Trade mark registration in Singapore is governed by the Trade Marks Act 1998. It is not compulsory to register a trade mark in Singapore. One may also rely on rights under the common law doctrine of "passing off" to protect a trade mark.
The Singapore Treaty on the Law of Trademarks was adopted on March 27, 2006 and came into force on March 16, 2009. Singapore acceded to the Madrid Protocol on July 31, 2000, and it came into force in Singapore on October 31, 2000. This means that an entity can file a single trademark application in Singapore and extend the trademark protection to multiple jurisdictions. Similarly, trademark owners in other Madrid Protocol member jurisdictions can extend their trademark protection to Singapore.
Applicants may file trademark registration across multiple goods and services. Prior to the passing of the Intellectual Property (Amendment) Act 2022, if the trademark examiner had objections to the application in respect of some of the goods or services, these objections may hold up the whole application. However, the Intellectual Property (Amendment) Act 2022 now allows the IPOS to partially accept an application, ie, to allow registration of trademark in respect of the goods and services that have not received any objections.