Sierra Leone 

Trademark - Sierra Leone

Register your Trademark

Register your trademark with Inventa and benefit from the following advantages:

Strategic Advice

Our specialists will review the information you provide and advise you on the best strategy to increase your chances of success in obtaining a trademark and protecting your brand.

We prepare the application

We will be in charge of all the procedings related to filing a trademark application based on the chosen strategy.

Trademark Maintenance for 10 years

Inventa keeps a close eye on every event related to your trademark.

Client Area available

We provide you a secure web based client area to manage your Intellectual Property assets.

Trademark Registration

Process

Monitor the process from the preparation for the trademark application to its maintenance phase. Inventa will accompany you every step of the way.

Sierra Leone

Trademark Details and Timeframes

Priority claim

Available

Multi Class Application

Unavailable

Well-known Trademarks

Unavailable

Body responsible for non-use cancellations

IP Office

Search with legal opinion time frame

14 days

Time until registration

4 years

Opposition Period

90 days

Use requirement period

4 years

Requirements

  •  Power of attorney, simply signed.
  •  Applicant data.
  •  Sample of the mark (not required for word marks).
  •  List of goods and/or services.
  •  Certified copy of corresponding U.K. registration if goods are of cotton and correpond to Classes 23, 24 or 25 or if registration is based on a U.K. registration.
  •  Power of attorney, simply signed.
  •  Duration: 10 years from the date of the application.
  •  Proof of renewal of basic U.K. registration (if applicable).
  •  Power of attorney, simply signed.
  •  Deed of Assignment.
  •  Power of attorney, simply signed.
  •  Certificate of change of name, with verified English translation.
  •  Power of attorney, simply signed.
  •  Proof of recordal of change of address of basic U.K. registration (if applicable).
  •  Power of attorney from the licensor and licensee, simply signed.

Latest news

OPINION

Confusion remains over the not-so-young Trademarks Act of Sierra Leone

Until mid-2020 there were no regulations drafted on the implementation of the Sierra Leone Trademarks Act 2014, nor was the date of its entry into force defined in the act that was published in the Sierra Leone Gazette (vol CXLV 53 (9 October 2014)). Although the Office of the Administrator and Registrar General (ie, the Sierra Leone Registry) informally announced in September 2018 that the new act is in effect and being enforced by the registry, no official notification has been issued thus far. Article 60(1) of the act repeals the earlier Trademarks Act (17 Cap 244 1960). Further, Article 60(2) determines that any regulation made under the repealed act and in force immediately before the commencement of the 2014 act will continue to be in force until amended or revoked. Therefore, it is uncertain as to whether formal legal processes have been followed to replace the 1960 act, amended by Act 29/1972, which was based on the UK Trademarks Act 1960. The previous act was drafted when the country was still a British colony (it became independent in 1961). Thus, the UK classification system (ie, pre-1938 system with 50 classes of goods and no recognition of services) applied. In addition, the former act did not protect collective or well-known marks or refer to the claim of priority rights under the Paris Convention. The main changes in terms of the 2014 Trademarks Act include: adoption of the Nice Classification of Goods and Services and the registration of service marks; acknowledgment of INTA agreements signed by Sierra Leone, which means recognition of international registrations since this jurisdiction is a member of the Madrid Union (the system came into force in Sierra Leone in 1999); the possibility to claim priority rights under the Paris Convention; protection of collective marks; recognition of well-known marks; renewal terms every 10 years from the application date; publication of the recordal of an assignment; full examination, publication and opposition procedures; cancellation of a trademark following five years of non-use; provisions with regard to: licensing; additional grounds for opposition; infringements (which will be extended to similar goods; damages may be awarded for infringement and intentional infringement will be a criminal offence); unfair competition; trade names; and false trade descriptions; establishment of an IP Agency, which includes a trademarks registry; and establishment of an IP tribunal, under an IP Agency Act, with powers to hear appeals and rule on invalidations, infringements and criminal offences. The changes update the legislation in line with common aspects of other countries’ trademark systems. Given the insecurity surrounding the application of this new legislation, regulation of – or at least the issuance of an official statement by the registry on – this act is urgent. This is mainly for essential issues such as the protection of service marks, collective and well-known marks, and trademark renewals.   This is a co-published article, which was originally published in the World Trademark Review (WTR).

Learn more

Send us a message