Should I ask an existing trademark owner for permission to use a similar name?

Direct Answer

Sometimes yes, through a consent agreement or coexistence agreement. Written consent from the senior owner can overcome USPTO refusal and preserve your use in a defined scope. Direct contact carries risks — it alerts the senior owner to your plans and can invite demands or enforcement. Most outreach should go through a trademark attorney.

Joseph Kincart Sr.

Joseph Kincart Sr.

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

Best Move

Have a trademark attorney initiate any contact with the senior owner — the structure and tone of the outreach significantly affects the outcome.

Why It Works

Professional outreach frames the request favorably and protects against admissions or waivers that direct contact can create.

Next Step

Consult a trademark attorney before reaching out; the 30-minute strategy session is worth the $200 to $500 cost.

What you need to know

What is a consent or coexistence agreement?

Consent agreements and coexistence agreements are contractual arrangements between trademark owners that define how similar marks can coexist in commerce. The USPTO recognizes these agreements and typically accepts them as evidence against likelihood of confusion when both parties agree in writing that no confusion will occur.

Consent agreement vs coexistence agreement

  • Consent agreement — a simpler document where the senior owner consents to the junior party’s use and registration of a similar mark; typically includes reasons why confusion is unlikely
  • Coexistence agreement — a more comprehensive contract defining detailed restrictions on how each party uses their mark, including geographic limits, class restrictions, channel restrictions, and mutual non-expansion covenants
  • Both are accepted by the USPTO — properly drafted agreements typically overcome examining attorney refusals based on likelihood of confusion under 15 U.S.C. §1052(d)[1]
  • Both create legal obligations — once signed, the agreements bind both parties and can be enforced as contracts

The USPTO’s acceptance of these agreements reflects the principle that the trademark owners themselves are best positioned to judge whether confusion is likely in their specific commercial context. If both parties agree that coexistence works, the examining attorney typically defers to their mutual judgment unless clear contrary evidence exists.

When is asking for permission the right approach?

Asking for permission fits specific scenarios where a negotiated outcome is likely achievable. Not every conflict is resolvable through negotiation, and the effort to negotiate adds cost and time without guaranteed results.

Scenarios where permission requests work

  • Different industries with clear customer separation — the senior owner has little incentive to refuse coexistence in an unrelated market
  • Geographic separation — regional businesses that can clearly divide territory
  • Senior owner has abandoned or underused the mark — owners with inactive marks may welcome modest payment or concessions in exchange for consent
  • Prior-use position — you have legitimate common-law rights predating the senior registration, creating incentive for negotiated resolution
  • Defined product-line separation — businesses within the same industry that can cleanly divide by product type

Scenarios where permission requests usually fail

  • Directly competing products in the same market — competitors rarely agree to coexistence that could confuse their customers
  • Aggressive enforcement history — owners known for active enforcement typically refuse consent
  • Famous marks — dilution concerns lead famous-mark owners to refuse almost all consent requests
  • Identical marks in related classes — the confusion risk is too high for either party to accept

Realistic assessment of fit before initiating contact saves time and prevents creating adversarial relationships in situations where negotiation wouldn’t work anyway.

What are the risks of direct contact?

Reaching out to the senior owner without legal counsel creates specific risks that professional representation typically avoids. The risks are real even when the request is polite and the case seems straightforward.

Risks of DIY direct contact

  1. Alerting the senior owner to your plans — the senior owner may have been unaware of your mark; your contact puts them on notice and can prompt enforcement action
  2. Creating admissions — statements about your mark, use, or plans can be used against you in later disputes if negotiation fails
  3. Waiving prior-use rights — acknowledging the senior owner’s superior rights in your outreach can undermine your own common-law defenses
  4. Inviting demand letters — senior owners may respond with cease-and-desist letters demanding payment or rebrand
  5. Setting unfavorable negotiation expectations — direct contact often starts negotiations from positions that trademark attorneys would structure differently
  6. Missing procedural protections — attorney communications can be structured as privileged or without-prejudice, protecting your position if the negotiation fails

Most trademark attorneys recommend against direct outreach. A trademark attorney’s opening letter frames the request favorably, identifies acceptable outcomes, and protects your position throughout the negotiation. The attorney’s fee for managing an initial outreach is typically $500 to $2,000 — small relative to the risk of unstructured direct contact.[2]

How do I structure the request properly?

A properly structured request to the senior owner addresses several specific elements: a clear description of your proposed use, evidence that confusion is unlikely, a specific request for what you want, and terms both parties might reasonably accept. The structure comes from trademark attorney experience with what actually works.

Elements of an effective request

  1. Clear identification of you and your proposed mark — full business name, proposed trademark, planned class and goods/services
  2. Factual analysis of why confusion is unlikely — industry differences, customer separation, trade channel distinction, geographic considerations
  3. Specific request — typically a consent agreement for USPTO registration; sometimes a broader coexistence agreement
  4. Proposed terms — what restrictions you accept (geographic, class, channel), any financial consideration offered, mutual non-expansion covenants
  5. Professional tone — collaborative rather than adversarial; recognize the senior owner’s rights while explaining why coexistence makes sense
  6. Response timeline — reasonable deadline for a response (typically 30 to 60 days)

The structure matters because it shapes the senior owner’s response. A well-structured request that demonstrates understanding of the legal landscape, offers reasonable terms, and respects the senior owner’s rights produces cooperation more often than an unstructured contact asking for generic permission. Professional drafting substantially improves success odds.[3]

What happens if the senior owner refuses?

Refusal closes the negotiated-coexistence option but leaves other paths open. A senior owner’s refusal to consent is not a final word on your filing — several alternative approaches still work depending on the specific situation.

Options after a refusal

  1. Modify your mark to differentiate — changing the mark enough to move out of the conflict zone may allow filing without consent
  2. Narrow your goods/services description — restricting your USPTO application to narrower goods that clearly don’t overlap with the senior mark can overcome likelihood of confusion
  3. File despite the refusal — the USPTO may still approve your application if the likelihood-of-confusion analysis supports registration even without consent; riskier but not always wrong
  4. Rebrand entirely — sometimes the clearest resolution is choosing a different mark that avoids the conflict
  5. Continue common-law use — if federal registration is not critical, continuing use under common-law rights in your geographic area may be viable

The senior owner’s refusal often reflects their legal position rather than an objective fact about likelihood of confusion. A refusal doesn’t make confusion more likely; it just removes one tool for addressing it. Evaluate the underlying likelihood of confusion independently, and proceed based on that analysis rather than treating the refusal as a definitive verdict.

The Trusted IP Guide Perspective

Asking for permission is a negotiation — not a request for forgiveness

Founders sometimes approach consent requests as if asking a favor: please allow me to use a similar mark, I hope you’ll say yes. That framing starts the negotiation from a weak position and invites unfavorable outcomes.

The better framing recognizes consent agreements as mutual business arrangements. Both parties have interests. The senior owner has the right to refuse but typically benefits from clarity about the other party’s use. The junior party wants to proceed with a specific filing or commercial use and can offer terms that protect the senior owner from harm. A properly structured negotiation finds terms both parties can accept.

This is where Responsible Asset-Building treats consent negotiations as business transactions managed professionally. The trademark attorney’s opening letter frames the request favorably, offers specific reasonable terms, and positions the request as a clear business proposition rather than a personal appeal. The structure matters — professional handling produces agreement where DIY outreach often produces rejection or escalation. An educated consumer respects the senior owner’s rights while advocating for a specific, achievable outcome that both parties can accept.

More questions about this topic

How much does a consent agreement negotiation typically cost?

Attorney-managed negotiations typically run $2,000 to $10,000 depending on complexity. Simple consent agreements between clearly cooperative parties can resolve in a few attorney hours at the lower end of the range. Complex coexistence agreements with multiple restrictions and negotiations take more time and cost toward the higher end. Financial consideration paid to the senior owner (if agreed) is separate from legal fees.

Do I have to pay the senior owner for consent?

Sometimes, sometimes not. Financial consideration is negotiable. Senior owners with inactive marks may consent for modest payment or purely as a business accommodation. Senior owners with active marks may demand significant payment. Whether to pay and how much are negotiation decisions rather than legal requirements. Many consent agreements involve no payment — the value exchanged is the mutual clarity about coexistence.

Is a consent agreement enforceable if we later have a dispute?

Yes, as a contract. The consent agreement binds both parties to its terms. If either party breaches (expands beyond agreed scope, uses the mark outside defined parameters, etc.), the other party can enforce through contract litigation. The agreement is also useful evidence in USPTO or court disputes about trademark rights because it documents both parties' positions at the time of agreement.

What if the senior owner responds with a cease-and-desist instead of consent?

Treat it as a cease-and-desist letter and respond through counsel. Your original outreach inadvertently escalated the situation, which is the primary risk of DIY contact. The response should evaluate the cease-and-desist claims on their merits, propose alternative resolutions (modified mark, narrowed use), and negotiate from the current position. A trademark attorney handles the escalation process professionally.

Can I file my application while the negotiation is in progress?

Yes, but it can affect the negotiation. Filing during negotiation signals urgency, which may strengthen or weaken your position depending on circumstances. Some attorneys recommend filing before contact to establish priority; others recommend waiting until negotiation concludes. The strategic choice depends on specifics. Most intent-to-use filings can sit in the USPTO pipeline while negotiation proceeds without forcing immediate conflict.

How long do consent negotiations typically take?

Simple consent requests resolve in 30 to 90 days. Complex coexistence agreements with detailed restrictions take 3 to 6 months. Very complex situations involving multiple parties or international considerations can take 6+ months. Plan for the negotiation timeline in your filing strategy; if you need to file quickly, negotiation-dependent paths may not fit.

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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