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Last updated: 16 July 2026
If you are asking when can I renew my trademark in Zambia, the short answer is that you may file for renewal up to six months before the registration expiry date, and you must do so before that date to avoid surcharges. Zambia’s Trade Marks Act No. 11 of 2023, operationalised in 2025 through implementing regulations, replaced the former regime with a modernised framework that aligns the country’s renewal term at ten years, renewable indefinitely for successive ten-year periods. The Act also introduces a structured grace period and a formal restoration mechanism administered by the Patents and Companies Registration Agency (PACRA), making 2026 the first full calendar year in which all renewals proceed under the new rules.
This guide walks through every step: the legal basis, exact trademark renewal deadlines, PACRA forms you need to file, current fees and surcharges, and what happens if you miss the window entirely.
Before diving into the statute, use this action checklist to stay on track with your Zambia trademark renewal:
The Trade Marks Act No. 11 of 2023 is the governing statute for all trademark registrations in Zambia. Under the Act, a trademark registration is valid for an initial period of ten years from the date of registration. The proprietor may renew the registration for further periods of ten years each, with no upper limit on the number of successive renewals, meaning a trademark can be maintained indefinitely so long as it is renewed on time.
The Act provides that a renewal application must be filed before the expiry of the current registration period. In practice, PACRA accepts renewal filings up to six months before the expiry date, giving proprietors a generous pre-expiry window to prepare paperwork and settle fees. This pre-expiry filing window is consistent with international norms and mirrors the approach taken in many ARIPO member states.
Where a proprietor fails to file before expiry, the Act provides a grace period (discussed below) during which renewal can still be effected on payment of the prescribed surcharge. Beyond the grace period, the mark is removed from the register, though a restoration application may still be possible within defined time limits.
The 2023 Act repealed the previous Trade Marks Act (Cap 401) and introduced transitional provisions to protect existing registrations. Marks registered under the old statute remain valid and are treated as if registered under the new Act. Their renewal dates do not change, they continue to fall on the anniversary of the original registration date. However, the procedural requirements for Zambia trademark renewal (including forms, fees and filing channels) now follow the new Act and its implementing regulations, as announced by PACRA in its operationalisation notices.
Industry observers expect that the transition will be seamless for most proprietors, since PACRA has been processing renewals under the new framework since 2025 and has published updated forms and guidance accordingly.
Before you begin the PACRA trademark renewal process, assemble the following:
PACRA prescribes specific forms for trademark transactions. For a standard renewal, the proprietor (or their authorised agent) must complete and submit the prescribed renewal application form as set out in the Trade Marks Regulations. The form requires the following essential fields:
Forms are available for download on the PACRA service portal. Proprietors should check the current version at info.pacra.org.zm before filing, as PACRA periodically updates form templates to reflect regulatory changes.
PACRA accepts trademark renewal filings through two channels:
Whichever channel you use, retain a copy of the completed form, proof of payment and the PACRA receipt. The renewal takes effect from the expiry date of the current period, not from the date of filing, so an early filing does not shorten your protection.
Understanding the cost of trademark renewal is essential for budgeting, especially for multi-class portfolios. PACRA publishes its fee schedule in the Zambia Industrial Property Journal and on its website. The table below summarises the main fee categories:
| Fee type | Basis | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard renewal fee | Per class, per 10-year period | Payable to PACRA before the expiry date. Confirm the current amount on the PACRA website or in the latest Industrial Property Journal. |
| Late renewal surcharge (grace period) | Flat surcharge added to the standard fee | Applies when renewal is filed during the six-month grace period after expiry. The surcharge is prescribed by regulation, consult the PACRA fee schedule for the exact figure. |
| Restoration fee | Separate application fee + standard renewal fee | Payable when the mark has been removed from the register and the proprietor applies for restoration. Evidence of continued use or intention to use is required. |
| Professional / attorney fees | Varies by firm | Typical market range for agent-assisted renewal: confirm with your chosen Zambia-based IP practitioner. These are not statutory fees. |
PACRA periodically adjusts statutory fees through Statutory Instruments, so always verify the current schedule before filing. Multi-class marks will incur the renewal fee for each class, dropping an unnecessary class at renewal can reduce costs but also narrows protection.
The trademark renewal deadline in Zambia is the expiry date of the current ten-year registration period. You may file your renewal application at any point during the six months before that date. Filing early within this window carries no penalty and does not change the renewal’s effective date, the new ten-year term always runs from the expiry of the previous period.
Example date calculation: Suppose your mark was registered on 15 March 2016. The initial ten-year period expired on 15 March 2026. You could have filed your renewal as early as 15 September 2025 (six months before expiry). If you filed and paid on 10 January 2026, the renewed registration runs from 15 March 2026 to 15 March 2036.
If you miss the expiry date, the Trade Marks Act 2023 provides a six-month grace period during which you may still renew. Filing during this window requires payment of both the standard renewal fee and the prescribed late surcharge. The Registrar will process the renewal, and the new ten-year period runs from the original expiry date as though the renewal had been filed on time.
During the grace period, however, the proprietor’s rights are in a precarious position. Third parties may attempt to file applications for identical or similar marks, and the proprietor’s ability to enforce exclusive rights may be challenged. Industry observers note that prompt action during the grace period is therefore essential, delay increases both cost and legal risk.
If the six-month grace period also passes without a renewal filing, the mark is removed from the register. The Trade Marks Act 2023 allows the proprietor to apply to the Registrar for restoration of the registration, subject to prescribed conditions. A restoration application is a separate procedure, more demanding, more expensive and less certain than a simple renewal.
PACRA will typically require the following evidence in support of a restoration application:
The Registrar retains discretion to refuse restoration where the evidence is insufficient or where third-party rights have intervened. Early indications suggest that PACRA applies this discretion cautiously, but proprietors should not treat restoration as a guaranteed fallback.
The following two scenarios illustrate how the renewal timeline works in practice:
| Scenario | Key dates | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| A, On-time renewal | Registration date: 1 July 2016. Expiry: 1 July 2026. Filing window opens: 1 January 2026. Proprietor files and pays on 15 March 2026. | Renewal processed at standard fee. New term: 1 July 2026 – 1 July 2036. No surcharge. |
| B, Missed deadline → grace period → restoration | Registration date: 1 July 2016. Expiry: 1 July 2026. Proprietor does not file by 1 July 2026. Grace period: 2 July 2026 – 1 January 2027. Proprietor files on 15 November 2026. | Renewal processed with surcharge. New term: 1 July 2026 – 1 July 2036. If the proprietor had also missed the grace period (after 1 January 2027), a separate restoration application with evidence of use would be required, at higher cost and with no guaranteed outcome. |
These examples underscore the practical value of diarising the renewal date well in advance and filing at the earliest opportunity within the six-month pre-expiry window.
PACRA publishes all prescribed intellectual property forms on its service portal. The table below summarises the forms most relevant to trademark renewal and related transactions:
| Form / document | Purpose | Key completion notes |
|---|---|---|
| Renewal application form (prescribed under the Trade Marks Regulations) | Request for renewal of a registered trademark | Enter registration number, proprietor name, class(es) and sign. Attach proof of fee payment. |
| Power of attorney | Authorisation for an agent to file on the proprietor’s behalf | Must be signed by the proprietor (or a duly authorised officer if the proprietor is a company). Attach to the renewal form. |
| Restoration application form | Request to restore a mark removed from the register after failure to renew | Include a statutory declaration explaining the failure to renew, evidence of use or intention to use, and proof of payment of all prescribed fees. |
| Amendment / change-of-details form | Update proprietor name, address or agent details before or during renewal | File this before the renewal form if any proprietor details have changed since registration. |
Always download the latest version of each form from the PACRA portal at info.pacra.org.zm to ensure compliance with current regulatory requirements. Outdated forms may be rejected.
Allowing a Zambia trademark renewal to lapse carries serious commercial and legal consequences:
Proprietors with active licensing agreements should also review whether their licences contain renewal obligations, as a lapse in registration may trigger termination clauses or expose the licensor to damages claims.
Many straightforward, single-class renewals can be handled directly by in-house teams. However, professional IP counsel is strongly advisable in the following situations:
To connect with a qualified Zambia-based IP practitioner, visit the Global Law Experts Zambia lawyer directory.
International brand owners often manage trademark portfolios across multiple jurisdictions. The following comparison highlights how Zambia’s post-2025 renewal framework aligns with, and differs from, two major systems:
| Feature | Zambia (Trade Marks Act 2023) | United Kingdom (Trade Marks Act 1994) | United States (Lanham Act, USPTO) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial registration term | 10 years from date of registration | 10 years from date of registration | 10 years from date of registration |
| Renewal term | 10 years (unlimited renewals) | 10 years (unlimited renewals) | 10 years (unlimited renewals, but with interim Section 8 filing at years 5–6) |
| Pre-expiry filing window | Up to 6 months before expiry | Up to 6 months before expiry | Up to 6 months before expiry (Section 9) |
| Grace period after expiry | 6 months (surcharge applies) | 6 months (additional fee applies) | 6 months (surcharge applies) |
| Restoration after grace period | Yes, application to Registrar with evidence of use | Yes, application to restore within 6 months of removal | No general restoration; new application required |
| Filing authority | PACRA (Lusaka) | UK IPO (Newport) | USPTO (Alexandria, VA) |
Zambia’s alignment with the 10-year / 6-month grace period model used by the UK and other TRIPS-compliant jurisdictions simplifies portfolio management for multinational brand owners. The key distinction is that the USPTO does not offer a post-grace restoration route, once a US registration lapses, the owner must re-file, making timely renewal even more critical in that jurisdiction.
Understanding when you can renew your trademark in Zambia, and acting on that knowledge promptly, is the single most cost-effective step a brand owner can take to protect their rights. The Trade Marks Act No. 11 of 2023 gives proprietors a clear six-month pre-expiry filing window, a six-month grace period with surcharge, and a discretionary restoration pathway as a last resort. Filing early within the renewal window eliminates surcharges, avoids the risk of third-party filings during any lapse, and keeps enforcement rights intact. For portfolios that include ARIPO or Madrid designations covering Zambia, coordination with international filing timelines is equally important.
Proprietors who build renewal diarisation into their annual compliance calendar, and engage qualified Zambian IP counsel for complex or multi-class portfolios, will find the process straightforward under the new regime.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Bonaventure Mutale at Ellis & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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