Our Expert in Japan
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Last updated: 21 May 2026
If a competitor, bad-faith applicant or unrelated third party has just secured a trademark registration in Japan that conflicts with your brand, the clock is already ticking. Understanding how to file an opposition to a trademark in Japan is critical because the statutory window is short, just two months from the date the Japan Patent Office (JPO) publishes the registration in its Trademark Gazette. Recent procedural developments, including the 2024 introduction of a consent-letter system under the revised Trademark Act and Nice Classification updates applied from 2026, have altered both the evidence strategy and classification choices that underpin a well-prepared opposition.
This guide walks in-house counsel, brand managers and outside advisors through every stage of the Japan trademark opposition process, from pre-filing searches through to the final JPO decision, and provides the checklists, cost benchmarks and strategic frameworks needed to act decisively within the deadline.
An effective opposition begins well before the filing deadline. A thorough Japan trademark search allows you to identify conflicting marks early, build an evidence dossier in advance and set realistic deadlines for counsel engagement.
| Registration No. | Mark | Publication date | Nice classes | Opposition deadline | Conflict assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6XXXXXXX | EXAMPLE MARK | 1 June 2026 | 9, 42 | 31 July 2026 | High, identical word element to client’s prior mark in Class 9 |
| 6XXXXXXX | SAMPLE BRAND | 15 June 2026 | 25, 35 | 14 August 2026 | Medium, phonetically similar, different goods |
Set calendar reminders at least four weeks before each opposition deadline. This lead time is essential for evidence collection, counsel briefing and, where applicable, obtaining a power of attorney from foreign principals.
Japan’s Trademark Act provides a broad range of grounds on which an opposition may be filed. These divide into absolute grounds, inherent deficiencies in the registered mark, and relative grounds, which rely on conflict with an earlier right.
The evidentiary threshold varies according to the ground invoked. For similarity-based grounds under Article 4(1)(xi), the opponent typically must demonstrate prior registration or filing-date priority and similarity of marks and goods/services. For well-known-mark grounds, evidence of Japan trademark use requirements, including sales volumes, advertising expenditure, media coverage and consumer surveys, is essential to establish reputation. Understanding Japan trademark use requirements and the evidence standards the JPO applies to each ground is vital for assembling a persuasive dossier.
Under Trademark Act Article 43-2, any person may file an opposition. There is no standing requirement, opponents need not be rights holders, competitors or even commercial entities. The opposition is filed with the Commissioner of the JPO.
Oppositions may be filed on paper (postal or in person at the JPO in Tokyo) or through the JPO’s electronic filing system. Most practitioners file electronically for speed and traceability. The filing must occur within the two-month opposition window, there is no grace period for late submission.
The JPO charges a government filing fee for an opposition. Payment is made via revenue stamps (特許印紙) affixed to the filing documents, or electronically through the JPO’s online payment system. Fee amounts are set by the Trademark Act’s fee schedule and may vary depending on the number of designated classes challenged. The fee structure is separate from counsel costs, which are discussed in the Costs section below.
Once an opposition is filed, the Japan trademark opposition process proceeds through a series of administrative stages, all conducted in writing. Understanding the typical timeline helps manage client expectations and coordinate evidence gathering.
The JPO first checks whether the opposition has been filed within the statutory deadline, the correct fees have been paid and all required documents are present. If formal requirements are not met, the JPO issues a request for correction. Failure to correct within the set period results in dismissal.
A JPO trial examiner (or panel of three examiners) reviews the Notice of Opposition and the evidence. If the examiner finds prima facie grounds to revoke the registration, the registrant is notified and given an opportunity to submit a written opinion (counter-arguments and counter-evidence). The opponent does not have a right of reply to the registrant’s submission, this is a key distinction from inter partes invalidation proceedings.
The examiner issues a written decision either maintaining the registration or revoking it (in whole or in part, i.e., for specific classes or goods/services). If the registration is revoked, the registrant may file an appeal to the Intellectual Property High Court. If the opposition is rejected and the registration is maintained, the decision is final and the opponent cannot appeal, although an invalidation trial may still be pursued as a separate remedy.
| Stage | Typical duration | Key deliverable |
|---|---|---|
| Filing and formal examination | 1–2 months | Confirmation of acceptance or correction request |
| Substantive examination (examiner review) | 3–6 months | Preliminary assessment; notification to registrant if revocation appears justified |
| Registrant response period | 1–2 months (set by JPO) | Written opinion and counter-evidence from the registrant |
| Decision | 1–3 months after close of submissions | Written decision (maintain or revoke) |
| Total (typical) | 6–12 months | Final resolution or escalation to appeal |
Industry observers note that straightforward cases involving clear-cut similarity grounds tend toward the shorter end of this range, while cases turning on well-known-mark evidence or requiring translation of voluminous foreign documents may extend to 12 months or beyond.
Before filing an opposition, it is worth considering whether the opposition route is strategically optimal compared to an invalidation trial (審判, shinpan) or court proceedings. The following comparison table summarises the key differences when evaluating opposition vs invalidation in Japan.
| Action | When recommended | Pros / Cons (time, cost, burden) |
|---|---|---|
| Opposition (Art. 43-2) | The mark was just registered and the two-month window is still open; you want to block quickly and cost-effectively | Pros: any person may file; lower initial cost; faster resolution (6–12 months typical). Cons: strict deadline; no appeal if opposition is rejected; ex parte, limited procedural control; cannot claim damages. |
| Invalidation trial (Art. 46) | The opposition window has closed, or you need broader inter partes engagement; you want the registrant to bear the burden of proving distinctiveness or use | Pros: broader grounds available; inter partes procedure with full evidence exchange; decision is appealable by either party. Cons: typically longer (12–24 months); higher cost; must demonstrate interested-party standing for certain grounds. |
| Court action (IP High Court) | Complex factual disputes; cross-border evidence; need judicial precedent or damages | Pros: binding judicial precedent; potential for damages and injunctive relief. Cons: longest timeline; highest cost; procedural complexity; unpredictable outcome. |
The likely practical effect of recent changes is that the 2024 consent-letter system gives registrants an additional tool to defend registrations where parties have coexistence agreements, making it more important for opponents to anticipate and rebut potential consent defences during the opposition itself.
Budgeting accurately for a JPO opposition cost requires distinguishing between official government fees and professional service costs. The following table provides indicative ranges. All counsel-fee figures are labelled as representative firm examples and should not be treated as fixed quotations.
| Cost category | Low estimate | Mid estimate | High estimate |
|---|---|---|---|
| JPO official fee (per class challenged) | ¥3,000 | ¥3,000 | ¥3,000+ |
| Patent attorney (benrishi) counsel fee | ¥200,000 | ¥400,000–¥600,000 | ¥1,000,000+ |
| Translation (foreign evidence into Japanese) | ¥50,000 | ¥150,000 | ¥500,000+ |
| Evidence collection and survey costs | Minimal | ¥100,000–¥300,000 | ¥1,000,000+ |
| Appeal to IP High Court (if needed) | N/A | ¥500,000 | ¥2,000,000+ |
Note: Counsel-fee ranges are illustrative and drawn from published Japanese patent-attorney fee schedules. Actual fees vary by firm, case complexity and volume of evidence. Cross-border evidence collection, particularly where affidavits and market data must be gathered from multiple jurisdictions, significantly increases costs at the higher end.
The strength of your evidence often determines the outcome. A well-organised dossier that is tailored to the specific grounds of opposition can compensate for a limited procedural role in what is essentially an ex parte review.
Witness statements or affidavits from company officers, marketing directors or distribution partners can contextualise documentary evidence. All foreign-language documents must be accompanied by accurate Japanese translations. While the JPO does not mandate certified translations, using a professional translation service with demonstrable quality-assurance processes strengthens credibility.
The two-month opposition deadline is strict, but the JPO does recognise the practical difficulties faced by overseas filers. Where the opposing party is domiciled outside Japan, a limited extension, generally up to 60 days, may be available on request. The request must be filed before the original deadline expires and must include a reasoned explanation of why additional time is necessary (for example, time required to gather and translate evidence from foreign jurisdictions, or delays in obtaining a notarised power of attorney).
It is essential to note that extensions are not granted automatically. Early engagement with Japanese counsel is the single most effective safeguard against missing the deadline. If you identify a potentially conflicting mark, instruct a benrishi immediately, even before your evidence is complete, so that the formal filing can be made within the window and supplementary evidence submitted afterwards within the examiner-set deadline.
Regarding amendments, opponents may supplement the grounds and evidence stated in their initial Notice of Opposition within a period designated by the JPO examiner after filing. However, new grounds of opposition cannot be added after the initial two-month filing window closes. This means the Notice of Opposition should identify all intended grounds at the outset, even if supporting evidence is still being assembled.
Filing a trademark opposition in Japan requires precision, speed and a well-prepared evidence strategy. The two-month deadline from publication in the JPO Trademark Gazette is non-negotiable, and the ex parte nature of the process means your initial filing and evidence must be compelling from the start. By monitoring the Gazette systematically, conducting a thorough Japan trademark search, selecting the correct statutory grounds and assembling a persuasive dossier, brand owners and their counsel can protect valuable rights efficiently. For complex or cross-border matters, including those where the choice between opposition vs invalidation in Japan has strategic implications, early engagement with experienced intellectual property counsel is strongly recommended.
Those seeking guidance on how to file an opposition to a trademark in Japan should consult a qualified professional through the Global Law Experts network.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Chie Kasahara at Atsumi & Sakai, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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