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UK Law Reference
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Consumer
Updated 2026-05-16

Registered Trade Mark vs Passing Off Action

A registered trade mark under the Trade Marks Act 1994 (TMA 1994) gives the owner a statutory monopoly over their sign. Passing off is a common law action that protects unregistered goodwill and reputation. This comparison explains the requirements, advantages, and limitations of each.

Overview

Businesses seeking to protect their brand identity in England and Wales can rely on two main legal tools: registered trade mark protection and the common law tort of passing off. A registered trade mark under the TMA 1994 (implementing the EU Trade Mark Directive, now retained in UK law post-Brexit) gives the proprietor an exclusive right to use the mark in relation to the registered goods or services. Infringement is established by showing that an identical or similar sign is used for identical or similar goods or services where there is a likelihood of confusion (TMA 1994 s.10). Passing off is a common law tort that has developed through case law since Perry v Truefitt (1842) and was comprehensively stated in the 'classic trinity' by Lord Oliver in Reckitt & Colman Products Ltd v Borden Inc [1990] UKHL 12 (the Jif Lemon case): the claimant must establish (1) goodwill in their business; (2) a misrepresentation by the defendant that causes or is likely to cause; (3) damage to the claimant's goodwill. Passing off protects the substance of a business's reputation, not a registered right.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Registered Trade Mark (TMA 1994)

Cost: UKIPO application: from £170 per class online. Solicitor/trade mark attorney costs: £500–£2,000+ for straightforward applications.
Time: Registration typically 4–6 months if no objection or opposition; longer if contested.

Pros

  • Statutory monopoly — no need to prove goodwill, misrepresentation, or damage to establish infringement under TMA 1994 s.10
  • Nationwide protection from the date of application — earlier priority date can defeat later applications
  • Can be licensed, assigned, and used as security — a valuable business asset that appears on the IP register
  • Criminal offences under TMA 1994 ss.92–97 for counterfeiting — gives access to Trading Standards and customs seizure

Cons

  • Registration required — UKIPO application process; costs of prosecution and potential opposition
  • Five-year use requirement — a registered trade mark can be revoked for non-use after 5 years (TMA 1994 s.46)
  • Registration may be opposed by earlier rights holders and can be declared invalid if grounds exist (TMA 1994 ss.47–48)

Best For

Any business with a distinctive brand identity that it actively uses and wishes to protect from copying — registration provides the strongest and most cost-effective protection. Particularly important for brands that trade across the UK or internationally.

Passing Off (Common Law)

Cost: No registration cost, but litigation costs can be significant — High Court passing off claims involve substantial solicitor and counsel fees.
Time: No preliminary registration step — action available as soon as goodwill is established. Litigation timeframe: 12–24+ months in the High Court.

Pros

  • No registration required — protects unregistered brands and get-up from the moment goodwill is established
  • Can protect aspects of a brand that cannot be registered (e.g., descriptive names, colours, shapes that are functional)
  • Available where a trade mark application has lapsed, been refused, or has not yet been filed
  • Can be pleaded alongside a registered trade mark infringement claim — a belt-and-braces approach

Cons

  • Must prove the classic trinity — goodwill, misrepresentation, and damage — which requires evidence and costs
  • Goodwill is territorial — must establish that customers in the relevant territory recognise the mark as identifying the claimant's goods
  • No registration means no priority date — a competitor who registers a similar mark first may obtain rights that defeat the passing off claimant

Best For

Businesses whose mark is unregistered but well-known in the relevant market; businesses whose registration has lapsed; cases where the defendant's conduct amounts to an extended form of passing off (misrepresentation about quality, association, or endorsement).

Key Differences

AspectRegistered Trade Mark (TMA 1994)Passing Off (Common Law)
Legal basisStatute — Trade Marks Act 1994Common law tort (Reckitt & Colman v Borden [1990] UKHL 12)
RegistrationRequired — registered at UKIPO (or EUIPO for EU mark)Not required — protects unregistered goodwill
What must be provedUse of identical/similar sign for identical/similar goods — likelihood of confusion (TMA 1994 s.10)Goodwill + misrepresentation + damage (classic trinity)
Protection scopeStatutory monopoly — no need to prove actual damageMust prove actual or probable damage to goodwill
PriorityPriority date from application — defeats later filersNo registered priority — earlier registration by another can defeat the claim
Licensing and assignmentCan be formally licensed and assigned as a business asset (TMA 1994 ss.24–28)Goodwill can be assigned with the business but less easily separated
Criminal enforcementCriminal offences under TMA 1994 ss.92–97 — counterfeiting, Trading StandardsCivil tort only — no criminal passing off offence

Our Recommendation

Registration under the TMA 1994 is the most effective and cost-efficient way to protect a brand identity — it provides statutory exclusivity without the need to prove goodwill or damage in each infringement action. Passing off remains a valuable safety net for businesses with established goodwill but no registered mark, and can be pleaded alongside trade mark infringement. All businesses with valuable brand identities should register their core marks.