Start with UAE Filing. Expand Worldwide.

Register your trademark in the United Arab Emirates first—then extend protection to multiple countries through a single international system.

If your brand journey starts in the UAE, your local filing becomes the “Basic Registration” for the world.

Solid Foundation:

Build a strong UAE filing as your base.

Unified Application:

Submit one international application via WIPO.

Global Reach:

Designate multiple countries/regions instantly.

Simplified Admin::

Centralize renewals and portfolio management.

How it Works?

UAE Base Application

We prepare and file your UAE trademark application in line with UAE Trademark Law and Ministry of Economy requirements.

WIPO Preparation

Using your UAE application/registration as the basis, we prepare the International Application and help you select the countries where you want protection.

Worldwide Designation

You can designate one or many Madrid member jurisdictions based on your market plan (e.g., GCC expansion, EU/UK, US, Asia-Pacific, Africa—where available under Madrid).

Examination Management

Designated countries examine your application under their local laws. We coordinate timelines, communications, and responses where support is needed.

Our Services

UAE Base Filing (Foundation)

Suitability & Compliance Review

Nice Classification (UAE Standards)

Drafting & Filing UAE Applications

Handling UAE Office Actions

Post-registration Support

Madrid Protocol (Global Expansion)

Strategy on target country designations

WIPO Application preparation

Scope & Wording consistency review

 Deadline docketing & coordination

Support with international refusals/objections

Start Your UAE Filing

To start with a UAE base filing and prepare for international designations, please share


FAQs?

Still got questions?

You can designate jurisdictions that are members of the Madrid System. We’ll help confirm coverage based on your target markets.

No. Each designated country examines the mark under its local laws and can issue objections/refusals.

Ideally at the time of the International Application, based on near-term commercial plans. Additional designations can often be added later depending on your strategy.