📋 Understanding China's Trademark Classification System

What is the Nice Classification?

The Nice Classification is an international system for classifying goods and services for trademark registration. Established in 1957 by the Nice Agreement, it's used by over 150 countries, including China.

Key Features:

  • 45 classes total (34 for goods, 11 for services)
  • Hierarchical structure with classes, headings, and detailed items
  • Updated every 5 years (current: 13th edition, 2025)
  • Standardized across 150+ countries

Why Classification Matters:

  • Trademark rights limited to registered classes
  • Protection only covers registered goods/services
  • Incomplete classification leaves gaps
  • Wrong classification can invalidate registration

📦 The 45 Classes Explained

Goods (Classes 1-34)

1

Chemicals

Chemicals for industry and science. Examples: Adhesives, fertilizers, industrial chemicals.

2

Paints and Varnishes

Paints, varnishes, rust preventatives. Examples: Industrial coatings, wood stains.

3

Cosmetics and Cleaning

Cosmetics, cleaning preparations, perfumes. Examples: Skincare, haircare, household cleaners.

9

Electronics

Scientific, electrical, photographic apparatus. Examples: Computers, software, cameras, smartphones.

25

Clothing

Clothing, footwear, headgear. Examples: Shirts, shoes, hats.

28

Toys and Sporting Goods

Games, toys, sporting goods. Examples: Board games, sports equipment.

Services (Classes 35-45)

35

Advertising and Business

Advertising, business management. Examples: Marketing, consulting, retail services.

42

Scientific and Technological

Scientific and technological services. Examples: IT services, research, design.

43

Services for Food and Drink

Services for providing food and drink. Examples: Restaurants, catering, hotels.

44

Medical and Beauty Care

Medical services, veterinary, hygienic. Examples: Hospitals, beauty salons, agriculture.

🎯 How to Choose the Right Classes

1

Identify Your Core Business

What products do you sell? What services do you provide? What is your primary business activity?

2

Consider Related Classes

Protect against similar businesses, cover future expansion, prevent competitors from related fields.

3

Evaluate Cost vs. Coverage

Each class requires separate fee (¥300 + agent fee). Balance coverage with budget.

4

Use RTMCN's Expertise

Deep knowledge of classification system, experience with CNIPA requirements, strategic planning capabilities.

🔄 Multi-Class Registration Strategies

🎯

Core + Related

Register core business class first, add closely related classes, expand as business grows.

🛡️

Defensive Registration

Register in classes where squatters might file, protect against competitors in related fields.

🏭

Industry Coverage

Register across entire industry value chain, cover all relevant goods and services.

🌍

Geographic Expansion

Register for international markets, consider regional variations, plan for global protection.