Why Indian brands struggle with U.S. trademark clearance and how to avoid expensive rejections
By Prashant Kumar
Introduction
Indian businesses entering the U.S. market often face an unexpected roadblock: a “likelihood of confusion” objection issued by the USPTO. It is one of the most common — and most misunderstood — reasons why Indian filings fail. Even brands that are properly cleared and registered in India run into trouble in the U.S. because the legal tests, interpretation of classes, and understanding of consumer perception differ sharply between the two jurisdictions. With more Indian companies expanding to Amazon U.S., software platforms, and ecommerce storefronts, understanding the confusion test is no longer optional. This is the precise reason I earlier wrote detailed guides on India–U.S. class mapping, Amazon Brand Registry, and U.S. trademark filing from India — because these factors directly influence whether a mark survives USPTO examination.
What is the USPTO’s “Likelihood of Confusion” Objection?
The USPTO raises a “likelihood of confusion” objection when your mark is too similar to an existing U.S. trademark in sound, look, meaning, or customer impression. If U.S. consumers may assume both marks come from the same business, the USPTO must refuse registration.
Unlike India, which follows a more class-driven similarity test, the U.S. standard is consumer-perception driven. The examiner evaluates pronunciation, conceptual meaning, impression, and how the mark behaves in the American marketplace. This explains why a mark that feels unique in India can still collide with a U.S. brand you’ve never heard of.
Why Indian Trademark Filings Commonly Fail at USPTO
1. Blind reliance on Indian clearance searches
IP India results have no predictive value in the U.S. market. This is why Indian brands selling on Amazon U.S. consistently receive refusals despite having clean Indian registrations. In fact, this is the exact problem discussed in your article Amazon Brand Registry: Do Indian Sellers Need a U.S. Trademark? — sellers often start the process too late, after discovering a USPTO objection during Brand Registry verification.
2. Ignoring how U.S. consumers pronounce the mark
USPTO examiners evaluate pronunciation the way an American consumer would read it. Names like “ZENA,” “ZEENA,” and “XINA” are phonetic twins in U.S. usage. Many Indian filings fail because applicants assume Indian pronunciation norms apply globally, which is never the case.
3. Misinterpreting U.S. classes and relatedness
A major reason for confusion objections is incorrect classification and misunderstanding how U.S. classes align with Indian ones. Unlike IP India, the USPTO interprets class coverage more broadly and views goods/services as “related” even across different classes.
To illustrate this, your article U.S. Trademark Classes Explained for Indian Brands (With India–US Mapping)explains how Indian descriptions often become too wide in the U.S., unintentionally overlapping with existing registrations. Many objections are traced back to this mismatch.
4. Filing descriptive or weak marks in a crowded market
Words like “Global,” “Prime,” “Smart,” “Tech,” and “Digital” are extremely common in U.S. filings. Even slightly similar variations are seen as confusingly close. India is more tolerant, but in the U.S., a weak mark plus broad goods/services is a recipe for refusal.
5. Underestimating how the USPTO interprets “related goods/services”
Indian applicants often assume that if classes differ, confusion won’t arise. The U.S. system flips this: the question is whether consumers might think both products come from the same source.
For instance, apparel and online fitness training, though in different classes, can still be related because U.S. lifestyle brands commonly operate in both spaces.
6. Filing without understanding U.S. procedural nuances
Most objections could have been avoided with a basic U.S.-specific clearance. This is why your detailed guide How to Register a Trademark in the U.S. from India (Step-by-Step 2025 Guide) emphasises pre-filing searches, class narrowing, and alignment with U.S. practices. The lack of these steps explains most Indian refusals.

How Indian Businesses Can Avoid a USPTO Refusal
Avoiding a USPTO refusal requires a U.S.-focused search, proper India–US class mapping, narrow specifications, a distinctive mark, and pre-filing legal review. Most confusion objections are preventable if Indian applicants analyse conflicts the way U.S. examiners and consumers do.
The smartest approach builds on three pillars:
1. Conduct a U.S.-centric trademark search
A TESS search alone is not enough. You must check pending applications, common-law use, Amazon listings, social media accounts, Google visibility, domain names, and U.S. industry-specific databases.
Indian searches cannot detect these conflicts.
2. Apply the U.S. “DuPont confusion factors”
Examining attorneys assess similarity across:
sound, spelling, meaning, commercial impression, marketing channels, and consumer sophistication.
This holistic test is why many Indian filings get rejected even when they seem visually distinct.
3. Correctly map classes and narrow specifications
Overly broad class descriptions amplify conflicts. Precise, narrow drafting reduces overlap and decreases the chance of a Section 2(d) refusal.
This directly connects with the guidance in your India–US class mapping article — Indian applicants often unknowingly pick descriptions that duplicate existing U.S. marks.
4. Strengthen the brand name before filing
Suggestive or coined marks clear faster and encounter fewer conflicts. Descriptive marks not only risk refusal but also offer weak enforceability even if accepted.
5. Use a pre-filing strategy instead of post-objection firefighting
Most Indian applicants approach counsel after receiving an Office Action. Avoid this. A deliberate approach aligned with your step-by-step U.S. trademark guide drastically increases approval rates.
FAQs
1. Does having a registered trademark in India reduce the chance of USPTO refusal?
Not really. An Indian registration gives you priority only if you file through the Madrid Protocol, but it does not influence USPTO examination. U.S. examiners treat every application as a clean slate and apply the American confusion test independently. Even a strong Indian registration can be refused in the U.S. if a similar mark already exists.
Indian founders often assume the Indian certificate gives them a “presumption of uniqueness” globally — it doesn’t. The USPTO database is far larger, older, and more crowded, especially in software, apparel, and online services.
2. Can I actually overcome a USPTO Section 2(d) “likelihood of confusion” objection?
Yes, but only in specific scenarios. You can challenge the objection by narrowing your goods/services, arguing differences in commercial impression, or evidencing that the marketplace treats the marks differently. Sometimes coexistence agreements help — but not always, because USPTO examiners are not bound to accept them.
Most objections remain difficult to overturn because the U.S. confusion standard is intentionally broad. If similarity exists in sound or meaning, examiners prefer to err on the side of refusal to protect consumers. The best results usually come when the applicant has strong distinctiveness or a tightly drafted specification.
3. Why do tech, ecommerce, apparel, and Amazon sellers face higher refusal rates?
These sectors are exploding in the U.S., which means the register is packed with similar-sounding marks. Classes 9 (software/electronics), 25 (clothing), 35 (business services), and 42 (SaaS/tech services) account for an outsized share of Section 2(d) refusals.
If you’re selling on Amazon U.S., the congestion is even worse — Amazon Brand Registry requires an active USPTO application, and many Indian sellers file without checking whether the mark is already taken in the U.S. Your linked article on Amazon Brand Registry explains why this mismatch between Indian and U.S. clearance creates repeated, preventable complications.
4. How big a role does India–US class mismatch play in U.S. trademark refusals?
A significant one. India’s classification system allows broader, umbrella-style descriptions (“Software services”, “Education services”). When these are copied into USPTO filings, they create unintended overlap with dozens of U.S. registrations.
Your India–US class mapping guide explains that the U.S. regime interprets goods/services more narrowly, and views “relatedness” more broadly. So even if the class number matches, the scope and market perception may not match at all. This mismatch is one of the most common reasons Indian applications trigger confusion objections — especially when the applicant uses broad, catch-all descriptions.
5. Is it better to rebrand in India before filing in the U.S. if my mark is weak or descriptive?
Often, yes. If your brand relies on generic words like “Prime”, “Global”, “Smart”, “Digital”, or geographical indicators, you’ll face difficulties in the U.S. market regardless of proper class mapping. A weak mark attracts more conflicts, offers poor enforceability, and creates problems during Amazon Brand Registry or future franchise/licensing expansion.
Many companies refine their branding before entering the U.S., especially when long-term scaling is planned. It’s usually more cost-effective to strengthen the mark at home than to fight an uphill battle abroad.
6. Can I rely on TESS searching alone? Or do I need a full clearance search?
TESS is essential but insufficient. Many conflicting marks exist outside the USPTO register: unregistered common-law marks, Amazon sellers, domain owners, social media brands, and business names that are commercially active but not federally registered.
The U.S. system recognises these rights. So even if your TESS search looks clean, a common-law conflict may still block your application or cause future disputes. This is why proper U.S. trademark strategy includes marketplace searches far beyond TESS.
What Smart Indian Brands Do Differently in the U.S. Market
Building a brand in the U.S. requires a shift in mindset. India’s trademark environment is structured, class-bound, and relatively forgiving, while the U.S. system is dynamic and deeply rooted in consumer perception. A mark that feels unique at home may sit dangerously close to a decade-old registration in the U.S. And in crowded sectors — SaaS, apparel, ecommerce, wellness, content platforms — the margin for error is razor thin.
The Indian businesses that succeed in the U.S. aren’t the ones with the fanciest logos or the biggest marketing budgets. They’re the ones that prepare early, search thoroughly, map classes correctly, choose distinctive names, and understand how American consumers interpret brands. With the right groundwork, the USPTO stops feeling like a roadblock and becomes a predictable part of your expansion playbook.
About the Author
Prashant Kumar is a Company Secretary, Published Author, and Partner at Eclectic Legal, where he advises businesses on trademark strategy, global brand protection, and cross-border compliance. His work includes guiding Indian companies on U.S. trademark filings, Amazon Brand Registry, and international market entry. Prashant supports organisations in building distinctive, defensible brands that can scale confidently across jurisdictions.
He can be reached at prashant@eclecticlegal.com or +91-9821008011 for discussions on U.S. IP strategy, India–US trademark planning, and global growth compliance.
