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IP Knowledge Hub

Key IP insights by country, at a glance.

Regional Organizations

Regional organizations centralize filing and granting, commonly for trademarks, designs, and patents. The advantage is one application with multi-country coverage, but scope and effect must follow each system’s rules (e.g., country designation, automatic effect).

  • European Union (EUIPO)
  • European Patent Organization (EPO/EPC)
  • African Intellectual Property Organization (OAPI)
  • African Regional Intellectual Property Organization (ARIPO)
  • Benelux Intellectual Property Office

Europe

Europe offers both regional and national routes: trademarks/designs via EUIPO with EU-wide protection; patents examined centrally by the EPO before taking effect nationally. Member states still differ in use evidence, opposition, and renewal rules.
  • Germany
  • France
  • UK
  • Spain
  • Italy
  • Norway

North America

A mature and transparent system: the US emphasizes use/availability evidence for trademarks; Canada and Mexico follow civil-law-influenced procedures. Designs may be termed “industrial designs” or “design patents.”
  • USA
  • Canada
  • Mexico
  • Jamaica
  • Panama
  • Dominican Republic

South America

Primarily civil law systems, with stricter requirements on language (Spanish/Portuguese) and formalities. Many allow e-filings but differ in priority proof, powers of attorney, notarization, and certification. Timelines and grace periods also vary.
  • Brazil
  • Argentina
  • Chile
  • Colombia
  • Peru
  • Ecuador

Asia

Large and diverse: differences in language, documentation, examination speed, and use requirements. Most countries allow e-filings; some require special rules on prior use, intent-to-use, priority terms, or classification editions.
  • China
  • Japan
  • India
  • Korea
  • Singapore
  • Vietnam

Africa

Typically a mix of national and regional routes: besides national filings, OAPI grants rights through a single filing, while ARIPO requires member designation. Multiple languages (EN/FR, etc.) and document formality must be observed.
  • South Africa
  • Nigeria
  • Egypt
  • Kenya
  • Morocco
  • Ghana

Oceania

Australia and New Zealand have mature, highly digitalized systems, with classifications and standards aligned with common-law jurisdictions. Pacific Island states are smaller, with fragmented rules and stricter requirements for powers of attorney, notarization, and timelines.
  • Australia
  • New Zealand
  • Papua New Guinea

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