Oppositions
Article 8(5) EUTMR lets a reputed mark block a later EU application even for goods that are nowhere near its own — no likelihood of confusion required. For US counsel it is the EU's dilution ground, but on a lower threshold than 'fame' and with a free-riding theory the Lanham Act lacks.
Most EUIPO oppositions are built on likelihood of confusion under Article 8(1)(b) — the comparison of the signs and the comparison of the goods and services that anyone who briefs Section 2(d) cases will recognize. Article 8(5) EUTMR is the separate, more powerful ground built for reputed marks. It allows an earlier mark with a reputation to oppose a later EU trademark (EUTM) application — or an international registration designating the EU — even where the goods and services are dissimilar, and without proving any likelihood of confusion at all.
The provision has a mirror image on the enforcement side: Article 9(2)(c) EUTMR gives the owner of a reputed EUTM the corresponding right to stop later use of a similar sign. In practice, 8(5) is the registry filter and 9(2)(c) is the litigation weapon; they rest on the same conditions and the same evidence, so a strong 8(5) opposition file is also the backbone of a later infringement claim.
Article 8(5) is a ground within the ordinary EUIPO opposition — the same three-month window, the same €320 flat fee, the same cooling-off period and written procedure described at trademark opposition before the EUIPO. What changes is the substance, and it is worth pleading 8(5) alongside 8(1)(b) whenever the earlier mark can credibly claim reputation: the two grounds carry no extra official fee and cover different failure modes.
An opposition under Article 8(5) succeeds only if all of the following are made out:
The applicant can still defend on due cause — a legitimate reason for the later sign — and, if the earlier mark is old enough, can require the opponent to prove genuine use; see responding to a proof of use request. Because the whole case stands on the evidentiary file and there is no discovery, the record you file is the case.
Reputation is a question of fact. The threshold is that the earlier mark must be known by a significant part of the public concerned by the goods or services it covers, in a substantial part of the EU territory — which, for an EU trademark, can be the territory of a single sufficiently important member state (the CJEU’s PAGO standard, C-301/07).
The evidence that carries an 8(5) file is quantitative, dated, and territorial:
No single exhibit proves reputation; the Opposition Division weighs the file as a whole. The stronger the reputation shown, the easier the remaining conditions become — a powerful reputation makes the link more likely and the injury easier to accept.
The fourth condition is really three alternative harms — establishing any one is enough:
The opponent must show that one of these harms is a serious, non-hypothetical risk — supported by reasoning and evidence, not mere assertion — though actual, present injury need not be proven where a logical probability is established. Pleading the specific injury clearly, and matching it to the evidence, is what separates a winning 8(5) opposition from a boilerplate one.
Article 8(5) does not require the public to be confused about origin; it requires only that the later sign brings the reputed mark to mind — a mental “link.” That is a lower bar than confusion, but it is not presumed from reputation alone. The recognized factors are the strength of the reputation, the degree of similarity between the signs, the nature of the goods and services and how far apart the markets sit, the strength of the earlier mark’s distinctive character, and whether any likelihood of confusion exists. The greater the reputation and the closer the signs, the more readily the link — and then the injury — is accepted.
For US counsel the reference point is federal dilution under Section 43(c) of the Lanham Act (15 U.S.C. §1125(c)). The concepts rhyme, but three differences change strategy:
The practical takeaway: do not assume that a mark which fails the US “famous” test will fail in the EU. The EU analysis is independent, the threshold is lower, and the extra free-riding theory frequently carries the day.
For a US brand with genuine standing in Europe, reputation is an asset to inventory before you need it. A structured trademark watch surfaces the conflicting EU filings that an 8(5) opposition can stop, including those reaching into classes your registrations do not cover. Upstream, EU trademark registration and a proper clearance search set up the portfolio that makes reputation actionable. The same doctrine, expressed as national protection for reputed marks in France, is covered at reputed and well-known trademarks in France. See our results in reputation-based cases on the results page.
Considering a reputation-based opposition, or facing one? Contact us — we assess the file, the reputation evidence and the deadlines within days, in English.
Opposing a French trademark at the INPI: 2-month deadline, grounds, fees from €400, procedure and appeal. A guide for US counsel, by a Paris IP firm.
Opposing an EU trademark at the EUIPO: 3-month window, €320 fee, cooling-off, proof of use, Boards of Appeal. Practical guide for US in-house and firms.
Opposed in France or the EU, or facing an INPI irregularity notice? Deadlines, defense options, coexistence and limitation — a guide for US counsel.
Proof of use in France and at the EUIPO: the short opposition deadlines, what genuine use requires, and which evidence actually works.