
International trademark protection is among the most strategically significant investments a growing business can make. The Madrid Protocol offers a streamlined, cost-effective mechanism for securing trademark rights across multiple jurisdictions through a single international application — eliminating the complexity and expense of managing separate national filings in every target market. Navigating that system rigorously and strategically requires expert legal counsel from initial filing through to active portfolio management.
Vohra & Vohra offers comprehensive Madrid Protocol and international trademark filing services to businesses of every scale — from emerging brands filing their first international application to multinational corporations managing extensive multi-jurisdictional portfolios. Every strategy is aligned with the client's global commercial ambitions and brand expansion priorities.
Vohra & Vohra provides strategic Madrid Protocol and international trademark filing services that help businesses of every scale secure, manage, enforce, and expand their brand protection across global markets with confidence and commercial clarity.
Get answers to common Madrid Protocol filing, international trademark registration, provisional refusal, portfolio management, and global brand expansion queries.
The firm provides comprehensive international trademark services including filing strategy advisory, Madrid Protocol application preparation and filing, WIPO coordination, multi-jurisdictional portfolio management, provisional refusal and office action responses, opposition proceedings before national offices, international renewals, subsequent designations, recordal of assignments, and advisory on global brand expansion strategies.
The Madrid Protocol is an international treaty administered by WIPO that allows a trademark owner to seek protection in multiple member countries through a single international application filed via their home trademark office. Once registered internationally, the mark is protected in each designated country subject to that country’s national examination process.
When a designated country’s trademark office raises objections, it issues a provisional refusal within a set timeframe. Vohra & Vohra monitors examination outcomes across all designated jurisdictions and responds strategically to provisional refusals and office actions before the relevant national offices, working to secure protection in each target market.
Yes. The Madrid Protocol allows rights holders to file subsequent designations to extend an existing international registration to additional member countries at any time after the initial registration. Vohra & Vohra advises on the timing and strategy for subsequent designations as part of an ongoing brand expansion programme.
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