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Indonesian Trademark Law: Challenges for Brand Owners

  • InCorp Editorial Team
  • 16 November 2017
  • 3 minutes reading time

Hearing people describe what trademark is may oftentimes make the concept sound so simple. Trademark, an intellectual property or an intangible business asset, covers business names, logos, slogans, and other components. This trademark used to identify the business and its products (or services) in the market. Businesses, especially small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are known to use it to protect their businesses from undesired use. Then what is Indonesian trademark law?

It is important for investors who intend to start a business in Indonesiato familiarize themselves with the trademark law and eventually go ahead with thetrademark registrationto avoid any unwanted trademark infringement, which is very common in Indonesia. And the better news is, by registering your trademark, you not only gain protection for your business’s intangible assets, you also attract more investors.

This article highlights the challenges of the Indonesian Trademark Law for brand owners in Indonesia. Ever since the Indonesian administration approved amendments to the country’s Trademark Law on October 27, 2016 that took effect on November 28, 2016, some challenges were resolved, while some others evolved.

Related article: 5 Most Common Trademark Registration Mistakes: What Your Business Should Avoid

It could take some time

Undertaking the trademark registration process when running a business in Indonesia can be a long and costly journey. It could take 12 to 18 months to get the trademark certificate from the Directorate General of Intellectual Property (DGIP). However, with the amendments to 2016 Trademark Law, the government shorten and accelerate the process to as fast as 8 months.

It could be pricey

The fee for the trademark registration process has significantly increased. The manual trademark registration fee has doubled to IDR 2 million; the online trademark registration fee doubled to IDR 1.8 million. Companies with existing trademarks may want to fork out more for the renewal process for at IDR 4 million. It costs twice as much the previous fee.

It could test your patience

Brand owners doing business in Indonesia are not able to register trademark directly via a single application through the Regional Trademark Office; Indonesia is not a member of the Madrid System yet. As a result, Indonesia has its own trademark law that lays out the registration procedures. It further requires twice the time and effort previously required from the brand owners.

It could urge you to learn a second language

A Company should submit all registrations and documents to DGIP in Indonesian national language, Bahasa Indonesia; creating a language barrier for foreign brand owners during the registration process. You need to translate documents in other languages as well.

It could force you to regularly upgrade brands for marketing strategy

Despite the many positive aspects about the new 2016 Trademark Law, it does not have a very solid guideline to protect the original brand owners and their trademarks. For instance, a brand owner who happens to have a brand name derived from a generic product may want to actively upgrade, modify, alter their trademark registrations for marketing tactics, including increasing the public’s awareness or to prevent their trademark from turning into generic. As the 2016 Trademark Law states, any company can register a generic trademark by just adding distinctive words or features.

In this light, brand owners need to analyze and be fully aware of the regulations stipulated by theIndonesian Trademark Lawwhen doing business in Indonesia.  Registering your trademark remains a surefire way to prevent others hijack your intellectual property. When someone hijacks one’s intellectual property, brand owners will face extensive losses that could have detrimental effects on businesses.

Verified by

Daris Salam

COO Indonesia at InCorp Indonesia

With more than 10 years of expertise in accounting and finance, Daris Salam dedicates his knowledge to consistently improving the performance of InCorp Indonesia and maintaining clients and partnerships.

Frequently Asked Questions

    You will need to register your products with the BPOM (National Agency of Food and Drugs) and MoH (Ministry of Health) before you can distribute them in Indonesia. It can only be registered with an Indonesian legal entity. Your local distributor will register your product in Indonesia under their entity and become the license holder if you distribute via the entity you choose.

    According to the latest provision regarding Halal Product Assurance, halal certification for many consumer products in Indonesia that was previously voluntary has now been mandatory. Food and beverage products are the first Halal certified before 17 October 2024.

    You can transfer the license if your local distributor agrees to change the product license holder.

    To provide you with accurate pricing information for our product registration services, we consider the complexities of your inquiries and the dynamic nature of regulations in Indonesia. As a result, the pricing for the service may vary accordingly. For detailed information, please get in touch with our consultants.

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