A comprehensive search before filing is non-negotiableFiling a trademark without a comprehensive search is the most expensive mistake in trademark law. If your mark conflicts with an existing registration, you face a USPTO refusal or third-party opposition costing $10,000–$50,000+. A professional search ($500–$1,000) before filing costs a fraction of conflict resolution. Never skip this step.
Office Actions affect 65% of applicationsThe USPTO issues Office Actions — official objections — in roughly 65% of trademark applications. These require legal argument responding to the examiner's specific concerns. Responding effectively costs $800–$2,500 in additional attorney fees. Non-response within 3 months results in abandonment. The likelihood of an Office Action is a reason to use an experienced attorney, not a surprise.
Timeline is 12–18 months under normal circumstancesUSPTO trademark registration takes 12–18 months from filing to registration under current processing times. You can use the ™ symbol immediately upon filing; the ® symbol only after registration. This timeline affects contracts and licensing agreements that reference registered trademark status — plan accordingly if you have time-sensitive business agreements.
US registration gives you no international rightsA USPTO registration protects your mark in the United States only. If your Louisville business sells internationally, separate filings through the Madrid Protocol or direct country applications are required. International trademark protection adds $1,500–$5,000+ per country or region and requires a separate international strategy conversation with your attorney.
Register early — before you're invested in the brandThe longer you use a mark without registration, the more expensive conflicts become. Unregistered use for years before filing creates situations where a similar registered mark already exists in your category — requiring a rebrand that costs $50,000–$500,000+ for an established business. Early filing ($1,100–$3,000 total) is always cheaper than a forced rebrand.