If a cease and desist letter is ignored, escalate through a series of proportional steps: send a follow-up letter with a firmer deadline, consider platform reporting (marketplace takedowns, domain disputes), file a USPTO opposition or cancellation if applicable, or proceed to federal court. Continued infringement after notice supports willful-infringement findings and enhanced remedies under 15 U.S.C. §1117.
Escalate systematically — follow-up letter, then platform takedowns, then USPTO or federal filing — rather than giving up after silence.
Continued infringement after a documented cease and desist supports willful-infringement findings and unlocks enhanced damages and attorney fees.
Send a follow-up letter within 7–14 days of the ignored deadline, noting specific consequences and a new deadline.
Yes, in most cases. A follow-up letter within 7–14 days of the original deadline serves several purposes: it rebuts any argument that the original letter was lost or overlooked, it adds documentation to the willful-infringement record, and it signals that the trademark owner is serious about escalation. Many recipients who ignore the first letter respond to the second.
The follow-up is shorter and firmer than the original. Compliance rates for follow-up letters are typically lower than first letters, but the record created by the exchange becomes valuable evidence if litigation follows.
Many infringements occur on platforms (Amazon, eBay, Etsy, Instagram, TikTok, Shopify, domain registrars) that have their own dispute resolution procedures. Platform takedowns can often remove infringing listings or accounts faster and cheaper than court action.
Platform takedowns address specific infringing content without resolving the underlying rights dispute. Repeat offenders often need legal escalation beyond the platform level, but removing listings and accounts disrupts the infringer’s operations and creates pressure for compliance.
File at the USPTO when the infringer has a pending trademark application or existing registration that can be challenged. USPTO Trademark Trial and Appeal Board proceedings — oppositions and cancellations — are faster, less expensive, and more focused than federal litigation, and they directly address the infringer’s claim to rights.
The TTAB doesn’t award damages, injunctions against use in commerce, or attorney fees — its jurisdiction is limited to USPTO registration decisions. For many disputes, however, defeating or cancelling the infringer’s registration provides enough leverage to stop the infringement without separate court action.
Federal court is the most expensive and time-consuming enforcement path, reserved for serious ongoing infringement where other options have failed. A Lanham Act suit under 15 U.S.C. §1114 can produce injunctions, damages, the infringer’s profits, and in exceptional cases attorney fees — but the cost and duration can substantially exceed the potential recovery for smaller disputes.[1]
| Phase | Duration | Typical cost range |
|---|---|---|
| Filing and initial motions | 2–4 months | $15,000–$40,000 |
| Discovery (document production, depositions) | 6–12 months | $50,000–$150,000 |
| Summary judgment and pretrial | 3–6 months | $30,000–$80,000 |
| Trial (if case doesn’t settle) | 1–3 weeks | $50,000–$200,000+ |
| Full case, start to finish | 18–36 months | $150,000–$500,000+ |
Most cases settle before trial — often within discovery — but litigation budgets should assume at least the discovery-phase cost. Small businesses should carefully evaluate whether the infringement damages justify the litigation budget before filing.
Cross-border infringement adds procedural complexity and usually requires coordinated action across jurisdictions. U.S. trademark rights generally protect against conduct affecting U.S. commerce, but enforcement in the infringer’s home country typically requires local counsel and local trademark registration.
International enforcement is typically more expensive than domestic enforcement and requires patience. For most small businesses, platform takedowns and Customs recordation handle the majority of cross-border infringement without requiring foreign litigation.
Small-business founders often treat an ignored cease and desist as a defeat — evidence the letter didn’t work, the infringer won’t comply, the case is hopeless. That framing misreads what silence actually tells you. An infringer who ignored a professional cease and desist has already made the critical strategic error: they’re now infringing with documented actual notice, which transforms the legal posture in the owner’s favor.
Willful infringement is significantly easier to prove than garden-variety infringement, and the remedies available — enhanced damages under 15 U.S.C. §1117, attorney-fee recovery in exceptional cases, profit disgorgement — are more favorable to the trademark owner. The infringer’s decision to ignore the letter converts the case from a borderline enforcement matter into a strong one, provided the owner follows through.
This is Responsible Asset-Building at its most methodical. Each step — letter, follow-up, platform takedowns, USPTO proceeding, federal suit — escalates the pressure while building the record. An educated consumer treats the escalation ladder as a program, not a series of all-or-nothing decisions. The goal is to match enforcement intensity to the infringement severity and keep the infringer’s costs rising until compliance is cheaper than continued resistance.
Typically 7 to 14 days after the deadline in the original letter. This gives enough time for a delayed response while avoiding extended delays that weaken the willful-infringement argument. Some cases warrant faster escalation — ongoing harm at scale, counterfeit operations, active sales cutting into the owner's revenue — while others allow a longer waiting period when strategic reasons support it.
Potentially — under 15 U.S.C. §1117, attorney fees are recoverable in exceptional cases involving willful or bad-faith infringement. Documented refusal to respond to a cease and desist letter supports an exceptional-case finding. However, fee recovery isn't guaranteed and shouldn't be assumed when budgeting. Courts have discretion, and not every willful infringement case is deemed exceptional.
No. The USPTO Trademark Trial and Appeal Board can only affect USPTO records — cancelling registrations, denying applications, or limiting the scope of registered rights. The TTAB cannot order the infringer to stop using the mark in commerce or award damages. If stopping the use is the goal, federal court injunctive relief is required. Many owners pursue both paths in parallel for leverage.
Respond immediately with counsel. A declaratory judgment action lets the infringer sue first in their preferred jurisdiction, asking a court to declare the mark non-infringing. The trademark owner can counterclaim for infringement, but the forum and timing now favor the infringer. Declaratory judgment actions are a known risk of cease and desist letters, especially when letters contain specific threats that create jurisdiction.
The Lanham Act has no explicit statute of limitations for infringement claims, but federal courts typically apply the most analogous state statute of limitations — often 3 to 6 years. The doctrine of laches also bars claims after unreasonable delay with prejudice to the defendant. For ongoing infringement (continuous use), claims for the current infringement remain viable; historical damages may be time-limited.
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