Can I trademark a slogan or tagline?

Direct Answer

Yes — distinctive slogans can be trademarked when they function as a source identifier, not just as descriptive advertising. The slogan has to stand out as a brand signal rather than an informational phrase. Famous examples include 'Just Do It' (Nike), 'The Ultimate Driving Machine' (BMW), and 'Finger Lickin' Good' (KFC).

Joseph Kincart Sr.

Joseph Kincart Sr.

Founder, Trusted IP Guide; Creator of Trademarking Made Simple™

Best Move

File a slogan trademark only if the slogan is distinctive, stable, and actually used on your marketing materials.

Why It Works

The USPTO rejects slogans that are merely descriptive or informational; distinctiveness is what earns the registration.

Next Step

Review your current and past marketing to find the slogan customers most associate with your brand.

What you need to know

What makes a slogan qualify for trademark protection?

A slogan qualifies for trademark protection when the slogan acts as a source identifier — customers associate the phrase with a specific company rather than with the product category. The USPTO treats slogans as standard word marks, examining them under the same distinctiveness rules as any other trademark.[1]

Famous slogan trademarks

  • “Just Do It” — Nike athletic products
  • “The Ultimate Driving Machine” — BMW automobiles
  • “Finger Lickin’ Good” — KFC fast food
  • “I’m Lovin’ It” — McDonald’s restaurants
  • “Because You’re Worth It” — L’Oréal beauty products

Each of these slogans was registered not because the slogan was catchy, but because customers came to associate the specific phrase with a specific company. The slogan became a second layer of brand identification alongside the business name and logo.

Which slogans can't be trademarked?

Slogans that are purely descriptive, informational, or functional are not trademarkable. The USPTO refuses registration under 15 U.S.C. §1052 when a slogan merely describes the product, states a common marketing claim, or functions as information rather than branding.[2] The core test is whether the slogan identifies a source or simply describes what the product is.

Slogans the USPTO typically refuses

  • Descriptive phrases — “Fast Delivery,” “Fresh Daily,” “High Quality Service”
  • Purely informational — “Drink Responsibly,” “Made in USA,” “Try It Today”
  • Common phrases — “Welcome to Our Store,” “Thank You for Shopping”
  • Functional claims — “Strongest Hold,” “Longest-Lasting” (unless tied to a specific unique product feature)

The line between descriptive and suggestive is often the deciding factor. A suggestive slogan requires imagination to connect the phrase to the product, while a descriptive slogan directly states what the product does. Suggestive slogans are generally registrable; descriptive slogans are not, unless they acquire secondary meaning over years of use.

Does my slogan have to be famous to register it?

No — a slogan does not have to be famous to register. The USPTO examines distinctiveness, not fame. A brand-new slogan used on a small business’s marketing can register if the slogan is distinctive and not merely descriptive. Fame matters later, during infringement disputes, but not at the filing stage.

What the USPTO actually checks

  1. Distinctiveness — is the slogan inherently distinctive, or does it merely describe the product?
  2. Likelihood of confusion — is the slogan confusingly similar to an existing registered slogan in related goods or services?
  3. Use in commerce — is the slogan actually being used on marketing materials, packaging, or advertising?
  4. Compliance with refusal grounds — deceptive, scandalous, or government-symbol uses are barred by 15 U.S.C. §1052

A small business with a distinctive slogan used consistently for even a few months in commerce can register the slogan. The USPTO does not require customer surveys, media mentions, or sales thresholds. Fame becomes relevant later — famous marks receive broader enforcement rights against dilution — but fame is not a precondition to initial registration.

How is a slogan trademark different from a name trademark?

A slogan trademark protects a phrase used in marketing; a name trademark protects the core brand identifier. The two work together but operate in different commercial contexts. A slogan supports the brand while the name defines it.

Slogan trademark vs name trademark

 Business name markSlogan mark
What it protectsThe core brand identifierA memorable advertising phrase
Stability over timeTypically permanentOften changes across campaigns
Where usedPackaging, website, invoices, every touchpointAdvertising, marketing materials, campaigns
Priority for small businessHighestSecond-tier, case by case
USPTO fee$250–$350 per classSame fee

Most small businesses file the name mark first and consider the slogan mark only if the slogan has stabilized into a core brand asset. A slogan that has appeared on every piece of marketing for three or more years and is recognized by customers is a strong candidate for filing. A slogan rotated through quarterly campaigns is usually not.

What are the steps to trademark a slogan?

Trademark a slogan in four steps: verify the slogan is distinctive and stable, run a USPTO search for conflicts, select the same class as the underlying goods or services, and file through TEAS Plus. The filing process is identical to a name mark — the USPTO treats slogans as standard word marks.

Four steps to trademark a slogan

  1. Verify distinctiveness — confirm the slogan is inherently distinctive (not merely descriptive) and has been used in commerce for at least a short period
  2. Run a USPTO knockout search at TESS for the exact slogan and close variations in your class
  3. Select the correct class from the ID Manual — typically the same class as your main goods or services
  4. File through TEAS Plus at $250 per class as a standard character mark, submitting the slogan text exactly as used

Intent-to-use filings are available for slogans that are planned but not yet in use, under 15 U.S.C. §1051(b).[3] A slogan filed under intent-to-use follows the same timeline as any intent-to-use application, with a Statement of Use required once the slogan is actually in commercial circulation.

The Trusted IP Guide Perspective

A slogan is worth trademarking only when it becomes an asset

Small business owners sometimes want to trademark every phrase they write — their slogan, their tagline, their social-media bio line, even their email signature. Most of those phrases don’t warrant the filing cost. The test isn’t whether a phrase sounds catchy; it’s whether the phrase has become an asset customers recognize.

An asset is something that carries durable value. A slogan becomes an asset when customers associate the phrase with the specific company, when the slogan appears consistently across years of marketing, and when the slogan would be missed if it disappeared. Most campaign taglines don’t meet that bar. A few do.

This is where Responsible Asset-Building narrows the filing strategy. File the business name. File the logo if the logo is a recognition vehicle. File the slogan only after the slogan has stabilized into a true brand pillar — typically three or more years of consistent use and customer recognition.

The Structured Middle Path treats slogan filing as a reserve decision, not a reflex. An educated consumer spends the filing fee where the asset durability actually exists — and saves the fee where the phrase might be gone next quarter.

More questions about this topic

Can I trademark a slogan before I've used it in commerce?

Yes, through an intent-to-use application under 15 U.S.C. §1051(b). An intent-to-use filing establishes priority from the filing date and gives you up to three years (with extensions) to put the slogan into commercial use. Once the slogan is actually in use, a Statement of Use is filed to complete the registration process.

How long does a slogan trademark last?

A federal slogan trademark follows the same term as any USPTO trademark: 10 years, renewable indefinitely with Section 8 and Section 9 filings. The registration remains valid as long as the slogan continues in commercial use and required maintenance documents are filed on time. Abandoning the slogan for three consecutive years creates a presumption of abandonment that can cancel the registration.

Can I trademark a slogan that uses common words?

Yes, in many cases. A slogan using common individual words can still be distinctive when the arrangement and meaning of the full phrase is unique. 'Just Do It' uses three common words but the full phrase became associated with Nike, not with any generic motivational message. The USPTO examines the overall impression of the phrase, not whether individual words are common.

What happens if my slogan becomes generic?

A slogan that becomes so widely used that it refers to the product category itself rather than a specific source can be challenged as generic — the same genericide risk that affects famous brand names. Consistent use of the slogan tied specifically to your brand, plus active enforcement against third-party use, prevents this outcome. Most small businesses will never face genericide.

Do I need to use the TM or ® symbol with my slogan?

TM signals an unregistered claim; ® signals federal registration. Use TM with a slogan before registration is granted and ® after. For a business that uses the slogan across multiple marketing materials, placing the symbol on the slogan at first prominent use on each piece is the standard convention. The symbols for a slogan follow the same rules as any word mark.

Can I trademark a slogan that competitors have used?

Only if the competitor's use never created federal trademark rights (no registration and no strong common-law claim) and if your use is now creating source-identifying association with your specific brand. This path is high-risk — competitor prior use is the first ground of refusal at the USPTO. A USPTO search before filing is essential to surface any prior uses that would block the application.

Related pages

Joseph Kincart Sr.

Joseph Kincart Sr.

Joseph Kincart Sr. is the founder of Trusted IP Guide and a trademark attorney with 20+ years of U.S. practice. He built Trademarking Made Simple™ to give small business owners a structured, plain-language understanding of the trademark process — so they can work with an attorney as educated consumers, or proceed pro se with eyes open.

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