In almost every case, file the business name first. A name trademark covers the core brand identifier in any font, color, or design, while a logo trademark covers only the specific graphic. The name persists through rebrands; the logo usually doesn't. When budget forces one filing, the name wins.
File the business name as a standard character mark first — it carries the broadest protection per dollar.
A word mark covers the name in any styling, so it protects the brand through every future logo refresh.
Confirm your final business name, run a USPTO knockout search, and file the word mark through TEAS Plus.
The business name wins because the word mark provides the broadest protection per dollar and persists through visual changes to the brand. A standard character registration under 15 U.S.C. §1051 protects the name itself — in any font, any color, any styling — for every context where the name is used.[1]
A logo filed without the underlying word mark leaves a visible gap: a competitor who uses a similar name but a different logo design can infringe on the brand recognition without triggering the logo registration. Filing the word mark closes that gap and creates the primary asset protection.
Filing the logo first makes sense in two narrow scenarios: when the logo is the brand’s primary recognition vehicle (rare for small businesses) or when the business name is too generic or descriptive to register on its own. In both cases, the logo carries the brand identity that the name cannot.
For most small businesses, none of these scenarios apply. The business name is distinctive enough to register as a word mark, the logo is secondary to the name, and filing the word mark first delivers the widest protection. Logo-first is the exception, not the rule.
A word mark covers the name as a linguistic identifier; a design mark covers the specific graphic as a visual identifier. The two overlap on the same brand but protect different commercial uses and face different USPTO examination standards.
| Word mark (standard character) | Design mark (stylized) | |
|---|---|---|
| What it protects | The name in any visual form | The specific graphic as filed |
| Stops use of same name, different logo | Yes | No |
| Stops use of similar logo, different name | No | Yes |
| Survives logo redesign | Yes | No |
| Filing complexity | Lower (text only) | Higher (image submission, design codes) |
The two filings are complementary rather than redundant. Filing both provides full protection; filing only one leaves a gap. For budget-constrained small businesses, the word mark is the higher-leverage filing because the name is stable and the visual presentation is likely to change.
File the word mark. If the budget supports only one USPTO filing, the standard character word mark for the business name is almost always the right choice. It protects the broadest scope, survives the most business changes, and addresses the most common competitor threats.
Running all five filings simultaneously can cost $1,500 to $3,000 in USPTO fees plus attorney time. Most small businesses cannot justify that spend at launch. Starting with the word mark and building the portfolio over 1 to 3 years is a reasonable budget-aware sequence that still protects the core brand from day one.
Plan to file the word mark now, the design mark within 6 to 12 months, and any additional filings (slogan, combined mark, color claim) as the brand matures and budget allows. The sequence matters because priority is locked in at filing date — filing the word mark early protects the name while the logo catches up.
Each filing creates a separate USPTO registration under 15 U.S.C. §1057 with its own priority date, class coverage, and maintenance schedule.[2] Tracking the registrations in a portfolio view — with renewal dates, use requirements, and enforcement histories — becomes a standard part of brand asset management once three or more marks are registered.[3]
Many small business owners fall into a logo-first trap because logos feel tangible. A logo is something you can point to, screenshot, and put on a T-shirt. A name, in comparison, feels abstract — just a word. So the logo gets trademarked first, and the name either waits or never gets filed at all.
The intuition is backwards. The name is the primary asset; the logo is the current expression of the asset. Ten years from now, the logo will likely be redesigned, refreshed, or replaced entirely. The name, if it’s a good one, will still be the same name. Which one deserves the permanent federal registration?
This is where Responsible Asset-Building clarifies the sequence. File the name first because the name is the asset that persists. File the logo second because the logo is the current visual skin of that asset. Don’t skip the name filing because the visual feels more concrete — that feeling is aesthetic intuition, not strategic analysis.
The Structured Middle Path prioritizes durability over visual appeal. An educated consumer files the word mark first every time — and files the design mark as soon as the budget allows.
Yes. A logo registration does not automatically cover the name in all its visual forms. Filing the word mark separately closes the biggest gap in most brand-asset portfolios. Both registrations can coexist and both can be enforced independently. Most trademark attorneys would recommend filing the word mark immediately even if the design mark is already registered — the additional protection is worth the additional filing fee.
File both a standard character word mark and a combined word-and-design mark. The word mark protects the name in any form; the combined mark protects the specific lockup your brand uses consistently. Together they cover the name alone, the logo alone (via the combined mark's design element), and the combination. Many brands use this three-filing structure to protect every version they use commercially.
No, not fully. A combined word-and-design mark protects only the specific lockup filed — the exact word-plus-graphic combination. It does not protect the standalone name in different visual treatments or the standalone logo without the name. A separate word mark and a separate design mark offer broader protection than a single combined filing. Many brands file all three: word, design, and combined.
A word mark covers the name only, not any specific logo. A new logo design is a separate matter from the word mark registration. The word mark continues protecting the name with or without a logo refresh. A new logo may warrant a new design mark filing, and the old design mark may need to be maintained or abandoned depending on whether the old logo is still in commercial use.
Black-and-white filings protect the logo in any color; color filings protect only the specific color combination claimed. Most brands file in black-and-white for broader protection unless the color is itself a core recognition element (like Tiffany blue or UPS brown). A later color-claim filing can be added once the brand builds recognition around a specific palette, but the initial filing is usually safer without a color restriction.
Use TM (for goods) or SM (for services) on the business name, logo, and any slogans to establish common-law rights while you save for filing. Common-law rights are narrower than federal registration but provide some protection in the geographic area where you actually operate. File the word mark as soon as the budget allows — every month of delay is a month where a competitor could file first and block your application.
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