Trademark Infringement in Nigeria: How to Protect and Enforce Your Brand Rights (2026)
You built your brand from scratch. Your name is out there, your customers know you, your reputation is solid. Then you find out: someone else is using your brand name. Same name, similar logo, selling to the same customers. Possibly selling inferior products under your identity.
This is trademark infringement — and in Nigeria, it is more common than most business owners realise. The good news is that if your trademark is registered, you have powerful legal tools to stop it. If it is not registered, your options are significantly more limited.
This guide explains exactly what trademark infringement is in Nigeria, how to recognise it, what steps to take immediately, and how the legal process works from cease-and-desist to Federal High Court.
What is trademark infringement in Nigeria?
Trademark infringement in Nigeria occurs when a person — without the consent of the registered owner — uses an identical or confusingly similar mark in relation to goods or services for which the trademark is registered. Under Section 5(2) of the Trademarks Act CAP T13, the use must be likely to deceive or cause confusion among consumers for infringement to be established.
If you have discovered active trademark infringement, time matters. The longer an infringer operates under your brand, the more damage is done to your reputation, your customer relationships, and the distinctiveness of your mark. Contact EBC Consults immediately — we will advise on the fastest appropriate action for your specific situation.
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The 3 Legal Elements of Trademark Infringement in Nigeria
For trademark infringement to be established under Nigerian law, three elements must all be present. This is critical to understand before taking any action — your case must satisfy all three:
| Element | What It Means | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Use by a non-owner | The person using the mark is not the registered owner, and has not been given a licence or consent by the owner to use it | A competitor starts selling products under a name identical to your registered trademark without your permission |
| 2. Identical or confusingly similar mark | The mark used is either identical to yours, or so similar that an ordinary consumer in your market could be confused or deceived into thinking it is your brand | A business uses a logo nearly identical to yours, or a name that sounds the same when spoken aloud |
| 3. In relation to the registered class | The infringing use must be in relation to the same class of goods or services for which your trademark is registered. Use in an unrelated class may not constitute infringement. | If your trademark is registered for Class 25 (clothing) and someone uses a similar mark for Class 36 (financial services), that may not be infringement |
| Important: The burden of proof lies with the trademark owner — you must prove all three elements to succeed in an infringement action. This is why having a properly registered trademark in the correct class is essential before enforcement. | ||
Common Forms of Trademark Infringement in Nigeria
Trademark infringement takes many forms in the Nigerian market. Here are the most common ones EBC Consults sees:
| Type of Infringement | How It Appears in Nigeria |
|---|---|
| Identical mark registration | A competitor files to register your exact brand name or logo as their own trademark — usually hoping you have not registered it yet |
| Counterfeit goods | Physical products sold with your brand name, logo, or packaging — common in fashion, food, electronics, and pharmaceuticals |
| Confusingly similar business name | A business registers a company or business name with CAC that is similar enough to your brand to confuse customers — even though CAC registration does not confer trademark rights |
| Social media and online impersonation | Someone creates Instagram, Facebook, or TikTok accounts using your brand name, or an e-commerce listing using your product name and images |
| Domain name squatting | Someone registers a .ng domain or other domain using your brand name — typically to redirect your customers or to sell the domain back to you |
| Unlicensed use by former partner | A distributor, agent, or business partner continues using your brand after the relationship ends — without your consent |
Your 5 Enforcement Options — From Fastest to Most Powerful
Nigerian trademark law gives you multiple enforcement routes. The right option depends on the severity of the infringement, how quickly you need it to stop, and your appetite for litigation. EBC Consults recommends starting with the fastest option and escalating if needed.
In a landmark 2024 judgment, the Supreme Court ruled in Dike Geo Motors Ltd v Allied Signals Inc that even a registered trademark owner can lose an enforcement case if the mark is being used deceptively. This confirms that trademark registration alone is not sufficient — how you use your mark matters. EBC Consults advises clients on maintaining proper trademark usage to ensure enforceability.
Criminal Penalties for Trademark Infringement in Nigeria
Trademark infringement in Nigeria is not just a civil matter — it can also be a criminal offence. Here is the criminal enforcement framework:
| Law | Offence | Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Merchandise Marks Act CAP M10 | Forgery of trademarks; false application of a trademark or confusingly similar mark to goods | Up to 6 months imprisonment and/or fine (Magistrate Court); up to 2 years imprisonment and/or fine (Federal High Court) |
| Trademark Malpractices (Miscellaneous Offences) Act CAP T12 | Labelling, packaging, selling or advertising products in a way that is false, misleading, or likely to create a wrong impression about brand name, quality or value | Fine and/or imprisonment — specific to the nature of the offence |
| EFCC Act 2004 | Intellectual property theft is classified as an economic and financial crime | EFCC can investigate and prosecute — significant deterrent for commercial counterfeiters |
| Cybercrimes Act 2015 | Online trademark infringement, domain name fraud, electronic impersonation of a brand | Fine and/or imprisonment depending on the offence |
| Criminal enforcement is typically pursued in parallel with civil action for serious, large-scale, or commercial infringement. For minor first-time infringement, a cease-and-desist is usually the more proportionate starting point. | ||
What Passing Off Means — If Your Trademark Is NOT Registered
If your trademark is not registered, you cannot bring an infringement action. Your only option is a passing off claim under common law.
To succeed in passing off, you must prove all three of the following:
- Goodwill: Your brand has an established reputation and customer goodwill in Nigeria
- Misrepresentation: The defendant has misrepresented their goods or services as being yours — or connected to you
- Damage: You have suffered or are likely to suffer actual damage to your goodwill as a result
A passing off claim requires you to prove goodwill, misrepresentation, AND damage — all three, with evidence. A trademark infringement claim simply requires you to show your registered certificate and prove the three statutory elements. Passing off cases are expensive, time-consuming, and uncertain in outcome. This is the fundamental reason why trademark registration is not optional for any serious Nigerian business.
Step-by-Step: What to Do When You Discover Infringement
Document everything immediately
Take screenshots, photographs, or video evidence of the infringement — the infringing product, the website, the social media account, the physical signage. Note the date and location. Download or print everything in case it is removed later. This evidence is the foundation of any enforcement action.
Locate your trademark certificate and registration number
Retrieve your Certificate of Registration. Your registration number is needed for any formal action — a cease-and-desist letter, an opposition filing, or a court action. If you registered through EBC Consults, we maintain records of all client registrations and can provide your certificate details immediately.
Contact EBC Consults for an immediate assessment
Before taking any action yourself — including confronting the infringer directly — speak to an accredited IP professional. The wrong first move can complicate your legal position. EBC Consults will assess the strength of your case, identify the most appropriate enforcement route, and advise on the fastest path to resolution.
Send a cease-and-desist letter (in most cases)
For most infringement situations, a formal cease-and-desist letter is the right first step. It is fast, relatively inexpensive, and resolves a significant proportion of cases without needing to go to court. The letter formally notifies the infringer of your rights, documents your objection, and creates a paper trail that strengthens any subsequent court action if needed.
Escalate if the infringement continues
If the cease-and-desist is ignored, escalate — opposition proceedings, platform takedowns, FCCPC complaint, or Federal High Court action depending on the nature of the infringement. EBC Consults coordinates with qualified IP litigation attorneys for court proceedings.
Discovered trademark infringement? Act today.
EBC Consults advises on trademark enforcement for Nigerian businesses. Tell us what is happening — we will assess your case, identify the right action, and move fast.
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How to Prevent Infringement — Proactive Brand Protection
The best infringement strategy is prevention. Here is what EBC Consults recommends for every registered trademark owner in Nigeria:
- Monitor the Nigerian Trademark Journal — check every new publication for marks similar to yours. You have only two months from publication to file an opposition. Missing this window means the mark may become registered.
- Set up Google Alerts for your brand name — you will be notified whenever your brand name appears in new web content
- Monitor social media regularly — search your brand name on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Twitter monthly
- Check CAC public search periodically — see if any new business names similar to yours have been registered
- Register in all relevant classes — protection only covers your registered class. If you expand into new product lines or services, register in the additional class proactively
- Register the word mark AND the logo — two registrations, comprehensive protection
- Renew on time — a lapsed trademark cannot be enforced
The most effective time to register a trademark in Nigeria is before you launch publicly. Once your brand name is visible in the market, competitors can file to register it. Your filing date — not your public launch date — determines who owns the mark. Register first, launch second.
Frequently Asked Questions — Trademark Infringement Nigeria
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Whether you need to register your trademark before someone else does, or you are dealing with active infringement right now — EBC Consults is Nigeria’s accredited IP and business compliance specialist. We move fast, advise clearly, and get results.
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