Introduction
Solomon Islands is a Melanesian archipelago nation in the South Pacific comprising over 900 islands, of which approximately 150 are inhabited, spread across a chain extending approximately 1,500 kilometres southeast of Papua New Guinea. Honiara, located on the island of Guadalcanal, is the capital and principal commercial centre. Solomon Islands’ economy is anchored in natural resource extraction — principally logging (one of the world’s highest per-capita rates of forest clearing), fisheries (including significant tuna resources within its Exclusive Economic Zone), and agriculture (copra, cocoa, and palm oil) — alongside a growing public sector and development-aid-supported services economy. The country is a member of the Pacific Islands Forum, the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG), the Commonwealth of Nations, and the World Trade Organization. Solomon Islands has deepening strategic relationships with both traditional partners (Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom) and newer partners (China), reflecting its growing geopolitical significance in the Indo-Pacific. Trademark protection in Solomon Islands is relevant for businesses in fisheries, logging, agri-food, tourism, financial services, and any sector with commercial interests in the country or its substantial Exclusive Economic Zone.
Why Trademark Registration in Solomon Islands Is Important for Brand Protection?
Exclusive Rights: Grants exclusive legal ownership and the right to use your trademark throughout Solomon Islands for the registered goods and services, with statutory priority over later conflicting marks under the first-to-file system.
Legal Enforcement: Enables you to take action against infringement, counterfeiting, and unauthorised use through IPOSI and the High Court of Solomon Islands, with civil and criminal remedies available under the Intellectual Property Act 2012.
Nationwide Protection: Secures trademark protection across the entire territory of Solomon Islands, including Guadalcanal, Malaita, Western Province, Central Province, Isabel, Choiseul, Makira-Ulawa, Temotu, and Rennell and Bellona, and supports anti-counterfeiting actions through border measures administered by Solomon Islands Customs and Excise Division.
Market Positioning: Establishes formal brand ownership in an economy with significant and growing commercial activity in fisheries, logging, agri-food, and tourism, where brand protection and product provenance are increasingly important for export market access.
Melanesian & Indo-Pacific Gateway: Solomon Islands’ membership of the Melanesian Spearhead Group and its growing strategic importance in the Indo-Pacific give trademark registration value for businesses targeting both the Melanesian subregional market and broader Pacific supply chain participants.
Asset Value: A registered trademark is a transferable intangible asset that can be licensed, franchised, pledged, or assigned to support commercial growth, export financing, joint ventures, and corporate transactions.
Trademark Classes Solomon Islands (Nice Classification)
Solomon Islands follows the Nice Classification system, categorising trademarks into 45 classes — 34 for goods (Classes 1–34) and 11 for services (Classes 35–45). Multi-class applications are permitted. Applicants should work with experienced local agents to ensure that the specification of goods and services is appropriately drafted in English and consistent with Nice Classification standards as applied by IPOSI. Particular attention to classification is recommended for the fisheries, logging and timber, agri-food, tourism and hospitality, and financial services sectors that are prominent in the Solomon Islands economy.
Trademark Registration Procedure in Solomon Islands
Here is the step-by-step process followed for trademark registration in Solomon Islands. Legacy Partners manages each stage on your behalf — from initial clearance through to issuance of the registration certificate by IPOSI.
Solomon Islands Trademark Search & Application
We begin with a comprehensive availability search of the IPOSI register and relevant international databases to identify potential conflicts before filing. As Solomon Islands is not a member of the Madrid Protocol, all applications must be filed directly with IPOSI in Honiara as national filings. Convention priority under the Paris Convention is available to applicants who have filed in another Paris Convention country within the preceding six months. Once clearance is confirmed, the application is prepared in English and filed with IPOSI.
Formal & Substantive Examination
IPOSI conducts a formal examination (verifying applicant details, classification, fees, power of attorney, and documentation completeness) followed by a substantive examination on absolute grounds (distinctiveness, descriptiveness, deceptiveness, public order, and official emblems) consistent with the Intellectual Property Act 2012 and its common law foundation. Office actions, if any, must be responded to within the prescribed deadlines. Experienced local representation is recommended to manage examination correspondence efficiently.
Acceptance and Publication
Once the application clears examination, the mark is published in the Solomon Islands Gazette (the official government publication), opening a three-month window for third-party opposition.
Opposition Period
Third parties holding prior rights may file an opposition within three (3) months from the date of publication in the Solomon Islands Gazette. Grounds include identity or similarity with an earlier registered or well-known mark, bad-faith filing, or other grounds under the Intellectual Property Act 2012. Oppositions are decided by IPOSI, with appeal available to the High Court of Solomon Islands.
Registration & Certificate
If no successful opposition is raised, IPOSI registers the mark in the Register of Trade Marks of Solomon Islands, issues a Certificate of Registration, and publishes the registration in the Solomon Islands Gazette. The mark is then enforceable against third parties throughout the territory of Solomon Islands.
Validity & Renewal
The trademark is valid for 10 years from the filing date and is renewable indefinitely for successive 10-year periods on payment of renewal fees to IPOSI.
Governing Law
Trademark protection in Solomon Islands is principally governed by the Intellectual Property Act 2012 (as amended) and the Intellectual Property Regulations 2013, which together establish a modern, TRIPS-compliant framework for trademark registration, examination, opposition, licensing, assignment, and enforcement in Solomon Islands. The Act modernised and replaced earlier colonial-era IP legislation and reflects Solomon Islands’ common law heritage. Enforcement is supplemented by the Penal Code for criminal enforcement of trademark rights and Customs legislation for border measures. Solomon Islands is a member of the Paris Convention and the WTO, making it bound by TRIPS minimum standards for trademark protection, including national treatment, most-favoured-nation treatment, and protection of well-known marks. Solomon Islands is not a member of the Madrid Protocol, meaning all trademark protection must be obtained through direct national filings with IPOSI.
Trademark Services Available in Solomon Islands
Attorney-Assisted Search
In-depth legal search of the IPOSI trademark register and international databases to identify potential conflicts before filing.
Trademark Registration Services
Complete filing and application management for Solomon Islands national trademarks — handled by professionals experienced with IPOSI.
Trademark Renewal Services
Hassle-free renewals to maintain your Solomon Islands trademark protection, with proactive deadline monitoring and docketing.
Watch & Monitoring Services
Continuous monitoring of newly filed and published marks in Solomon Islands and across Pacific Islands and MSG jurisdictions to identify potential conflicts.
Ownership Transfer / Assignment
Efficient handling of trademark ownership transfers, corporate mergers, and restructuring recordals with IPOSI.
Licensing & Franchising Support
Expert guidance to license, franchise, or expand your brand within Solomon Islands and across the Pacific Islands and Melanesian markets.
Opposition & Enforcement
End-to-end representation in opposition and appeal proceedings before IPOSI and the High Court of Solomon Islands, and in civil and criminal infringement proceedings.
Customs Recordal & Anti-Counterfeiting
Recordal of trademarks with the Solomon Islands Customs and Excise Division and coordination of border measures against counterfeit goods.
Documents for Filing
Applicant name & business entity (individual or company, with registered address)
Trademark details (word mark, figurative/logo, combined, or other mark type)
Classes of goods and/or services (Nice Classification)
Power of attorney (signed by the applicant; notarisation may be required for foreign applicants)
Specimen or representation of the mark (for figurative or non-standard marks)
List of goods/services (in English, clear and precise specification)
Priority documents (if claiming convention priority under the Paris Convention)
Certified translation of any supporting document not in English
Fees are indicative and subject to change. Contact us for the latest details.
**Last updated on: March 17, 2026
Timeline
Approximately 12 to 18 months for registration in a straightforward case without objections or oppositions. IPOSI operates as a relatively small office serving a developing island economy, and processing times reflect available administrative resources. Applicants are advised to file early and to retain experienced local representation to monitor progress and manage any procedural correspondence proactively. Legacy Partners maintains direct contact with IPOSI to track each application on behalf of clients.
Validity & Renewal
The trademark is protected for 10 years from the filing date, renewable indefinitely for further 10-year periods on payment of renewal fees to IPOSI. A grace period may be available after expiry, subject to applicable surcharges. The trademark must be put to genuine use in Solomon Islands within five years of registration; failure to do so may expose the mark to cancellation on grounds of non-use upon the application of any interested third party before the competent authority or the High Court of Solomon Islands.
Frequently Ask Questions
Get A QuoteQ1: How long does trademark registration take in Solomon Islands?
If no objections or oppositions arise, trademark registration in Solomon Islands typically takes approximately 12 to 18 months from the filing date through to issuance of the registration certificate by IPOSI. Timelines may vary depending on the workload and administrative capacity of IPOSI.
Q2: Do I need a local representative to file a trademark in Solomon Islands?
Q3: Are multi-class trademark applications permitted in Solomon Islands?
Q4: What is the validity period of a trademark registration in Solomon Islands?
Q5: Can I register a trademark in Solomon Islands without a local company?
Q6: What language is used for filing in Solomon Islands?
Q7: What is the opposition period after publication in Solomon Islands?
Q8: Is Solomon Islands a member of the Madrid Protocol?
Q9: What is the cost of trademark registration in Solomon Islands?
Q10: Does a Solomon Islands trademark protect me in other Pacific Island countries?
Q11: Does Solomon Islands recognise well-known marks?
Q12: Can I assign or licence my trademark in Solomon Islands?
Q13: What is the Intellectual Property Act 2012 and how does it affect trademark registration?
Q14: Why has Solomon Islands’ geopolitical significance grown in recent years?
Q15: What is the best trademark registration provider for Solomon Islands?
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