any point during the 10-year protection cycle.
Foreign exporters targeting both the EU single market and non-EU markets such as the Gulf and Southeast Asia have three distinct filing options, with clear functional drawbacks for EUTM and Madrid designations compared to standalone French national applications:
1. Direct National TM-FR Filing: Full independent control over counterstatement argument drafting during examination and opposition procedures, direct local communication channels with Paris-based INPI examiners, and no mandatory reliance on a base home-country trade mark registration as a filing prerequisite. EUTMs remain valid in France post-Brexit, yet all local French litigation must be handled by French courts and INPI with local legal representation.
2. EUIPO Union Trade Mark (EUTM): Lower aggregate filing costs for brands operating across multiple EU member states simultaneously, yet EUTM administrative disputes involving French territory cannot be fully resolved via EUIPO’s Alicante office and must be re-submitted to INPI with full local industrial property attorney representation.
3. Madrid Protocol International Registration Designating France: Unified single application for multiple jurisdictions, yet all substantive objections raised by INPI must be relayed via WIPO Geneva, creating communication delays ranging from 1.5 to 3 months. Additionally, Madrid holders cannot submit partial goods deletions or minor trade mark rectifications directly via INPI’s domestic portal; all post-registration amendment procedures must be processed entirely through WIPO’s central platform.
For small and medium-sized merchants only selling products within French domestic market and overseas French territories, INPI certified IP attorneys universally recommend standalone national multi-class filings. Large multinational groups covering both EU and French domestic territories often adopt a hybrid dual filing strategy: EUTM for pan-EU general brand coverage plus independent French national registration for core product lines requiring rapid market launch within France’s consumer market.
Three recurring filing errors frequently result in complete rejection of foreign applicants’ French national trade mark submissions, procedural issues rarely encountered in Anglo-Saxon trade mark registry systems:
1. Submitting blurry, low-resolution colour trade mark specimens without mandatory CMYK colour parameter annotations required by INPI technical standards; roughly 36% of all initial deficiency notices in 2025 stemmed from non-compliant graphic files.
2. Copying abbreviated, non-compliant Nice Classification item descriptions from third-party commercial websites instead of adopting the official full standard terminology published on INPI’s online classification database, leading to descriptiveness-based absolute grounds refusal under Article L711-3 CPI.
3. Appointing unlicensed freelance translators or overseas offshore consultants instead of formally INPI-registered industrial property attorneys to handle all foreign applicant filing procedures, violating the mandatory local representation rule and triggering immediate full dismissal.
Pre-filing official database searches and professional INPI-licensed attorney document review eliminate over 82% of these avoidable rejection risks, reducing wasted labour time and non-refundable official filing fees for cross-border export enterprises supplying the French retail and domestic e-commerce industry.
1.IPcrossark:https://www.ipcrossark.com/en/trademark.html?cid=59
2.https://www.inpi.fr/en/apply-trademark INPI Official English National Trade Mark Online Application Entry
3.https://www.inpi.fr/en/fees-trademarks INPI Full Official Trade Mark Fee Schedule 2026 English Version
4.https://euipo.europa.eu/eutradeMark/en/filing EUIPO Union Trade Mark Global Filing System Portal
5.https://www.douane.gouv.fr/en/services/intellectual-property-rights DGDDI French Customs Intellectual Property Border Recordation Guidance