A registered trademark never expires as long as the owner keeps using the mark and files the required USPTO maintenance documents on time. The first renewal window is between year 9 and year 10, and renewals repeat every 10 years thereafter under 15 U.S.C. §1059. Failure to renew cancels the registration permanently.
File the combined Section 8 + 9 renewal between year 9 and year 10, then every 10 years after.
U.S. trademark rights are tied to continued use plus maintenance filings — abandoning either one terminates the federal registration.
Confirm your registration issue date on USPTO.gov and calendar year 9 for the renewal window.
A federal trademark registration lasts indefinitely. Each registration has a 10-year term, but the term can be renewed every 10 years as long as the mark remains in bona fide commercial use. Under 15 U.S.C. §1059, there is no cap on the number of renewals. Some of the oldest active U.S. marks have been renewed continuously since the 1800s.[2]
These registrations illustrate the fundamental difference between trademarks and other forms of IP. Patents expire on a fixed schedule. Copyrights expire a fixed number of years after the author’s death. Trademarks have no such clock — the registration lasts as long as the mark is used and renewed.
The renewal window for a U.S. trademark opens one year before the 10th anniversary of registration and closes on the anniversary date itself. Under 15 U.S.C. §1059(a), the Section 9 renewal must be filed within this 12-month window or during the 6-month grace period that follows. Subsequent renewals repeat on the same schedule every 10 years.
The simplest tracking method is to record the registration issue date and calendar every 10th anniversary for the combined Section 8 + 9 filing. Many registrants set alerts one year before each deadline to allow time for specimen preparation.
A standard trademark renewal combines two filings: a Section 8 Declaration of Continued Use and a Section 9 Renewal Application, filed together online through the USPTO’s Trademark Electronic Application System (TEAS). The combined filing requires the USPTO fee, a current specimen showing the mark in use, and a sworn statement confirming the mark’s continued commercial use.[1]
Most small-business registrants complete the combined filing themselves through TEAS in under an hour. Attorney review is recommended when goods are being narrowed, when specimens are questionable, or when the registration covers multiple classes with different use patterns.
A federal trademark registration can be cancelled for abandonment when the owner discontinues use with no intent to resume. Under 15 U.S.C. §1127, three consecutive years of non-use is prima facie evidence of abandonment. The registration remains on the USPTO record until cancelled, but the owner cannot enforce rights that have been abandoned — and competitors can petition to cancel.[3]
For owners in a pause period — product refresh, business transition, or seasonal production — documentation of continued intent to use is critical. Letters, internal plans, and supplier contracts can support the argument that the mark is not abandoned despite a gap in commercial use.
A trademark registration that missed the renewal deadline cannot be revived. Once the 6-month grace period closes, the registration is permanently cancelled under 15 U.S.C. §1058. The original priority date is lost, and the only option is to file a new application from scratch, which resets the priority clock to the new filing date.
Prevention costs nothing compared to recovery. A missed $525 renewal can easily cost thousands in lost priority and re-filing fees, plus exposure to any competitor who files for a similar mark during the gap.
Patents die on a schedule. Copyrights die on a schedule. A federal trademark can live longer than the company that registered it, longer than the generation that built the brand, longer than any contract or lease your business signs. The only condition is continued use and timely renewal — both entirely within the owner’s control.
Most owners don’t consider long-term longevity because they’re focused on the first ten years: getting the mark registered, launching the product, building the audience. The renewal arrives like a stranger at the door. Half of the time, nobody answers.
Coca-Cola’s trademark is 130+ years old and still active. Levi Strauss’s oldest marks are not far behind. Those aren’t corporate outliers — they are the expected lifespan of a properly maintained trademark. When a brand fails to survive past year 10 as a protected asset, the failure is almost never legal. The failure is operational.
Multi-generational maintenance is Responsible Asset-Building at its longest horizon. An educated consumer plans for the asset’s whole life, not just the registration ceremony. The renewal is not a formality. The renewal is the mechanism by which a one-time filing becomes a permanent piece of the business’s balance sheet.
No. The USPTO only accepts renewal filings within the designated window — one year before the 10th anniversary through the anniversary date itself. Filings submitted before the window are rejected and the fee is typically refunded. The same rule applies to Section 8 filings at the 5-6 year window. Early is not accepted; on time or in grace is.
Yes, once the trademark assignment is properly recorded with the USPTO. The new owner becomes responsible for all future maintenance filings, including any upcoming Section 8 or renewal. The assignment must be recorded under 15 U.S.C. §1060 for the USPTO to recognize the new owner. Missed renewals by a new owner cancel the registration the same way.
Bona fide use of the mark in the ordinary course of trade — actual sales, ongoing services, or distribution under the mark. Token use to preserve registration (a single manufactured sale, internal use, or minimal activity) can be challenged as insufficient. The specimen submitted with the renewal must show genuine commercial use, not staged evidence produced to meet the filing requirement.
Yes. Each country has its own trademark registration and renewal schedule. U.S. trademarks renew every 10 years under USPTO rules; most EU countries, Canada, and Japan also use 10-year intervals. Marks filed through the Madrid Protocol have a single consolidated renewal every 10 years managed through WIPO, but individual country registrations are renewed separately.
Updating a logo or design mark between renewals is allowed as a business decision, but the registration continues to reflect the original approved mark. If the update is a material alteration of the mark, the new version may not be protected by the existing registration and may require a new application. Consult counsel when planning any significant brand refresh.
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