Renew only if you have genuine intent to resume use of the mark — renewal without actual or planned use is risky because a Section 8 declaration under penalty of perjury requires certifying bona fide commercial use. Filing a false declaration can cancel the registration for fraud and expose the owner to legal liability.
Renew only if the mark is in bona fide commercial use or you have a concrete plan to resume.
Section 8 declarations require certifying current use under penalty of perjury — fraudulent renewals can cancel the registration for fraud.
Honestly assess whether the business uses the mark today; if not, consult counsel before renewing.
Bona fide commercial use means the mark is being used in the ordinary course of trade — actual sales of goods or ongoing delivery of services under the mark — not use manufactured solely to preserve registration. Under 15 U.S.C. §1127, commerce means activity Congress can regulate, which practically means interstate, international, or Indian commerce through normal business channels.[2]
The distinction matters at renewal because the Section 8 declaration is a sworn statement about current use. The snapshot at filing time determines whether the declaration is truthful.
Yes — if commercial use has actually resumed by the filing date, the declaration can be truthfully signed. Under 15 U.S.C. §1058, the Section 8 declaration certifies current use at the time of filing, not continuous use since registration. A legitimate pause followed by resumed use before the deadline allows the filing to go forward honestly.[1]
The risk to watch for is the abandonment threshold under 15 U.S.C. §1127. Three consecutive years of non-use creates a presumption of abandonment that a competitor could use to petition for cancellation even after Section 8 is filed. Resumed use after a long pause doesn’t erase the abandonment presumption automatically.
Future plans cannot support a Section 8 declaration no matter how genuine. The sworn statement certifies current use at the filing date, not planned future use. A registrant planning a relaunch in 12–24 months but not currently using the mark has three options: accelerate the relaunch, let the registration lapse, or face cancellation for fraudulent filing.
The underlying principle: the USPTO does not maintain trademark registrations for marks that are not in commerce. A paused brand with a genuine relaunch plan is still a paused brand for Section 8 purposes.
For marks not in use and unlikely to return to use soon, intentionally letting the registration lapse is often the cleaner legal option. Lapse avoids fraudulent-filing exposure, preserves the owner’s credibility with the USPTO, and allows a new application when the mark returns to active use. The cost is losing the original priority date.
| Factor | Let lapse | Renew (if use is questionable) |
|---|---|---|
| Fraud exposure | None | Possible if use is inadequate |
| Original priority date | Lost | Preserved |
| Filing cost | $0 now; $250–$350 per class later | $525 per class now |
| Competitor risk | Competitor may file during gap | Registration stays on the register |
| Legal exposure | None | Fraud liability if declaration is false |
The tradeoff usually favors lapse when the gap between registration and future use is long and use is genuinely uncertain. Renewal is the right choice when use has resumed or will resume before the filing window closes.
The decision turns on four factors: whether use has actually resumed, how imminent any planned relaunch is, how much accumulated goodwill is at stake in the registered mark, and whether the owner can truthfully sign the Section 8 declaration. A framework balancing these factors against fraud risk helps clarify the call.[3]
Most paused-mark decisions resolve at step 1 or 2. Marks that can’t truthfully support the declaration and won’t return to use soon are better allowed to lapse; a future new application preserves the option to re-protect the mark when commercial use genuinely resumes.
There’s a cultural bias in trademark work toward keeping every registration alive at all costs. Owners and attorneys treat lapsing a mark as a failure, a loss, an avoidable regret. The bias is understandable — federal registration took work to get, and watching it disappear feels like losing something valuable. But the bias sometimes leads to decisions that are worse than lapse itself.
Renewing a mark you aren’t really using exposes you to fraud-on-the-USPTO liability. A competitor in a cancellation proceeding can point to the Section 8 and argue the filing was false. The consequences of a successful fraud claim are worse than the consequences of lapse: fraud can cancel the registration and potentially affect related registrations, whereas lapse is a clean ending.
The Responsible Asset-Building approach treats each registration as a live, performing asset. Marks that have become dormant aren’t performing; they’re placeholders. Letting a placeholder registration lapse while preserving common-law rights and the option to refile later is often more honest and less risky than filing a shaky Section 8 to maintain federal cover. An educated consumer knows when to retire an asset that has stopped earning its keep.
Prima facie evidence means three consecutive years of non-use creates a legal presumption that the mark is abandoned. The owner can rebut the presumption by producing evidence of genuine intent to resume use within a reasonable time, but the burden shifts to the owner once non-use is proven. Without rebuttal, a court or the USPTO can treat the mark as abandoned.
Not automatically. One year of non-use is below the 3-year prima facie abandonment threshold under 15 U.S.C. §1127. The registration remains valid, and the owner can still file Section 8 truthfully if the pause ends before the filing date. Short pauses are common in seasonal businesses and don't by themselves jeopardize the registration.
Yes — the filing allows the owner to narrow the registration by deleting goods or services no longer in use. The declaration must truthfully certify use for the remaining goods and services, and the specimen must show actual use in at least one class. Narrowing is a common and legitimate use of the Section 8 filing process.
Fraud in obtaining or maintaining a trademark registration can result in cancellation under USPTO Trademark Trial and Appeal Board rules and exposure to civil damages in related proceedings. In extreme cases, fraud can affect other registrations owned by the same party. Fraudulent filings are typically detected during cancellation proceedings when a competitor challenges the mark.
If the revenue is bona fide commercial activity — genuine sales at arm's length — renewal is truthful and often worthwhile. Nominal revenue doesn't automatically disqualify a mark from Section 8. The question is whether the use is bona fide, not whether the revenue is substantial. Low-revenue but genuine use supports a valid Section 8 declaration.
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