Yes — most distinctive logos qualify for federal trademark protection. A logo that visually identifies the source of your goods or services can be registered with the USPTO as a design mark or as a combined word-and-design mark. The logo needs to be distinctive enough to function as a source identifier, not purely decorative.
Trademark the logo and the business name as separate marks — each one protects a different part of your brand.
Federal law treats word marks and design marks as distinct registrations, each enforceable independently against copycats.
Pull your logo file, confirm it's distinctive, and run a USPTO design search before filing.
A logo qualifies as a trademark when the logo visually identifies the source of goods or services. The law at 15 U.S.C. §1127 protects any “word, name, symbol, or device” that functions as a source identifier — a logo clearly fits the “symbol or device” category.[1] Distinctive, non-generic design is the core requirement.
Design marks can include abstract symbols (Nike Swoosh), stylized letters (FedEx with arrow), literal illustrations (Starbucks siren), or complete logo lockups combining typography and imagery. What matters is whether the design functions as a source identifier in the actual marketplace, not how artistic it is.
The USPTO accepts logo filings in three distinct formats, and the format chosen determines what the registration actually protects. Picking the right format matters because a standard character filing protects the words but not the styling, while a design-only filing protects the graphic but not the name.
| Format | What it protects | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Standard character | The words only, in any font or styling | Business names rendered in multiple ways over time |
| Stylized or design | The specific graphic (with or without words shown) | Logos where the visual design is the core recognition element |
| Combined word-and-design | The full lockup of words and graphic together | Brands where customers recognize the logo-word combination |
Most established brands hold registrations in multiple formats. Nike holds a standard character registration for NIKE and a separate design registration for the Swoosh. Both filings are examined and granted separately under 15 U.S.C. §1051, and each can be enforced independently.[2]
A logo trademark protects the logo’s function as a brand identifier — how customers recognize the source. A copyright on the logo protects the specific artwork — the exact drawing, colors, and composition. The two are different legal protections covering different aspects of the same image.
A competitor who redraws a similar-looking logo typically avoids the copyright claim but still infringes the trademark. A competitor who uses your exact artwork without any brand-identifying use may infringe the copyright but not the trademark. Owning both protections closes both gaps — which is why most companies file the trademark on the logo and keep the designer’s original artwork as a copyright asset.
Yes, in most cases. A business name and a logo each serve as a separate trademark, each requires a separate USPTO filing, and each protects a different kind of competitor move. Filing only one leaves a visible gap a copycat can exploit.
The combined format appears cheaper, but the combined registration is narrower in scope. A business that plans to protect both the name and the logo independently ultimately files three registrations: the word mark alone, the design mark alone, and optionally the combined mark as belt-and-suspenders. USPTO fees at $250–$350 per class per mark make this a meaningful but manageable investment.
File a logo trademark in five steps: run a USPTO design search, finalize the logo artwork, select the correct class, choose the filing format (design-only or combined), and submit through TEAS Plus. The process takes a few hours when the logo is finalized and no conflicts appear.
The USPTO examining attorney reviews design marks the same way they review word marks, applying the same standards under 15 U.S.C. §1052 for refusal grounds (merely descriptive, likelihood of confusion, functional, deceptive).[3]
Many small business owners treat the logo as the brand. Years get spent on getting the logo just right — on Pantone colors, perfect kerning, whether the typography says the right thing — and then the logo gets trademarked as the singular brand filing.
The logo is not the brand. The logo is one of several assets that make up the brand, alongside the business name, the slogan, the color palette, and any signature design elements. Treating the logo as the entirety of the brand leads to narrow protection — and to painful rebrands when the logo eventually refreshes.
This is why Responsible Asset-Building pushes toward filing the business name first, then the logo, then any signature slogans or design elements. Each asset gets its own registration, each asset gets protected independently, and the brand as a whole becomes harder to dilute over time.
The Structured Middle Path treats the logo as one filing in a small portfolio rather than the only filing a business makes. An educated consumer plans for the logo to evolve while the name stays constant — and protects each accordingly.
Separate filings offer separate protection. The business name (word mark) covers the name in any font or design. The logo (design mark) covers the specific graphic. A competitor can copy your logo without copying your name, or vice versa. Most brands benefit from both filings. The design mark is a second priority after the word mark in most budget-constrained scenarios.
Filing a logo as a design mark at the USPTO costs the standard $250 to $350 per class through TEAS Plus or TEAS Standard — the same fees as a word mark. A separate filing for the logo in the same class as the word mark roughly doubles the total USPTO fee. Attorney fees, if used, add $500 to $1,500 per mark.
Yes, but ownership matters. The business needs to own the logo artwork to trademark it. Designer contracts should include a work-for-hire clause or an assignment of rights, transferring ownership of the artwork from the designer to the business. Without proper ownership transfer, the designer may retain copyright to the artwork even though the business registers the trademark.
The USPTO may refuse the application for likelihood of confusion if your logo is confusingly similar to an existing registered mark in related goods or services. Similarity is judged on overall impression, not just side-by-side comparison. A USPTO design search before filing identifies most conflicts. A competing logo in an unrelated industry class generally does not block your filing.
Filing in black-and-white protects the logo in any color. Filing in color protects only the specific color claim. Unless your brand's color is itself distinctive and identifying (like Tiffany blue), most brands file in black-and-white for broader protection. A later application can add color claims if the brand builds recognition around a specific palette.
A registered logo trademark protects the specific design filed. A minor refresh typically does not require a new filing. A substantial redesign means the original registration no longer matches what's being used in commerce, which can lead to abandonment after prolonged non-use. A significant redesign requires a new application for the updated logo, and the old registration may need to be maintained temporarily or abandoned deliberately.
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