You registered your business name with the province, set up your website, and printed your business cards. Your brand is official, right? Not quite. One of the most common misconceptions business owners have is that registering a business name with their provincial government gives them ownership of that name. It does not. If you want to truly own your business name and prevent others from using it, you need to understand how to trademark a name in Canada through the federal registration process.
This guide walks through everything you need to know about trademarking a business name in Canada, from understanding what trademark protection actually provides to navigating the registration process with the Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO).
Business Name Registration vs. Trademark Registration
Before diving into the trademark process, it is essential to clear up a fundamental confusion that trips up many Canadian business owners.
Business name registration is a provincial requirement. When you register a business name in Ontario, British Columbia, or any other province, you are essentially telling the government "this is the name I am operating under." It is an administrative filing that allows you to open a bank account and do business under that name. It does not give you exclusive rights to the name, and it only applies within that province.
Trademark registration is a federal process that grants you exclusive nationwide rights to use a particular name, logo, or slogan in connection with specific goods or services. A registered trademark is an actual property right that you can enforce against competitors, license to others, or sell.
Here is the critical difference: someone else could register a similar business name in another province, or even in your own province, and you would have limited recourse. But if you hold a trademark registration, you can stop anyone in Canada from using a confusingly similar name in your industry.
Think of business name registration as putting your name on a mailbox. Think of trademark registration as owning the exclusive rights to that name.
What Can Be Trademarked as a Name?
Not every business name qualifies for trademark protection. CIPO evaluates trademark applications against several criteria, and understanding these upfront can save you time and money.
Distinctive names are the easiest to register. These are invented words (like Kodak or Xerox) or arbitrary names that have no connection to the goods or services offered (like Apple for computers). The more unique and unusual your name, the stronger your trademark protection.
Suggestive names can also be registered, though they require more care. These are names that hint at what your business does without directly describing it. A name like "Netflix" suggests movies but does not describe them outright.
Descriptive names face significant hurdles. If your name simply describes what your business does or the quality of your goods, CIPO will likely refuse registration. "Fast Delivery Service" for a courier company would be considered merely descriptive. However, descriptive names that have acquired distinctiveness through extensive use may eventually qualify for registration.
Generic terms cannot be trademarked at all. You cannot register "Bakery" for a bakery business or "Computers" for a computer store. These words need to remain available for everyone in the industry to use.
Before committing to a name trademark in Canada, consider where your proposed name falls on this spectrum. A trademark search can help identify potential conflicts with existing registrations.
How to Trademark a Name in Canada: The Registration Process
Trademarking a name in Canada means navigating the five main stages of the registration process.
Stage 1: Trademark Search
Before filing an application, conducting a comprehensive trademark search is strongly recommended. This search looks for existing trademarks that might conflict with your proposed name. CIPO maintains a searchable database of registered trademarks, but a thorough search also considers pending applications, common law rights, and business name registrations across provinces.
Finding a conflicting mark before you file is far better than discovering it after you have invested in an application. A proper search can also inform your filing strategy if similar marks exist in different industries.
Stage 2: Preparing the Application
A trademark application to register a business name in Canada requires several key elements:
Applicant information: The application must identify who will own the trademark. This can be an individual, corporation, partnership, or other legal entity.
Representation of the mark: For a word mark (the name itself), you simply provide the name in standard characters. This gives you broad protection regardless of how the name is styled.
Goods and services description: You must specify what goods or services the trademark will cover. This is not a general business description but rather a specific list using language acceptable to CIPO. The scope of your goods and services determines the scope of your protection.
Filing basis: You can file based on proposed use (you intend to use the mark), actual use (you are already using it), or foreign registration (you have a registration in another country).
Stage 3: Examination
After filing, your application enters a queue for examination. CIPO has significantly reduced examination wait times in recent years. Currently, examination typically begins within 7 to 9 months of filing, though timelines can vary. An examiner reviews your application for compliance with the Trademarks Act, including whether the mark is inherently registrable and whether it conflicts with existing registrations.
If the examiner identifies issues, you will receive an Examiner's Report outlining the objections. You then have an opportunity to respond with arguments or amendments. Common objections include claims that the mark is descriptive, that it is confusingly similar to an existing registration, or that the goods and services description needs clarification.
Understanding trademark distinctiveness can help you anticipate and address potential objections.
Stage 4: Publication and Opposition
If your application passes examination, it is published in the Trademarks Journal for two months. During this period, any third party who believes they would be damaged by your registration can file an opposition. Oppositions are relatively rare, but they do happen, particularly if your mark is similar to an existing brand in your industry.
Stage 5: Registration
If no opposition is filed, or if you successfully defend against an opposition, CIPO issues a registration certificate. Your trademark is now officially registered, and you gain the exclusive right to use that mark across Canada for the goods and services listed in your registration.
Trademark registrations in Canada are valid for 10 years and can be renewed indefinitely for additional 10-year terms.
Costs to Trademark a Business Name in Canada
The government fees for a trademark application in Canada are currently $491 CAD for the first class of goods or services, plus $149 CAD for each additional class (as of January 2026). These fees are payable at the time of filing and are adjusted annually.
Beyond government fees, most applicants work with a trademark professional to prepare and file their application. Professional fees vary widely depending on the complexity of the application, whether a comprehensive search is conducted, and how much examination correspondence is required.
At Clearview, trademark registrations are handled for a flat fee of $799 plus government filing fees, which includes preparing and filing the application, responding to routine examination issues, and guiding the application through to registration.
Common Mistakes When Trademarking a Name
Several pitfalls can derail a trademark application or weaken your protection.
Filing too narrow a description: If you only register for "clothing" but you also sell accessories, you may not have protection for the accessories. Think about where your business might expand.
Filing too broad a description: Conversely, claiming goods or services you do not actually offer, or have no genuine intention to offer, can expose your registration to cancellation challenges.
Ignoring the search: Filing without searching first is a gamble. You might waste your filing fees on an application doomed to fail, or worse, invest in a brand that you will later have to change.
Waiting too long: Trademark rights in Canada can be established through use even without registration, but registration provides superior protection. Filing early, before competitors enter the market, is generally the safer approach.
Assuming provincial registration is enough: As discussed above, registering a business name provincially does not give you trademark rights. Many business owners learn this the hard way when a competitor registers their name as a trademark.
How Long Does Trademark Registration Take?
The total timeline to trademark a business name in Canada has improved significantly. For straightforward applications using pre-approved terms and facing no objections, registration can be achieved in approximately 12 to 18 months. The breakdown looks roughly like this:
Application preparation and filing: 1 to 2 weeks
Examination queue: 7 to 9 months
Examination and response period: 2 to 6 months (if objections are raised)
Publication period: 2 months
Registration: 1 to 2 months after publication closes
These timelines can extend if your application faces objections or opposition proceedings. Knowing how to trademark a name in Canada is one thing, but working with an experienced trademark professional can help streamline the process and avoid unnecessary delays.
Protecting Your Trademark After Registration
Registration is not the finish line. To maintain and protect your trademark rights, you need to:
Use the mark: Trademark registrations can be cancelled if the mark is not used for three consecutive years. Active use of your mark in the Canadian marketplace is essential.
Monitor for infringement: Keep an eye on new business names, domain registrations, and competitor branding. If someone starts using a confusingly similar name, you may need to take action.
Renew on time: Registrations expire after 10 years. Set a reminder to renew before the deadline to avoid losing your registration.
Use proper trademark notices: While not legally required, using the registered trademark symbol next to your mark signals to competitors that you have federal registration and are serious about enforcement.
Understanding the Basics First
If you are just starting to explore trademark protection, reviewing the fundamentals can provide helpful context. The basics of trademark law in Canada cover what trademarks protect, how they differ from other intellectual property, and why they matter for your business.
Protect Your Business Name Properly
Business name registration might feel like you have checked the box, but it leaves your brand vulnerable. If you want to truly protect and own your brand, the step that matters most is to register a business name as a trademark through CIPO's federal process. A trademark registration gives you genuine ownership of your name, the ability to enforce your rights nationwide, and peace of mind that your brand is protected as your business grows.
The process involves upfront effort, but the long-term protection is well worth it. Every year, businesses lose names they have used for years because they never secured a trademark registration. Filing sooner rather than later is the safest approach.
Ready to trademark your business name? Contact Clearview to discuss your trademark needs and get started with a professional application that gives your brand the protection it deserves.