Trademark Registration in Thailand: What Foreign Companies Need to Know

Thailand operates a first-to-file trademark system. Foreign companies entering the Thai market should register their marks before commercial launch — this guide covers the process, timelines, and common pitfalls.

By Prof. Dej-Udom Krairit·17 May 2026·1 min read

Overview

Thailand's trademark system is governed by the Trademark Act B.E. 2534 (1991) and its amendments. The system operates on a first-to-file basis — the first party to file wins the registration, regardless of who used the mark first. Foreign companies should file before entering the Thai market, not after.

What Can Be Registered

Trademarks

Any distinctive sign capable of distinguishing goods or services: words, logos, shapes, colours, sounds, or combinations thereof. The mark must not be descriptive of the goods, contrary to public order, or identical to a well-known mark.

Service Marks

Identical in principle to trademarks but covering services rather than goods. Registered and enforced under the same act.

Certification Marks and Collective Marks

Available for organisations certifying standards or for use by members of an association.

The Registration Process

  1. Trademark search — conducted at the Department of Intellectual Property (DIP) to check for conflicts
  2. Filing — application submitted with a representation of the mark, goods/services list, and power of attorney
  3. Examination — the DIP examines the mark for registrability (typically 12–18 months)
  4. Publication — if accepted, the mark is published in the Trademark Journal for 60 days for opposition
  5. Registration — if no opposition is filed (or opposition is defeated), the certificate is issued

Common Pitfalls

  • Filing only in one class when the business spans multiple classes
  • Using a mark in Thailand before filing — third parties can file first
  • Allowing registrations to lapse (renewal is every 10 years)
  • Not monitoring the journal for conflicting applications

Continue Reading

Corporate & M&AEmployment & Labour LawImmigration & Work Permits

What the 19 May Cabinet Means for Manufacturers, Employers, and Exporters

If your group runs manufacturing or food-processing in Ayutthaya, employs skilled trades, sits in a French-linked supply chain, exports seafood, or holds Thai government construction contracts, the Thai Cabinet's 19 May session is likely to touch your operations. Five developments to review.

Shawn Krairit·20 May 2026
Corporate & M&AImmigration & Work Permits

EU Adopts Visa Cascade for Thailand: Schengen Multi-Entry Visas of Up to Five Years for Eligible Thai Citizens

On 17 May 2026, the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that the European Commission has adopted the Visa Cascade regime for Thai citizens, opening the way for Thai nationals to obtain Schengen multi-entry visas valid for up to five years based on prior travel history. This client alert explains the tiered cascade structure, eligibility criteria, and the practical implications for Thai business travellers, families, and corporates with EU-bound personnel.

Prof. Dej-Udom Krairit·18 May 2026
Litigation & Disputes

What Influencers Can and Cannot Promote in Thailand

Thailand's regulators are actively prosecuting influencers personally for promotional content that violates sectoral statutes. This client alert maps the eight product and service categories that trigger criminal liability for promotion in Thailand, sets out the disclosure rules for permitted promotion, and gives content creators, brands, and agencies a practical compliance baseline.

Shawn Krairit·17 May 2026