Our trademark search shows a similar mark; should I fight or file smartly?

March 4, 2026by Legal Help Desk0

Question: “Our trademark search shows a similar mark—how do we decide if we fight, tweak the brand, or file smartly to reduce rejection/opposition risk?” 

 

Answer  

When a search shows a similar mark, the decision is not “file or don’t file.” It’s risk triage + the cheapest path to a defensible outcome. Here’s the method that works in practice. 

 

First, classify the “similar mark” you found 

You’re trying to place it into one of these buckets: 

 

Bucket A — High risk (red zone) 

Usually true if most of these apply: 

  • Very similar word (sound/meaning/look), not just logo 
  • Same/similar goods/services (or closely related) 
  • Same territory where you’ll trade 
  • Earlier filing/registration is live 
  • Their mark looks strong/distinctive (not descriptive) 

Likely strategic approach: Avoid attempting to “argue your way through” unless strong leverage exists. Consider modifying the brand or selecting an alternative mark. Proceed only where there is a clear commercial justification supported by a legal strategy.  

 

Bucket B — Medium risk (amber zone) 

  • Some similarity, but there are clear differentiators 
  • Classes overlap partially, or goods/services are adjacent 
  • Their mark may be weak/descriptive, or use seems limited 

Likely strategic approach: Proceed cautiously with structured filing, narrow specifications, and prepare for possible objection or opposition. Bucket C — Low risk (green zone) 

  • Similarity is superficial (different core word / different meaning) 
  • Different market and no plausible consumer confusion 

Likely strategic approach: Proceed with filing under standard risk parameters  

 

The 6-factor checklist that drives the decision 

Counsel typically scores these (informally) before recommending action: 

  1. Similarity of marks (sound/look/meaning) — word mark carries the most weight 
  2. Proximity of goods/services — are buyers likely to think it’s the same source? 
  3. Distinctiveness of their mark — invented/fanciful beats descriptive/common words 
  4. Territory + language variants — English vs Arabic transliteration/look-alikes matter 
  5. Their real-world use/enforcement — do they actually trade and police the mark? 
  6. Your commercial exposure — how visible is your launch? how costly is rebrand later? 

 

Your three main strategy options (and when to use them) 

 

Option 1: Fight / Proceed with Legal Position (Only Where Leverage Exists) 

Appropriate where: 

  • You have demonstrable prior use
    • The earlier mark is weak/descriptive
    • Goods/services are genuinely distinct 

Strategic measures: 

  • File with a prepared legal position
    • Compile first-use and market evidence
    • Prepare objection/opposition response strategy in advance 

This is a calculated decision, not a default reaction. 

 

Option 2: Tweak the Brand (Often the Highest ROI Decision) 

Appropriate where: 

  • You value the brand concept but want to significantly reduce risk exposure

A meaningful “tweak” may involve: 

  • Altering the dominant element (not merely spacing or punctuation)
    • Adding a coined, distinctive element (avoid generic additions such as “Group,” “Trading,” “Premium”)
    • Filing a new word mark even if visual branding remains similar 

Avoid superficial changes: 

  • Minor spelling changes (“Kool” vs “Cool”) rarelyeliminate phonetic similarity concerns. 

 

Option 3: File Smart (Structured Filing Strategy) 

Appropriate where: 

  • Risk is moderate but commercially manageable

Common structured filing strategies: 

  • File word mark and logo separately
    • Carefully narrow and define goods/services to avoid unnecessary exposure
    • Select classes aligned with actual trade and short-term expansion
    • Consider staggered filings (core activities first)
    • Prepare evidence pack and positioning arguments in advance 

Structured filing reduces unnecessary objection and opposition risk. 

 

What you should NOT do 

  • Don’t file blindly “in all classes” hoping something sticks (it invites trouble and cost). 
  • Don’t copy the competitor’s class list if your business model differs. 
  • Don’t rely on a logo difference when the words are similar. 
  • Don’t spend heavily on marketing before you’ve chosen the path—lock the risk first. 

 

The practical decision rule (simple, commercial) 

Ask: 

“If this mark is opposed, can we defend or resolve it proportionately?” 

  • If the answer is no —modifyor rebrand early (cost-efficient).
    • If the answer is yes — proceed with structured filing and controlled risk strategy. 

 

Consult an expert with the following 5 items (to get a confident recommendation) 

To get a clear, defensible “fight vs tweak vs file smart” recommendation, share these five inputs with your trademark counsel/expert: 

Your proposed mark 

  • word mark (exact spelling/case) 
  • logo/device (if any) 

The conflicting mark(s) from the search 

  • exact name/spelling 
  • application/registration number(s), status (filed/registered), and class(es) (if available) 

Your goods/services and how you sell 

  • what you offer now + what you plan within 6–12 months 
  • channels (e-commerce, retail, B2B, distributors, marketplaces) 

Territory and audience 

  • where you operate/plan to operate (countries/emirates) 
  • target customer segment (mass market/niche, B2B/B2C) 

Commercial timing and exposure 

  • launch date or campaign schedule 
  • how much branding is already “out there” (packaging printed, ads running, investor decks, etc.) 

Disclaimer

This article is intended for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. The opinions expressed in this blog are those of the respective authors. ATB Legal does not endorse these opinions. While we make every effort to ensure the factual accuracy of the information provided in our blogs, inaccuracies may occur due to changes in the legislative landscape or human errors. It is important to note that ATB Legal does not assume any responsibility for actions taken based on the information presented in these blogs. We strongly recommend taking professional advice to ensure the best possible solution for your individual circumstances.

About ATB Legal

ATB Legal is a full-service legal consultancy in the UAE providing services in dispute resolution (DIFC Courts, ADGM Courts, mainland litigation management and Arbitrations), corporate and commercial matters, IP, business set up and UAE taxation. We also have a personal law department providing advice on marriage, divorce and wills & estate planning for expats.

Please feel free to reach out to us at office@atblegal.com for a non-obligatory initial consultation.

by Legal Help Desk

The Agony Uncle column is helmed by our seasoned legal consultants with deep expertise in corporate law and compliance, offering practical solutions to complex business legal issues.

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