Advise, Drafting, Representation | Industrial Designs Protecting the Visual Identity of Your ProductsIndustrial Designs
in India

The appearance of a product is often its most commercially valuable feature. India’s Designs Act 2000 protects the aesthetic and visual features of articles — shape, configuration, pattern, ornamentation, and composition of lines or colours — giving registered proprietors exclusive rights and preventing unauthorised copying or imitation. ATB Legal provides end-to-end industrial design advisory from novelty search and Office of the Controller General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks (CGPDTM) filing through to enforcement and licensing.
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Design registration under India’s Designs Act 2000 transforms the visual identity of a product into a legally protected exclusive right — enforceable against competitors, counterfeiters, and imitators.

OUR INDUSTRIAL DESIGN SERVICES

Industrial Designs: Protecting the Visual Identity of Your Products

Industrial design protection addresses a gap that neither patents nor trademarks fill. Patents protect technical function; trademarks protect brand identity. Designs protect the aesthetic appearance of a product — the visual features that make it recognisable, desirable, and commercially distinctive. For manufacturers, product designers, packaging specialists, and consumer goods companies, design registration under the Designs Act 2000 is often the most commercially relevant and cost-effective form of IP protection available.

ATB Legal’s industrial design practice supports clients across the complete registration and enforcement lifecycle — from initial novelty assessment through to CGPDTM filing, prosecution, portfolio management, and action against infringers.

 

Industrial Design Protection in India

Industrial designs in India are protected under the Designs Act 2000, administered by the CGPDTM under DPIIT. Registration grants the proprietor the exclusive right to use the registered design in relation to the article for which it is registered, preventing any person from applying an identical or fraudulently imitated design for the purpose of sale.

The Act protects aesthetic and visual features — shape, configuration, pattern, ornamentation, and composition of lines or colours applied in two or three dimensions. A design must be new or original andmust not have been previously published or disclosed anywhere in the world before the filing date . Features dictated solely by technical function are excluded from design protection and may instead qualify for patent protection under the Patents Act 1970.

The term of protection is 10 years from the date of registration, extendable by a further 5 years on payment of the prescribed renewal fee — giving a maximum protection period of 15 years. Registered design rights are enforceable through civil and criminal proceedings from the date of registration.

 

Industries Where Design Registration Matters Most

Design registration is particularly valuable in sectors where product appearance drives purchasing decisions and imitation is commercially damaging. Industries actively using design protection in India include consumer electronics, home appliances, furniture and furnishings, packaging and containers, fashion accessories, automotive components, medical devices, and fast-moving consumer goods. For GCC and European businesses exporting to India or manufacturing in India, early design registration prevents local competitors from appropriating product aesthetics that represent years of development investment.

Our Services Include

  • Novelty Searches and Registrability Assessment: Conducting prior art searches across the Designs Register to assess novelty before filing — establishing registrability and identifying conflicting prior registrations.
  • Drafting and Filing Design Applications: Preparing applications, representations, and statements of article for filing with the CGPDTM through the IP India portal — ensuring compliance with all formal and substantive requirements.
  • Prosecution and Office Action Responses: Managing correspondence with the CGPDTM following examination, addressing objections, and progressing applications through to registration.
  • Design Renewal and Portfolio Management: Managing 10-year renewal cycles and 5-year extensions, maintaining design validity across large product portfolios, and coordinating international filings through the Hague System administered by WIPO.
  • Design Cancellation Proceedings: Representing clients in cancellation petitions before the CGPDTM — challenging registrations on grounds of prior publication, lack of novelty, or non-compliance with the Designs Act 2000.
  • Enforcement and Infringement Actions: Representing design proprietors in civil infringement proceedings before Indian courts — pursuing injunctions, damages, and delivery up of infringing articles.
  • Design Licensing and Assignment: Drafting and registering design licensing and assignment agreements, ensuring commercial exploitation is contractually documented and enforceable.
  • Design-Patent Strategy: Advising on the boundary between design and patent protection for products with both functional and aesthetic features — developing integrated IP strategies that maximise protection across both regimes.
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FAQsFrequently Asked Questions-Industrial Designs

  1. What does the Designs Act 2000 protect?

The Designs Act 2000 protects the aesthetic and visual features of an article — shape, configuration, pattern, ornamentation, and composition of lines or colours applied in two or three dimensions. It covers features that appeal to the eye, not technical function. Features dictated solely by technical function are excluded and may instead qualify for patent protection under the Patents Act 1970.

  1. What are the requirements for a design to be registrable in India?

A design must be new or original — not previously published or disclosed in India. It must be applied to a specific article and must not be purely functional, contrary to public order, or offensive. ATB Legal conducts a novelty search before filing to assess registrability and identify any conflicting prior registrations on the Designs Register.

  1. How long does design protection last in India?

A registered design is protected for 10 years from the date of registration. The proprietor may apply for a single extension of 5 years on payment of the prescribed renewal fee — giving a maximum total protection period of 15 years. After the maximum term expires, the design enters the public domain. ATB Legal manages renewal deadlines and portfolio maintenance to ensure no registered design lapses inadvertently.

  1. How does design protection differ from patent and trademark protection?

Patents protect the technical function of an invention — how something works. Trademarks protect brand identifiers such as names and logos. Design protection under the Designs Act 2000 protects the visual appearance of a product — how it looks. For many manufactured articles, all three forms of protection may be relevant: a patent for the functional mechanism, a design registration for the product’s visual form, and a trademark for the brand applied to it.

  1. Can a registered design be cancelled?

Yes. Any person may petition the CGPDTM to cancel a registered design on grounds including prior publication, lack of novelty, or non-compliance with the Designs Act 2000. ATB Legal represents clients both in filing cancellation petitions against conflicting registrations and in defending registered designs against cancellation challenges.

  1. Can Indian design registrations be extended internationally?

Yes. India is a member of the Hague Agreement for international design registration, allowing applicants to designate India through a single international filing, although in practice many applicants still prefer direct national filings depending on strategy. for the International Registration of Industrial Designs, administered by WIPO. An international design application through the Hague System can designate India and multiple other member countries in a single filing. ATB Legal advises on Hague System filings as part of coordinated international design portfolio strategies across India, the UAE, the GCC, and Europe.

Uncompromising Quality Our Approach

At ATB Legal, we understand that a registered design is a commercially valuable asset that directly supports revenue protection, competitive differentiation, and brand integrity. Products that are visually distinctive and legally protected are harder to copy, easier to licence, and more valuable in M&A and investment transactions. Our industrial design practice combines precise knowledge of the Designs Act 2000 and CGPDTM procedures with the commercial understanding of the industries our clients operate in — enabling filing strategies that protect the features that actually matter commercially. From initial novelty assessment through to active enforcement against imitators, every design mandate is managed with the same precision and foresight we apply across our entire IP practice.

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Representative Experience

Consumer Electronics — Product Design Portfolio Registration
Advised a consumer electronics manufacturer on registering a portfolio of industrial designs covering product housings, interface panels, and packaging configurations. The mandate included novelty searches, preparation of representations for multiple articles, filing with the CGPDTM, and prosecution through to registration. A parallel design-patent strategy was developed for products where visual form and functional mechanism both warranted protection.

Packaging Manufacturer — Design Infringement Enforcement
Represented a packaging manufacturer whose registered container designs were applied to competing products in the Indian market. ATB Legal filed an infringement action in the High Court seeking an injunction and damages. The proceedings resolved by consent order — requiring the defendant to cease use of the infringing design, deliver up existing stock, and pay agreed compensation.

GCC Exporter — Cross-Border Design Registration Strategy
Advised a GCC-based manufacturer entering the Indian market on a coordinated design registration strategy covering both India and the UAE. The mandate included a novelty assessment against the Indian Designs Register, preparation and filing of applications with the CGPDTM for key product lines, and structuring of a Hague System international application to extend protection across additional export markets simultaneously.
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ATB Legal's India industrial design team advises manufacturers, product designers, and exporters on design registration, portfolio management, and enforcement under the Designs Act 2000. Speak to the team before your product reaches the Indian market.

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    This website provides general information only, may not reflect current law, and should not be acted upon without professional advice.