To register a trademark in Turkey, you file an application with the Turkish Patent and Trademark Office (Turk Patent ve Marka Kurumu, known as TURKPATENT), pay the official fees, and pass an examination and a publication period before the registration certificate is issued. The whole process usually takes around six to ten months when there are no objections, as of the time this article is written. This guide explains, in plain language, exactly how to register a trademark in Turkey, who can apply, what the application must contain, what it costs, and how long it takes.
A trademark is the sign that distinguishes your goods or services from everyone else’s: a brand name, a logo, a slogan, a shape, or a combination of these. Protection in Turkey is territorial, which means a mark registered abroad gives you no rights here. If you sell, manufacture, or plan to expand into Turkey, registering locally is what gives you the legal right to stop others from using your brand.
What It Means to Register a Trademark in Turkey
When you register a trademark in Turkey, you obtain an exclusive right to use that sign for the specific goods and services you claim, for ten years, renewable indefinitely. The governing law is the Industrial Property Law No. 6769, which entered into force in 2017 and brought Turkish practice closer to European Union standards. Registration is handled entirely by TURKPATENT, the national authority based in Ankara.
Turkey follows a first-to-file system. The person who files first generally has priority over someone who used the mark earlier but never registered it. There are limited exceptions for well-known marks and genuine prior use, but the practical lesson is simple: filing early protects you. In our practice at Karanfiloglu Law Firm, the most common problem we see with foreign brands is that they enter the Turkish market, build recognition, and only then discover that a third party has already registered their name.
Who Can Apply, and Trademark Registration in Turkey for Foreigners
Any natural person or legal entity can register a trademark in Turkey, whether Turkish or foreign. There is no requirement to have a company or a physical presence in the country to own a Turkish trademark. Trademark registration in Turkey for foreigners follows the same examination rules as it does for residents, with one important procedural difference.
Applicants who do not have a residence or a principal place of business in Turkey must be represented by a registered Turkish trademark attorney. This is a legal requirement, not an option. A foreign applicant cannot correspond with TURKPATENT directly and must act through a local representative who is entered on the official register. Turkish nationals and Turkey-based companies may file on their own behalf, although many still use a representative to handle classification and examination correctly.
National route or international route
Foreign owners can reach Turkey in two ways. You can file a national Turkish trademark application directly with TURKPATENT, or you can designate Turkey through the Madrid Protocol if you already hold a base application or registration in your home country. Each route has trade-offs, and the right choice depends on how many countries you are targeting.
How to Register a Trademark in Turkey, Step by Step
The trademark registration in Turkey process moves through a fixed sequence of stages. Knowing the order of the trademark registration in Turkey process helps you plan and avoid the mistakes that cause refusals.
- Run a clearance search. Before filing, search the TURKPATENT database for identical or confusingly similar marks in the relevant classes. A clearance search is the single most cost-effective step in any Turkish trademark application, because it reveals conflicts before you spend money.
- Define the goods and services. List exactly what the mark will cover and assign each item to the correct class under the Nice Classification. Over-claiming wastes fees; under-claiming leaves gaps a competitor can exploit.
- Prepare the representation of the mark. Supply a clear image of a logo, or the plain text of a word mark, in the format TURKPATENT requires.
- File the application. Submit the application online with the applicant details, the mark, the class list, and proof of fee payment. The filing date sets your priority.
- Formal and absolute-grounds examination. TURKPATENT checks that the application is complete and that the mark is not descriptive, generic, deceptive, or otherwise barred on absolute grounds.
- Publication in the Official Trademark Bulletin. If the mark passes examination, it is published for a two-month opposition period during which third parties may object.
- Opposition, if any. If someone files an opposition, you respond with arguments and evidence, and TURKPATENT decides.
- Registration and certificate. If there is no opposition, or you prevail, you pay the registration fee and TURKPATENT issues the registration certificate.
What a Turkish Trademark Application Must Include
A complete Turkish trademark application needs a defined set of information before TURKPATENT will accept a filing date. Missing items delay the filing date, which can cost you priority in a first-to-file system.
- The full name and address of the applicant (the individual or company that will own the mark).
- A clear representation of the mark, in colour if colour is claimed.
- The list of goods and services, grouped by class under the Nice Classification.
- The official application fee, with an additional fee for each class beyond the first.
- A power of attorney for the trademark attorney, required for foreign applicants and commonly used by local ones. Notarisation is generally not required for this document.
- Priority documents, if you claim an earlier filing date from another country under the Paris Convention (a six-month window).
Accuracy at this stage matters more than speed. A Turkish trademark application built on a vague or incorrect class list is the version most likely to draw an objection or leave the brand unprotected where it actually trades.
Trademark Classes and the Nice Classification
Turkey uses the international Nice Classification, which sorts goods and services into 45 classes: 34 for goods and 11 for services. You pay per class, so the class list directly drives the cost and the scope of protection. A clothing brand typically files in Class 25, while a software company files in Class 9 and Class 42, and a restaurant in Class 43.
Choosing classes is a strategic decision, not a clerical one. Claim the classes that match what you sell today and what you realistically plan to sell soon. A registration is also vulnerable to cancellation for non-use if the mark is not genuinely used for the registered goods or services within five years, so padding the list with classes you will never use offers no lasting benefit.
Timeline: How Long It Takes to Register a Trademark in Turkey
A smooth, unopposed application to register a trademark in Turkey usually takes around six to ten months from filing to certificate, as of the time this article is written. The two-month publication window is fixed by law, but examination times and any opposition can extend the schedule. The figures below are typical ranges and not guarantees, because TURKPATENT workloads and procedures change.
- Clearance search: a few days.
- Formal and absolute-grounds examination: around two to five months.
- Publication and opposition window: two months, fixed by law.
- Registration and certificate issuance: around one to two months.
- Total, if unopposed: around six to ten months.
An opposition can add several months while both sides exchange arguments. Clients we advise in Istanbul who run a clearance search first tend to face fewer surprises later, because the conflicts that trigger oppositions are spotted before filing rather than after.
Costs and Official Fees
The cost to register a trademark in Turkey has two layers: the official TURKPATENT fees and, where used, the trademark attorney’s professional fee. Official fees are set by TURKPATENT and revised periodically, usually at the start of each year, so confirm the current schedule before you file. There is a filing fee for the first class, an extra fee for each additional class, and a separate registration fee payable once the mark is allowed.
Because the fee structure is per class, the number of classes is the main driver of the official cost. A single-class word mark is the least expensive filing, while a multi-class portfolio for a larger brand costs more. We do not quote fixed fees in this article, as official amounts change and every brand’s class needs differ; a lawyer can give you a current figure once the class list is settled.
National Filing or the Madrid Protocol
If you only need protection in Turkey, a national filing with TURKPATENT is usually the most direct route. If you are protecting the same brand in several countries, the Madrid Protocol lets you file one international application that designates Turkey along with other member states, managed through the World Intellectual Property Organization. Turkey is a Madrid member, so a designation is examined locally by TURKPATENT under the same substantive rules.
- Best when: a national filing suits protection in Turkey only, while the Madrid Protocol suits several countries at once.
- Base registration: a national filing needs none, while a Madrid application requires a base application or registration in your home country.
- Examination: TURKPATENT examines both routes under the same substantive rules.
- Local representative for foreigners: required for a national filing, and required for a Madrid designation if an objection or office action arises.
After Registration: Renewal and Enforcement
A Turkish trademark registration lasts ten years from the filing date and can be renewed for further ten-year terms without limit. Renewal is your responsibility; TURKPATENT does not extend protection automatically, and a lapsed renewal can open the door to others. Once registered, you can act against infringement and counterfeiting through civil courts, customs recordal to stop counterfeit imports, and, in serious cases, criminal complaints under the Industrial Property Law No. 6769.
Registration also strengthens your position in commercial dealings. A registered mark can be licensed, assigned, used as security, and recorded against your company, all of which depend on having a clear title that only registration provides.
Summary
To register a trademark in Turkey, run a clearance search, choose the correct Nice classes, file with TURKPATENT, clear examination and the two-month publication period, and collect your certificate, usually within around six to ten months when unopposed. Foreign owners must act through a registered Turkish trademark attorney, and a careful Turkish trademark application built on the right class list is the difference between solid protection and an expensive dispute later. Knowing how to register a trademark in Turkey before you enter the market is far cheaper than recovering a brand someone else has already claimed.
Talk to a Lawyer in Istanbul
If you would like advice on your own situation, Karanfiloglu Law Firm is a registered law office in Istanbul serving foreigners and Turkish clients across Turkey. You can reach us by phone or WhatsApp at +90 532 659 35 11, by email at [email protected], or visit us at Mecidiyeköy Mah. Büyükdere Cad. No:67-71, Alba İş Merkezi, Kat:8, Şişli, İstanbul. Contact us to discuss your situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to register a trademark in Turkey?
An unopposed application to register a trademark in Turkey usually takes around six to ten months from filing to certificate, as of the time this article is written. The two-month publication period is fixed, while examination time and any opposition can extend the schedule.
Can a foreigner register a trademark in Turkey?
Yes, any foreign individual or company can own a Turkish trademark, with no requirement to live in or have a company in Turkey. Trademark registration in Turkey for foreigners must, however, be handled through a registered Turkish trademark attorney who acts as the applicant’s representative before TURKPATENT.
Do I need a Turkish company to file a Turkish trademark application?
No, you do not need a Turkish company to file a Turkish trademark application. The owner can be a foreign individual or a foreign company; only a local representative is required for applicants without a residence or place of business in Turkey.
How much does it cost to register a trademark in Turkey?
The cost depends mainly on the number of Nice classes, because TURKPATENT charges a filing fee for the first class, an extra fee for each additional class, and a separate registration fee. Official fees are revised periodically, so confirm the current amounts before filing.
What is the difference between a national filing and the Madrid Protocol?
A national filing protects your mark in Turkey only and needs no prior registration, while the Madrid Protocol lets you designate Turkey alongside other countries from a single international application based on a home registration. Both are examined locally by TURKPATENT.
How long does trademark protection last in Turkey?
A Turkish trademark registration lasts ten years from the filing date and can be renewed for further ten-year terms without limit. Renewal is the owner’s responsibility, and a mark can be cancelled for non-use if it is not genuinely used within five years.
What happens if someone opposes my application?
If a third party files an opposition during the two-month publication window, you respond with arguments and evidence, and TURKPATENT decides whether the mark proceeds. A clearance search before filing greatly reduces the chance of facing an opposition.
About the Author
Kaan Karanfiloğlu is the founder of Karanfiloglu Law Firm, an Istanbul-based registered law office serving Turkish and international clients across Turkey. He is a lawyer registered with the Istanbul Bar Association (Reg. No. 58270) and the Union of Turkish Bar Associations (No. 133074), and has practised law in Turkey since 2017. He holds an LL.B. from Galatasaray University Faculty of Law (2016) and advises clients in Turkish, English and French; the firm also serves clients in Russian and Chinese with experienced in-office translators.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about Turkish law and is not legal advice. Laws, regulations, official fees and procedures change over time and every situation is different. For advice on your specific circumstances, please consult a qualified lawyer. No liability is accepted for any loss arising from reliance on the information in this article.







