The ® symbol means a trademark is federally registered with the USPTO, and using it is only legal once the USPTO has issued a registration certificate. Before that point, ™ for goods or SM for services is the correct notice. Using ® before registration is unlawful false marking and can expose your business to fraud claims.
Use ™ or SM on your brand until the USPTO actually issues your registration certificate — then switch to ®.
The ® symbol is reserved by federal law for registered marks; using it prematurely can weaken enforcement rights later.
Check your USPTO application status online and switch to ® only after the registration certificate issues.
The ® symbol tells customers, competitors, and the courts that the mark has been reviewed and registered by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office under federal law. The symbol signals the owner has cleared the USPTO examination process and holds nationwide rights in the specific class of goods or services the registration covers.
The symbol is governed by 15 U.S.C. §1111, which authorizes registered trademark owners to give notice of registration by displaying ® with the mark, or by using the words “Registered in U.S. Patent and Trademark Office” or “Reg. U.S. Pat. & Tm. Off.”[1] Without the ® symbol or equivalent written notice, a trademark owner may be limited in recovering damages from an infringer who did not actually know about the registration.
You can legally use the ® symbol only after the USPTO has issued a registration certificate for the mark in the specific class of goods or services.[3] Filing an application, paying the fee, or even receiving a publication notice does not grant the right to use ® — only the issuance of the actual registration.
During the entire period from filing to registration — typically many months to more than a year for an uncontested application — the correct notice is TM (for goods) or SM (for services), never ®. The USPTO publishes application status in its TSDR database (Trademark Status and Document Retrieval). A business should check TSDR to confirm registration has been granted before switching from TM or SM to ®.
Using the ® symbol before federal registration is granted is called false marking and is prohibited by federal law. While rarely criminally prosecuted, improper ® use can be raised as a defense by an accused infringer, can harm an ongoing trademark application, and in some cases can trigger a fraud claim at the USPTO.[2]
The fix is straightforward. Any business currently using ® on a mark that is not federally registered should immediately switch to TM or SM on all marketing, packaging, and web materials — and file a proper USPTO application if protection is the goal. Continuing to use ® without registration is not worth the legal exposure, especially when TM and SM deliver the same brand-notice benefit without the legal risk.
Using the ® symbol after registration is technically optional, but highly recommended because it unlocks the full financial remedies available in infringement claims. Without the ® notice — or the written equivalent — a trademark owner may be unable to recover damages or profits from an infringer who lacked actual knowledge of the registration.
15 U.S.C. §1111 expressly links damages recovery to the use of registration notice.[1] If the trademark owner neither displays the ® symbol nor uses the equivalent written notice, and the infringer did not have actual knowledge of the registration, the statute limits what the owner can collect — typically to post-notice infringement only.
In practical terms, every commercial use of the registered mark — on product labels, websites, marketing materials, social media, invoices, and packaging — should carry the ® symbol or equivalent written notice. Many brands place ® on the first or most prominent use of the mark on a given page or document, rather than every use. Either approach satisfies the statute; consistency is what matters for enforcement.
Place the ® symbol immediately after the trademark on first or most prominent use. The symbol is typically positioned as a small superscript or baseline character directly following the mark, with no space between the mark and the symbol.
| Material | Typical placement |
|---|---|
| Product packaging | Adjacent to the brand name on the label |
| Website | Next to the logo in the header, plus first body-copy use |
| Business cards and email signatures | After the registered name |
| Marketing materials | First or most prominent brand mention on each piece |
| Invoices and contracts | First brand-name occurrence |
The ® should only accompany the mark in connection with the specific goods or services covered by the registration. If a brand registered in Class 25 (apparel) also sells unregistered software, the ® belongs on the apparel only. Using ® on offerings outside the registered class can be challenged as overreach and weaken the registration.
Many business owners treat the ® symbol as an aesthetic choice — something to sprinkle on a logo for visual polish, the way some brands add small copyright symbols for professional appearance. That framing is a mistake.
The ® symbol is a legal instrument. Federal law authorizes it, restricts it, and links it directly to the financial remedies a registered trademark owner can collect. Using the symbol correctly is an operational habit — as routine as renewing a business license.
This is where Responsible Asset-Building shows up in small daily details. A registered trademark is an asset, but an asset only yields its full value when properly notated and consistently enforced. Adding ® to product packaging, email signatures, web headers, and invoices is the ongoing work of signaling that the brand is protected — and preserving the ability to recover full damages if someone copies it.
The Structured Middle Path is simple: file the application, wait for registration, switch from TM to ®, then use ® consistently. No shortcuts, no pre-registration claims. An educated consumer treats the symbol as a discipline — not decoration.
No. The ® symbol is legally reserved for marks that have received a registration certificate from the USPTO. A pending application — regardless of how far along it is in the examination process — does not authorize ® use. Continue using TM (for goods) or SM (for services) until the certificate issues. Premature ® use can expose your business to fraud claims.
The ™ symbol is an unregistered common-law notice that claims a word or logo as a brand identifier. Anyone can use it at any time, no filing required. The ® symbol is a federal statutory notice that signals the mark has been registered with the USPTO. Using ® carries legal consequences: it unlocks full damages remedies but is only lawful on federally registered marks.
No. Customary practice places ® next to the first or most prominent use of the mark on a given page, not every instance. The legal requirement is to give notice of registration, not to repeat the symbol. Using ® on the homepage header, product pages, checkout pages, and primary marketing materials typically satisfies the notice standard for enforcement.
Only in the United States. The ® symbol is authorized by U.S. federal law and signals USPTO registration — it has no legal effect outside the country. Each foreign country has its own registration system, and separate filings are required to protect the mark abroad. The Madrid Protocol offers a streamlined path to file in multiple countries simultaneously, but each jurisdiction grants its own registration.
A trademark registration lasts 10 years and can be renewed indefinitely, so long as the mark stays in commercial use and required USPTO maintenance filings are submitted on time. Missing a maintenance filing cancels the registration automatically, and ® is no longer legal to use until the mark is re-registered. The first maintenance filing is due between years 5 and 6.
Stop immediately, switch to TM or SM on all active marketing and packaging, and either file a USPTO application for the mark or accept that the mark is protected only under common law. Past incorrect use is not automatically fatal, but continued use after awareness is a fraud risk. A short consultation with a trademark attorney can clarify exposure for marks already distributed.
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