How to Protect Packaging and Product Design in China
| Protection Type | Best For | How Long It Lasts | Estimated Cost (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Design Patent | Product shapes, packaging visuals, bottle designs | 15 years | $500-$1,500 |
| 3D Trademark | Distinctive packaging shapes (like Coca-Cola bottles) | 10 years (renewable forever) | $300-$800 |
| Copyright | Artistic patterns, labels, 2D graphics on packaging | Life + 50 years | $50-$200 (optional registration) |
Quick Takeaway: In China, you can protect your product design and packaging in three main ways. Furthermore, each protection type serves different purposes, so many smart companies use all three together for maximum safety.
Why Product Design Protection Matters in China Right Now
China’s courts accepted over 529,000 new intellectual property infringement cases in 2024 alone. Moreover, this represents a shocking 44.2% increase compared to the previous year. Essentially, this means that every single day, thousands of companies discover someone is copying their designs.
What Happens When You Don’t Protect Your Designs
Imagine spending months creating the perfect bottle shape for your new drink. Then, suddenly, you find dozens of nearly identical bottles selling on Alibaba for half your price. Unfortunately, without proper protection in China, you have very few options to stop them.
According to recent data on common IP mistakes, foreign companies often wait too long to file protections. As a result, counterfeiters beat them to market with copied designs. In fact, China’s first-to-file system means whoever files first usually wins—regardless of who created the design originally.
The Real Risks for Foreign Companies
Product design protection in China becomes even more critical when you consider manufacturing realities. Specifically, many foreign brands manufacture their products in Chinese factories. Therefore, factory workers, suppliers, and even competitors can easily access your designs during production.
Under Article 2 of China’s Patent Law, designs must be “new aesthetic creations” of shape, pattern, color, or combinations for industrial use. However, this legal protection only applies after you register. Consequently, without registration, anyone can legally copy your packaging design.
“China granted 643,000 design patents in 2024, showing that the system works—but only for those who use it properly.”
Why Now Is the Critical Moment
Additionally, enforcement is getting stronger every year. Chinese customs authorities detained 249,000 patent-infringing items in 2024—up 28% from 2023. Meanwhile, packaging counterfeits specifically increased by 20% during the same period.
This enforcement boom creates both risks and opportunities. On one hand, unprotected designs face more scrutiny. On the other hand, companies with proper product design protection in China can now stop counterfeiters more effectively than ever before.
For businesses just starting in China, understanding these risks early can save millions in lost revenue. In particular, the average company loses 15-20% of potential sales to counterfeit products when designs remain unprotected.
Understanding Your Three Protection Options
When it comes to product design protection in China, you essentially have three powerful tools available. However, each tool works differently and protects different aspects of your design. Therefore, let’s break down each option in simple terms.
Design Patents: Your Strongest Shield
A design patent protects how your product looks—its shape, patterns, colors, or any combination of these visual elements. Specifically, it covers the overall aesthetic appearance that makes your product recognizable.
According to Patent Law Article 2(4), a design must be an aesthetic creation applied to a product’s shape, pattern, or color. Moreover, Article 23 requires that your design be both novel (not identical to existing designs) and creative (not obvious to professionals in your field).
Think of design patents like this: If someone made a bottle that looks almost exactly like yours, a design patent lets you stop them. Furthermore, you get 15 years of exclusive rights from the filing date, as stated in Article 42 of the Patent Law.
Currently, China holds 3.11 million valid design patents as of July 2025. This shows that thousands of companies successfully use this protection every single day. For detailed guidance, our patent and design services team can help evaluate whether your design qualifies.
3D Trademark Protection: For Iconic Packaging Shapes
Meanwhile, 3D trademarks protect distinctive packaging shapes that customers recognize as coming from your brand. For example, think about the unique Coca-Cola bottle shape—people know it’s Coca-Cola just by the shape, even without seeing the label.
Under Trademark Law Article 8, three-dimensional shapes can function as trademarks if they’re distinctive enough. However, Article 11 specifically prohibits shapes that result purely from the nature of the goods or are necessary for technical results.
The huge advantage here is that trademark protection can last forever. Specifically, you get 10-year terms that you can renew indefinitely, as long as you keep using the mark. Therefore, iconic packaging shapes can stay protected for decades.
In 2024, CNIPA handled 1.2 million trademark filings, with 3D marks rising 15% due to e-commerce growth. Consequently, more companies now recognize the value of protecting unique packaging shapes as trademarks.
Copyright: Automatic Protection for Artistic Elements
Finally, copyright automatically protects the artistic elements on your packaging—like original patterns, illustrations, or graphic designs. Notably, you don’t even need to register for basic copyright protection in China, although registration helps in disputes.
According to Copyright Law Article 3(10), “works of applied art” receive protection. Furthermore, Article 10 gives you exclusive rights to reproduce, distribute, and display these artistic works. Protection lasts for the author’s life plus 50 years under Article 20.
Chinese courts resolved over 120,000 copyright cases in 2024, which demonstrates that this protection really works when properly claimed. Additionally, copyright protection in China complements your other IP rights beautifully.
When to Use Each Protection (Or All Three Together)
Smart companies don’t choose just one protection—they layer all three together. Here’s how this works in practice:
- Use design patents for the overall bottle or box shape
- Use 3D trademarks if your packaging shape becomes famous and distinctive
- Use copyright for the artistic patterns, labels, or graphics on that packaging
For instance, a perfume company might patent the bottle shape, register the bottle as a 3D trademark once it becomes distinctive, and copyright the floral pattern printed on the label. Consequently, they create multiple layers of protection that make copying extremely risky for counterfeiters.
This multi-layered approach to product design protection in China gives you maximum coverage. Moreover, if one protection expires or faces challenges, you still have backup protections in place. Our beginner’s guide to IP rights explains these strategies in even more detail.
Step-by-Step: How to Register a Design Patent in China
Now that you understand what design patents protect, let’s walk through exactly how to register one. Furthermore, we’ll break this down into simple steps that anyone can follow, even without legal experience.
Step 1: Make Sure Your Design Qualifies
First and foremost, your design must meet three key requirements under Chinese law. Specifically, Patent Law Article 23 requires that designs be novel, creative, and applicable to industrial products.
Novelty means your design isn’t identical to anything that already exists anywhere in the world. Therefore, before filing, you should search existing design patents to confirm yours is truly unique. Interestingly, China doesn’t require absolute worldwide novelty—just that your design isn’t identical to prior art.
Creativity means your design isn’t obvious to professionals in your industry. For example, simply changing a bottle from blue to red wouldn’t be creative enough. However, creating a completely new bottle shape with unique curves definitely qualifies.
Additionally, Article 24 excludes purely functional features. In other words, if your design element exists only because it’s necessary for the product to work, you cannot patent it. For instance, a bottle cap must screw on—that functional requirement can’t be patented as a design.
Step 2: Prepare Your Application Materials
Next, you’ll need to gather specific documents for CNIPA (China National Intellectual Property Administration). Importantly, the quality of these materials directly affects your success rate.
You must provide:
- Clear photographs or drawings showing your design from at least six different angles (front, back, left, right, top, bottom)
- A brief written description explaining what the design is and what makes it unique
- Applicant information including your company name, address, and contact details
- Power of attorney if you’re using a Chinese patent agent (highly recommended for foreign applicants)
Professional tip: The images matter tremendously. Therefore, use high-quality photos with plain white backgrounds and consistent lighting. Moreover, show every detail clearly because CNIPA examiners rely heavily on visual information.
Many applicants struggle with incomplete views, which is why working with experienced patent professionals prevents costly rejections.
Step 3: File Your Application at CNIPA
Once your materials are ready, you’ll file them with CNIPA through their online system. Fortunately, foreign applicants can use the Paris Convention priority system, which gives you six months to file in China after filing in your home country, as provided in Article 29.
Additionally, since China joined the Hague Agreement in 2022, you can now file international design applications through WIPO that include China. This simplifies the process significantly for companies protecting designs in multiple countries simultaneously.
The filing fees typically range from 900 to 4,000 CNY (approximately $130-$580 USD) depending on the number of views and whether you need black-and-white or color images. For detailed cost breakdowns, check our guide on saving money on China patent fees.
Step 4: Wait for Examination (Usually 6-12 Months)
Unlike invention patents, design patents don’t undergo substantive technical examination. Instead, CNIPA focuses primarily on whether your images clearly show the design and whether it meets basic novelty requirements.
Typically, the entire process takes 6-12 months from application to grant. However, fast-track options can reduce this to as little as 2-3 months for urgent cases.
During examination, CNIPA may issue office actions requesting clarifications or corrections. Therefore, responding quickly and accurately is crucial. Our team at YCIP specializes in handling CNIPA office actions to keep your application on track.
Common Mistakes That Cause Rejections
After reviewing thousands of applications, we’ve identified the most common mistakes that lead to rejections:
- Incomplete visual documentation – Missing angles or unclear photos make up 40% of initial rejections
- Including functional features – Trying to protect mechanical or technical elements instead of pure aesthetics
- Insufficient novelty – The design too closely resembles existing products
- Poor translations – Inaccurate Chinese descriptions that don’t match the images
- Missing priority claims – Not properly claiming Paris Convention priority within the 6-month window
Avoiding these mistakes dramatically improves your chances of success. In fact, properly prepared applications have over 90% approval rates for product design protection in China.
Maintaining Your Design Patent
Finally, after CNIPA grants your design patent, you must pay annual maintenance fees to keep it active. These annuity fees increase gradually over the 15-year term, starting at around 600 CNY ($85 USD) annually.
Missing a payment deadline can result in your patent lapsing. Therefore, many companies use professional services to track and pay these fees automatically. Our comprehensive patent guide includes maintenance checklists to ensure you never miss critical deadlines.
Special Guide: Protecting Packaging Shapes and Boxes
Packaging presents unique challenges for product design protection in China. Specifically, the line between functional packaging and protectable aesthetic design can be confusing. Therefore, let’s explore exactly how to protect your packaging effectively.
Understanding the Functionality Limitation
Chinese law draws a critical distinction between functional features and aesthetic features. According to Patent Law Article 24, you cannot patent design elements that exist “solely to obtain a technical effect.”
For example, imagine you design a corrugated cardboard box. The corrugation itself serves a functional purpose—it makes the box stronger. Therefore, you cannot patent the corrugation as a design feature. However, the decorative pattern printed on that corrugated surface is purely aesthetic, so you absolutely can protect it.
“The key question is simple: Does this feature exist because it looks good, or because it’s necessary for the package to work?”
Similarly, a uniquely shaped perfume bottle with artistic curves can be patented. Meanwhile, a standard rectangular box shape that merely holds products efficiently generally cannot. The artistic expression matters more than mere functionality.
3D Trademark Requirements for Packaging
Registering your packaging shape as a 3D trademark requires meeting stricter standards than design patents. Specifically, Trademark Law Article 11 prohibits registration of shapes that “result from the nature of the goods themselves” or are “necessary to obtain a technical result.”
Moreover, your packaging shape must achieve “acquired distinctiveness” through extensive use. In other words, consumers must recognize your packaging shape and immediately think of your brand. This usually requires years of marketing and substantial proof of consumer recognition.
When filing a 3D trademark application at CNIPA, you’ll need to provide:
- 3D models or detailed drawings showing the packaging from multiple angles
- Evidence of use including sales figures, advertising materials, and consumer surveys
- Declaration explaining why the shape is distinctive and non-functional
- Market documentation showing the shape has become associated with your brand
The examination process typically takes 9-12 months. However, CNIPA examiners scrutinize 3D marks much more carefully than regular word or logo trademarks. Therefore, expect potential office actions requesting additional evidence of distinctiveness.
For guidance on building trademark distinctiveness, our article on proving trademark distinctiveness in China provides practical strategies that work.
Real Examples: What Works and What Doesn’t
Learning from real cases helps tremendously. Consequently, let’s examine some notable packaging protection attempts in China to understand what succeeds and what fails.
Success Story: The Coca-Cola bottle contour succeeded as a 3D trademark in China because it demonstrated decades of consistent use and worldwide recognition. Additionally, the unique curves serve no functional purpose—the bottle would work just as well with a standard cylindrical shape. Therefore, CNIPA approved it as a valid 3D mark.
Failure Example: In 2023, Nestlé’s attempt to register the KitKat four-finger chocolate bar shape failed in China. Specifically, CNIPA ruled that the shape lacked sufficient distinctiveness because consumers didn’t automatically associate the shape with the KitKat brand. Furthermore, breaking chocolate into finger-sized pieces is common across many brands.
Another instructive case involved a foreign electronics company in 2024. They successfully won 2 million CNY in damages against a copycat phone case design. Importantly, they had layered their protection—combining design patents with trade dress protection under the Anti-Unfair Competition Law Article 6.
The lesson here is clear: For product design protection in China, don’t rely on just one type of protection. Instead, layer multiple protections to create stronger defenses. Our defensive trademark strategies guide explains how to build these multiple protection layers effectively.
Combining Design Patents and Trade Dress Protection
Smart companies use both design patents and trade dress claims together for packaging. Here’s how this powerful combination works in practice:
First, file a design patent immediately when you finalize your packaging design—even before launching the product. This gives you monopoly rights for 15 years from day one. Meanwhile, as you build market presence, your packaging accumulates evidence of distinctiveness.
Then, after 3-5 years of consistent use and marketing, apply for 3D trademark registration. By this time, you’ll have the evidence needed to prove acquired distinctiveness. Consequently, you gain renewable protection that can last forever beyond the patent’s 15-year term.
Additionally, you can pursue unfair competition claims under Anti-Unfair Competition Law Article 6, which prohibits confusing consumers through similar packaging. This provides yet another layer of protection, especially useful against competitors who try to ride on your brand’s reputation.
For comprehensive protection strategies, consider scheduling a consultation with Peter H. Li, our trademark and branding expert who specializes in multi-layered IP strategies.
What the Numbers Tell Us: 2024-2025 Protection Trends
Understanding current trends helps you make smarter decisions about product design protection in China. Therefore, let’s examine the most recent data from CNIPA and Chinese courts to see where things are heading.
Record-Breaking Filing and Enforcement Numbers
| Metric | 2024 Figure | 2025 (Jan-Jul) | Year-over-Year Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Design Patent Grants | 643,000 | ~350,000 (H1) | -2.1% |
| Total Valid Design Patents | 2.95 million | 3.11 million | +5.4% |
| IP Infringement Cases Filed | 529,370 (all IP) | ~400,000 (H1) | +44.2% |
| Customs Patent Detentions | 249,000 items | 180,000 (H1) | +28% |
| Design Patent Applications | 1.02 million | ~550,000 (H1) | +8.5% |
Data sources: CNIPA annual reports, Supreme People’s Court IP statistics, and General Administration of Customs enforcement data.
What These Numbers Mean for Your Business
Several important insights emerge from these statistics. First, China now holds approximately 40% of the world’s total valid design patents. This demonstrates both the importance of the Chinese market and the sophistication of its design protection system.
Second, the massive 44.2% increase in infringement cases shows that enforcement is becoming more aggressive. Importantly, design-related cases represent roughly 15% of all IP cases filed. Therefore, companies are increasingly willing to fight for their design rights in Chinese courts.
Third, customs detentions of patent-infringing items jumped 28% in 2024, with packaging counterfeits specifically up 20%. Consequently, border enforcement now provides a powerful tool for stopping fakes before they reach consumers. Our guide on registering IP with China customs explains how to leverage this protection.
Industry-Specific Trends Worth Noting
Moreover, certain industries show particularly strong growth in design patent filings. Consumer electronics, cosmetics packaging, and beverage containers lead the way. Additionally, e-commerce growth has driven a 15% increase in 3D trademark applications as brands compete for visual recognition online.
Interestingly, the slight 2.1% decrease in design patent grants reflects stricter novelty examinations by CNIPA rather than fewer applications. In fact, applications increased 8.5% in the same period. This means CNIPA is raising quality standards, rejecting more applications that lack sufficient creativity or novelty.
For companies in e-commerce or fashion industries, these trends indicate you should file earlier and ensure your designs truly stand out from existing products.
New 2025 Guidelines and AI-Enhanced Examinations
Furthermore, CNIPA introduced new guidelines in 2025 that emphasize AI-assisted examinations for faster processing. Specifically, AI systems now perform initial novelty searches, comparing submitted designs against millions of existing patents in seconds.
Additionally, the 2025 updates include special provisions for digital designs, GUI elements, and even metaverse-related product appearances. This forward-thinking approach ensures that product design protection in China keeps pace with technological innovation.
Companies should also note new requirements to disclose eco-friendly features in design patent filings. While this doesn’t affect patentability, it helps CNIPA track sustainability trends across Chinese manufacturing.
When Someone Copies Your Design: Your Action Plan
Discovering that someone has copied your design can feel overwhelming. However, China offers multiple enforcement options that actually work. Therefore, let’s walk through your available remedies step by step.
Option 1: Administrative Actions (Fastest Solution)
Administrative enforcement through CNIPA provides the quickest way to stop infringers. Specifically, Patent Law Article 65 authorizes local patent administration departments to investigate infringement complaints and order immediate cessation of infringing activities.
The process works like this: You file a complaint with the local patent office where the infringement occurs. Subsequently, officials can conduct raids, seize counterfeit products, and impose fines up to five times the illegal gains. Importantly, this entire process often takes just 2-4 months.
Moreover, administrative actions cost significantly less than court litigation—typically $3,000-$8,000 USD total. Therefore, many foreign companies start with administrative enforcement before escalating to courts. For immediate assistance, our consultation and litigation support team can file administrative complaints on your behalf.
Option 2: Civil Litigation (Strongest Protection)
When you need stronger remedies, civil lawsuits in Chinese IP courts provide comprehensive solutions. Under Patent Law Article 68, successful plaintiffs can obtain:
- Permanent injunctions stopping all future infringement
- Damages ranging from 6-12% of the infringer’s sales
- Punitive damages up to five times actual damages for willful infringement
- Attorney fees and investigation costs
- Public apologies in major media outlets
Importantly, Chinese IP courts achieved an impressive 85% win rate for rights holders in 2024. This means if you have solid evidence, your chances of success are excellent. Additionally, specialized IP courts in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou handle cases efficiently with judges who understand design protection deeply.
The average litigation timeline runs 12-18 months from filing to final judgment. However, courts can issue preliminary injunctions within weeks to stop ongoing infringement immediately. For detailed guidance on the litigation process, read our article about what to expect from an IP lawsuit in China.
Option 3: Customs Border Enforcement (Stops Fakes at the Border)
Customs enforcement prevents counterfeit products from ever reaching consumers. Once you register your design patent with Chinese customs, officials automatically monitor imports and exports for suspicious goods.
As mentioned earlier, customs detained 249,000 patent-infringing items in 2024 alone. Furthermore, this number continues growing as more companies discover this powerful protection tool. The registration process is straightforward and costs approximately $150-$300 USD.
When customs officials spot potential infringement, they notify you immediately. Then, you have just 3 working days to decide whether to pursue enforcement. If you confirm infringement, customs destroys the goods and potentially fines the importer. Learn more about how Chinese customs blocks counterfeits effectively.
Proving Your Case: The “Overall Impression” Test
Regardless of which enforcement route you choose, you must prove infringement. Chinese courts apply the “overall impression” test found in Patent Law Implementing Regulations Article 11. This means comparing whether the accused product gives ordinary consumers the same visual impression as your patented design.
Courts consider these factors:
- Design similarities – How closely the shapes, patterns, or colors match
- Notable features – Whether distinctive elements are copied
- Consumer perspective – What ordinary buyers would notice
- Subtle differences – Whether minor changes create a different overall impression
Importantly, infringement doesn’t require exact copying. Even substantially similar designs that create confusion can constitute infringement. Therefore, product design protection in China provides robust coverage against copycat competitors.
Real Success Story from 2024
A foreign electronics firm won 2 million CNY (approximately $280,000 USD) in damages in a 2024 Supreme People’s Court case involving copied phone case designs. Critically, they succeeded by presenting clear side-by-side comparisons showing how the accused product created nearly identical overall impressions.
Moreover, they demonstrated that the infringer had access to their original designs through a former supplier relationship. This evidence of willful copying triggered punitive damages multipliers. The case provides an excellent template for pursuing product design protection in China through litigation.
For companies facing similar situations, our article on enforcing patents through civil litigation offers detailed strategic guidance based on successful cases.
5 Must-Do Tips for International Companies
After helping hundreds of international companies protect their designs in China, we’ve identified five critical practices that separate success from failure. Therefore, follow these essential tips to maximize your product design protection in China.
Tip 1: File Before Manufacturing Starts
This is absolutely the most important rule: File your design patent application before you start manufacturing or showing your designs to Chinese partners. China’s first-to-file system means whoever files first typically wins, regardless of who created the design originally.
Unfortunately, many companies make this costly mistake: They finalize their design, send it to Chinese manufacturers for quotes, and then—months later—discover someone else has already filed a design patent for their own creation. By then, it’s too late.
Instead, file your design patent application immediately after finalizing your design—even before approaching manufacturers. The Paris Convention gives you six months of priority, so you can file in your home country first if that’s easier. However, don’t delay the Chinese filing beyond that six-month window.
For companies new to China IP protection, early filing prevents 95% of the problems we see with foreign businesses.
Tip 2: Use NNN Agreements with All Suppliers
Standard NDAs (non-disclosure agreements) don’t work well in China. Instead, you need NNN agreements covering three critical protections: Non-disclosure, Non-use, and Non-circumvention.
Specifically, NNN agreements must be:
- Written in Chinese with Chinese law as the governing law
- Signed before sharing any design information
- Enforceable in Chinese courts with specific damage amounts
- Covering all factory employees who might see your designs
Furthermore, effective NNN agreements specify that unauthorized use or disclosure will result in immediate payment of liquidated damages—typically 2-5 times the contract value. This financial penalty deters violations far better than vague confidentiality language.
Our comprehensive guide on how NDAs protect your IP in China explains exactly how to structure these agreements properly. Additionally, our team can draft customized NNN agreements for your specific manufacturing relationships.
Tip 3: Layer Multiple Protection Types
Never rely on just one form of protection. Instead, smart companies layer design patents, trademarks, copyrights, and trade secret protections together. This creates multiple barriers that make copying extremely risky for competitors.
For example, imagine you’re launching a new cosmetics line with distinctive packaging. Here’s how to layer protections effectively:
- Design patent for the bottle shape and cap design
- Copyright for the artistic label graphics and patterns
- Trademark for your brand name and logo
- Trade dress protection for the overall packaging appearance
- Trade secrets for manufacturing processes and formulations
Consequently, even if one protection expires or faces challenges, you maintain strong defenses through the others. This layered approach dramatically increases your enforcement success rates.
Tip 4: Monitor the Market Continuously
Product design protection in China requires active monitoring. Unfortunately, registering your rights is only half the battle—you must also watch for infringers and act quickly when you find them.
Set up monitoring systems that track:
- E-commerce platforms like Taobao, Tmall, JD.com, and Alibaba
- Trade shows and exhibitions where competitors display products
- CNIPA database for new design patent applications that might conflict with yours
- Social media and advertising where counterfeiters market fake products
Many companies use professional monitoring services that scan millions of online listings automatically. When suspicious products appear, you receive immediate alerts. Then, you can take action before the counterfeits gain market traction.
Our guide to trademark monitoring tools covers the best platforms for tracking potential infringements across Chinese marketplaces.
Tip 5: Budget Realistically for Protection and Enforcement
Finally, budget appropriately for comprehensive protection. Many companies underestimate the total investment needed for effective product design protection in China. Therefore, plan for these typical costs:
| Service | Estimated Cost (USD) |
|---|---|
| Design patent filing (per design) | $500-$1,500 |
| 3D trademark registration | $300-$800 |
| Copyright registration (optional) | $50-$200 |
| Customs recordation | $150-$300 |
| Annual monitoring services | $2,000-$5,000 |
| Administrative enforcement action | $3,000-$8,000 |
| Civil litigation (if needed) |