What should I do if someone offers to buy the rights to my trademark?

Direct Answer

When someone offers to buy your trademark rights, treat the offer as a valuation event and evaluate it carefully before responding. Understand why the buyer wants the mark, what specific rights they want (full assignment, license, coexistence agreement, specific class), consider whether selling conflicts with your ongoing business, and negotiate terms that include appropriate consideration, scope limitations, and goodwill provisions under 15 U.S.C. §1060.

Joseph Kincart Sr.

Joseph Kincart Sr.

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

Best Move

Slow down — evaluate the offer thoroughly before responding; unsolicited trademark offers often signal the mark is worth more than the opening bid.

Why It Works

Buyers rarely lead with their best offer; understanding their motivation and the mark's value produces substantially better outcomes.

Next Step

Ask the buyer to put the offer in writing with specific terms before engaging in negotiation — verbal offers have no binding value.

What you need to know

Why would someone want to buy my trademark?

Trademark buyers have a range of motivations, and understanding the specific motivation materially affects negotiation strategy and price. The buyer’s reason for wanting the mark often tells the seller more about the mark’s value than any independent appraisal.

Common reasons buyers pursue trademark acquisitions

Market entry
A larger company entering a product category where your mark already has recognition wants to buy the mark rather than compete against it or build from scratch
Portfolio consolidation
Competitors or brand holders consolidating similar marks under one umbrella to reduce confusion and simplify enforcement
Infringement resolution
A party facing your infringement claim proposes purchase as an alternative to litigation
Defensive acquisition
A company that wants to prevent a competitor from acquiring the mark, often without immediate operational use
Domain or brand consolidation
Owner of a related domain or similar mark in another jurisdiction wants to consolidate rights globally
Speculation or resale
Buyer believes the mark’s value will appreciate; buys low with intent to resell at higher price

Each motivation produces different price ceilings and negotiation dynamics. A market-entry buyer has the highest willingness to pay because they need the mark for a specific strategic purpose. A speculator has the lowest because they’re arbitraging uncertainty. Understanding the motivation shapes how much the seller should push.

Should I even consider selling if I'm still using the mark?

Usually not — but the answer depends on the mark’s role in your business and the structure of the proposed deal. Full assignment of a mark in active use is typically incompatible with continuing operations under that mark. Partial arrangements (licenses, coexistence, geographic carve-outs) can produce revenue without disrupting operations.

When selling makes sense even while using the mark

  • Selling rights in a specific product class you don’t operate in — if your registration covers multiple classes but you only use some, selling the unused classes generates revenue without operational impact
  • Territorial carve-outs — selling rights in foreign markets where you don’t operate, while retaining U.S. rights
  • Licensing the mark back — full sale with a long-term license-back can produce immediate cash with continued operational use
  • Exit-stage transactions — if you’re preparing to exit the business entirely, a trademark sale may fit with the broader wind-down
  • Offers that significantly exceed expected value — occasionally the offer is high enough that selling the mark and rebranding makes economic sense

For most owners operating under the mark, the default answer should be no — the mark is generating more value as an operating asset than any sale would produce. Unless the offer comes in at a multiple of reasonable valuation, continuing operations typically beats the one-time sale proceeds.

What transaction structures should I consider?

The right structure depends on what the buyer wants, what the seller wants to retain, and the commercial context. Several standard structures exist, each with different implications for ongoing rights, revenue, and operational flexibility.[1]

Trademark transaction structures

  1. Full assignment — complete transfer of ownership under 15 U.S.C. §1060 with goodwill; seller exits the mark entirely
  2. Assignment with license-back — seller transfers ownership but licenses continued use for a defined period
  3. Partial assignment — transfer of specific classes, territories, or product categories while retaining others
  4. Exclusive license — seller retains ownership but grants exclusive rights to the buyer in defined scope
  5. Non-exclusive license — seller grants the buyer rights to use the mark alongside the seller’s continued use
  6. Coexistence agreement — both parties retain rights but agree on boundaries to prevent confusion
  7. Option to purchase — seller grants the buyer an option to purchase at a future date on specified terms

Each structure has different tax, legal, and commercial implications. Work with trademark and tax counsel to identify the structure that best matches both parties’ goals. The opening structure proposed by the buyer is typically the structure that best serves the buyer; counter-structures often produce better outcomes for the seller.

How do I evaluate whether the offer is fair?

Opening offers for unsolicited trademark purchases are almost always lower than the mark’s actual value to the buyer. Evaluating whether an offer is fair requires understanding the mark’s value in your own business, the buyer’s likely motivation, and comparable market data where available.

Framework for evaluating an offer

Current business value of the mark
Revenue generated under the mark, marketing investment to build recognition, and replacement cost if you had to rebrand
Buyer’s strategic value
What the mark would cost the buyer to develop or license independently, and what value they expect to extract from it
Comparable transactions
Recent trademark sales in your category or for similar brand profiles; specialty databases and M&A advisors can provide comps
Alternative uses
Licensing potential, future business plans, and sale of the entire business as alternatives to single-mark sale
Non-financial factors
Disruption to current operations, brand transition cost, customer confusion risk, personal attachment to the brand

A formal appraisal by an intellectual property valuation specialist typically costs $5,000–$25,000 and produces defensible valuation numbers for negotiation. Informal valuations through M&A advisors or industry peers can provide directional guidance at lower cost. Never respond to a meaningful offer without at least preliminary valuation work.

What are the key terms I should negotiate?

Beyond the purchase price, trademark sale agreements contain many terms that materially affect the transaction’s value to each side. Skilled negotiation focuses on terms that the seller values more than the buyer does and concedes on terms where the buyer’s sensitivity is higher.[2]

Key terms in trademark sale negotiations

  • Purchase price and payment structure — lump sum, installments, earn-outs based on future performance
  • Scope of transferred rights — specific registrations, pending applications, common-law rights, domain names, social media accounts
  • Goodwill transfer — explicit language confirming goodwill transfers with the mark under 15 U.S.C. §1060
  • Warranties and indemnities — representations about prior enforcement, no outstanding disputes, clear chain of title
  • Non-compete and non-use — seller’s obligation to cease using the mark or related marks
  • Transition period — time for seller to wind down existing uses
  • Cooperation in USPTO recording — seller’s obligation to sign additional documents needed to record the assignment
  • Dispute resolution — arbitration vs. litigation, governing law, venue

Each term can materially change the value of the deal. A shorter transition period may justify a higher price; narrower warranties reduce the seller’s post-closing exposure. Work with counsel experienced in trademark transactions to structure each term around your priorities.

The Trusted IP Guide Perspective

An offer is a starting point — never a finish line

The first instinct when an unsolicited offer arrives for a trademark is often to evaluate whether the number is acceptable. But that framing misses the most important information in the offer itself: someone wants this mark enough to actively pursue it. That willingness is a signal, and the signal usually means the mark is worth more than the opening number.

Trademark buyers don’t open with their best offers. They open with offers calibrated to test the seller’s sophistication and attachment to the mark. A seller who accepts the opening number confirms that the seller didn’t understand the mark’s value; the buyer walks away with an asset worth multiples of what they paid. A seller who slows down, evaluates carefully, and negotiates methodically typically closes at two to four times the opening offer, sometimes substantially more.

This is IP-to-Equity Strategy applied to inbound transactions. The offer is data about how others value your asset. An educated consumer of trademark rights treats the inbound offer as the beginning of a valuation process, not the end. Slow down, investigate, appraise, negotiate — and if the deal still doesn’t clear your valuation, decline cleanly. The mark you continue to own is worth more than the offer that didn’t quite match its value.

More questions about this topic

What if the buyer is actually a competitor I'm in conflict with?

Treat the offer as part of the broader conflict. A competitor purchasing the mark eliminates their infringement concern and may be willing to pay substantially more than a pure market-entry buyer. However, accepting the offer effectively ends the conflict on their terms — consider whether winning the underlying infringement case would produce a better outcome. Coordinate with litigation counsel if enforcement is underway.

Can I sell only some of my registered classes and keep others?

Yes. A single trademark registration covering multiple classes can be split, with specific classes assigned to the buyer and others retained. The USPTO supports partial assignment through specific recording procedures. This structure works well when the buyer's interest is in a specific product category the seller doesn't operate in. Each assigned class transfers with its associated goodwill.

Do I owe any fees to the buyer just for negotiating?

Typically no, unless you've signed something that creates an obligation. Good-faith negotiations don't create payment obligations; standard practice is for each party to bear its own costs of evaluating and negotiating the transaction. Be cautious about signing any term sheet or letter of intent without counsel review — these documents sometimes contain obligations that extend beyond the negotiation itself.

What if the buyer wants me to continue using the mark after sale?

Structure the arrangement as an assignment with license-back. You transfer ownership but receive a license to continue using the mark for a specified period. This structure can produce immediate cash while preserving operational continuity. License-back terms — duration, scope, royalty, quality control — are material negotiation points and should be addressed with counsel.

Should I counter the offer or just decline?

Always counter unless the offer is obviously abusive or the mark is not for sale at any price. A counter-offer preserves the negotiation, tests the buyer's flexibility, and often produces a higher final number than declining and restarting later. Structure the counter based on your own valuation analysis, not just a multiple of the buyer's opening number. A well-supported counter commands respect from sophisticated buyers.

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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