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Your brand is your most important asset. Dive into Indie Law’s resources to guide you through the maze of trademark law and keep your brand safe from copycats and infringers!

Nike’s Bronny James Trademark Rejected: A “Likelihood of Confusion” Case Explained

Nike just had its trademark application rejected for Bronny James’ “B9” logo, and the reason is something most business owners completely misunderstand. The United States Patent and Trademark Office refused the application because of a “likelihood of confusion” with an existing trademark owned by Back9 Golf Apparel, a Texas based company. Both marks were filed for clothing and apparel, which made the issue much more serious. According to the USPTO, the logos are similar enough that consumers could believe the products come from the same source. That is all it takes to get denied. Not an exact copy. Not bad intent. Just the potential for confusion.

This is where most people get trademark law wrong. They assume that if they are not copying a brand exactly, they are safe. They think changing a font, adding a design element, or tweaking a name is enough. It is not. Trademark law looks at the overall commercial impression of a brand. If two marks feel similar in the real world, especially when used on the same type of product, there is a high chance of rejection.

Even Nike ran into this problem. That should tell you how common this issue really is.

Bronny James’ situation is getting attention because of his name and platform, but the legal principle applies to everyone. Whether you are launching a clothing brand, building a personal brand, or starting an ecommerce business, the same rules apply. You do not get extra protection because you are new, and you do not get a pass because you were unaware of an existing trademark.

What made this case more straightforward for the USPTO is the category. Both Nike’s “B9” logo and Back9’s registered mark are tied to clothing and apparel. That overlap matters more than most people realize. When trademarks are used in the same industry, the bar for what counts as “confusingly similar” gets much lower. A name or logo that might survive in two unrelated industries can easily get rejected when both are selling similar products.

There is also a timing issue that works against Nike. Back9 began using its “B9” mark in 2020 and secured federal registration in 2022. In trademark law, priority matters. The first to use and register a mark generally has stronger rights. Once that registration is in place, it becomes a major obstacle for anyone trying to register something similar later.

This is not a rare situation. According to USPTO data, “likelihood of confusion” is one of the most common reasons trademark applications are refused. Thousands of applications face this issue every year. Many of those applicants have already invested in branding, logos, packaging, and marketing before discovering there is a problem. By that point, fixing it becomes expensive.

Here is what “likelihood of confusion” really means in plain English. If a customer sees two brands and reasonably thinks they are connected, affiliated, or come from the same company, there is a problem. That confusion does not have to be proven with actual mistakes. The possibility alone is enough.

For example, if you launch a brand called “FitNine” selling athletic apparel, and there is already a “Fit9” brand in the same space, changing the spelling will not save you. If the sound, look, and meaning are close enough, the USPTO can still reject your application. The same logic applies to logos. Stylized letters, fonts, and design tweaks do not override similarity in the core mark.

Nike now has a few options. The company can respond to the refusal and argue that the marks are different enough. It can try to narrow the scope of the application or adjust the design. It could also attempt to reach an agreement with the existing trademark owner. In some cases, these strategies work. In others, they do not, and the brand has to pivot.

For most businesses, the bigger lesson is what should happen before filing. A proper trademark clearance search is critical. This goes beyond a quick Google search or checking if a domain name is available. It involves reviewing federal registrations, pending applications, and even unregistered common law uses that could create risk.

Skipping that step is where most problems begin. Businesses fall in love with a name or logo, invest in it, and only later realize it is too close to something that already exists. At that point, they are forced to choose between fighting a legal battle or starting over.

The Bronny James situation is a high profile example, but the takeaway is simple. If a company like Nike can run into a trademark refusal over similarity, anyone can. Trademark law is not about creativity alone. It is about distinctiveness and separation in the marketplace.

Before you build a brand, make sure you can actually own it. That means choosing something unique, clearing it properly, and thinking beyond design into legal risk. Because in the end, the question is not whether you like your brand. It is whether you can protect it.

How to Protect Your Brand Before You Launch It

Most entrepreneurs do not lose their brand because of competition. They lose it because they did not protect it early enough.

It happens more often than people think. A founder picks a name, builds a logo, launches a website, and starts getting traction. Then a legal issue shows up. The name is already taken or too similar to an existing trademark. Now everything has to change.

Rebranding is not just frustrating. It is expensive. It can cost thousands of dollars in design, lost traffic, and momentum. In some cases, it can stop a business completely.

At the same time, the United States sees hundreds of thousands of trademark applications filed every year. That means the chances of name conflicts are only increasing. On the other side, more than 90 percent of startups fail, often because they struggle with positioning, visibility, or strategy.

So founders are dealing with two risks at once. They need to protect their brand legally, and they need to launch it in a way that actually generates revenue.

Most people handle these as separate problems. That is where things break down.

A typical path looks like this. You hire a trademark attorney to file paperwork. Then later, you try to figure out branding, messaging, and how to launch. There is no connection between the two steps. No clear system. Just a lot of guesswork.

The problem is that these decisions are not separate. They affect each other from the beginning. A brand name is not just a legal asset. It is also a marketing asset. If it is not viable on both sides, the entire business is at risk.

That is why Indie Law and 52Launch work together.

This is not just a partnership. It is a more complete way to build a brand. Instead of treating legal protection and launch strategy as two disconnected steps, this approach connects them from day one.

Indie Law focuses on protecting your brand the right way before you invest in it. That means confirming your name is actually available, filing your trademark correctly, and helping you avoid costly legal problems later. This step creates a solid foundation so you are not building on something that could collapse.

From there, 52Launch helps you turn that protected brand into something real in the market. That includes positioning, messaging, and a clear go to market strategy. Instead of guessing what might work, you move forward with a plan designed to attract attention and drive revenue.

Think about the difference in outcomes.

One founder skips the legal step or rushes through it. They invest in branding and launch quickly. A few months later, they run into a conflict and have to start over. Time is lost. Money is wasted. Momentum disappears.

Another founder takes a different path. They validate and protect their brand first. Then they build and launch with a clear strategy behind it. Every step supports the next. There is less risk and more direction.

The second path is not just safer. It is more efficient.

This is what makes the Indie Law and 52Launch approach different. It is not about filing a trademark or launching a brand in isolation. It is about creating a system that connects protection directly to growth.

Too many entrepreneurs treat trademarks like a simple task to check off a list. In reality, your trademark is the foundation of your brand. If that foundation is weak, everything built on top of it is at risk.

At the same time, a protected brand that never reaches the right audience does not create value. You need both sides working together.

If you are planning to launch a brand, the timing matters. The decisions you make early on will either protect your progress or create problems later.

The smarter move is to handle both from the start. Protect your brand before you invest heavily in it, and build a launch strategy that gives it a real chance to succeed.

If you want to avoid costly mistakes and move forward with clarity, this is where to begin.

Work with Indie Law to secure your trademark the right way. Then partner with 52Launch to bring your brand to market with a clear strategy.

Start here:https://52launch.com/trusted-chicago-trademark-attorney-52launch

When Can I Start Using the TM or ® Symbols?

We get this question constantly. And the answer is simpler than most people expect, but the consequences of getting it wrong are worse than most people realize.

Short version: you can start using TM right now. The ® symbol? You have to earn that one.


TM: No Permission Required

The TM symbol isn’t regulated by anyone. There’s no form, no application, no fee. You place it next to your brand name, logo, or slogan, and you’re done. That’s it.

All it does is signal to the world that you’re claiming this as your trademark. Think of it as planting a flag. It doesn’t give you federal protection. It doesn’t mean your mark is registered. But it tells competitors you consider this mark yours, and sometimes that alone is enough to keep someone from copying you.

If you’re offering services, you’ll sometimes see SM (service mark) used instead. Either way, no approval needed.


®: Only After Registration

Different story. The ® symbol means your trademark has been officially registered with the USPTO. Using it before that happens isn’t just premature. It’s potentially illegal.

Federal law prohibits the use of ® on marks that aren’t registered. If you use it on an unregistered mark and that fact comes up in a dispute, it can be used against you. Courts have denied damages to trademark owners who falsely used ®, treating it as fraud on the public.

Not a technicality. A real risk.


Pending Application? Still Use TM.

This is where people trip up. A pending application does not give you the right to use ®. Your application could sit with the USPTO for 8 to 14 months, sometimes longer. During that entire window, you should be using TM.

Only switch to ® after the USPTO issues your official registration certificate. Not when you file. Not when you pass examination. Not when your mark gets published in the Official Gazette. After registration.


Placement

Superscript, upper-right corner of the mark. You don’t need to include it every single time the mark appears. First mention or most prominent placement is standard.

Your website, social media profiles, packaging, and marketing materials are the places that matter most. Be consistent.


The Mistake We Keep Seeing

Business owners slap ® on their brand the moment they file, thinking the application itself gives them the right. It doesn’t. And if someone challenges your mark later, premature ® usage can weaken your position or get your claims thrown out.

We’ve had clients come to us mid-dispute where the other side pointed to the premature ® as evidence of bad faith. Completely avoidable.

Use TM freely. Use ® only after registration. No gray area. If you’re unsure where your application stands, a trademark attorney can answer that in five minutes, before it becomes a problem that takes months to unwind.

What If I Decide to Not Apply After Seeing My Search Report?

It happens more often than you’d think. You order a trademark search, you’re excited about the name, and then the results come back showing someone else is already using something similar. Or worse, they’ve registered it.

Nobody wants that news. But it’s exactly the kind of news you need before you pour thousands into branding, packaging, and marketing around a name you might not be able to protect.


A Search Report Isn’t a Rejection

A trademark search is not a denial from the USPTO. It’s an analysis of what’s already out there: registered trademarks, pending applications, common law uses, sometimes domain names and business filings.

The purpose is to surface potential conflicts before you file. Risk assessment, not verdict.

Sometimes the conflicts are obvious and filing would be a waste. Other times the results are more nuanced. Maybe the existing mark is in a completely different industry. Maybe it’s been abandoned. Maybe the overlap is minor enough to argue around. That’s where having an attorney review the results matters, because the raw data doesn’t tell the whole story.


When Walking Away Is the Right Call

If the search turns up a registered mark that’s identical or very close to yours, in the same or a related industry, and it’s actively being used? Walking away is usually the smart move.

This is the search doing its job.

Think about the alternative. You file anyway, pay the government fees, wait 8 to 12 months, and then get an office action citing the exact conflict you could have caught early. Or you build a whole brand around the name, get traction, and then a cease and desist letter shows up.

A search costs a fraction of what a rebrand costs.


What Happens to the Money You Already Spent

At Indie Law, the search is a separate step from the application. If you decide not to move forward after reviewing your results, you haven’t burned your application fees, because you haven’t filed one.

You spent money on intelligence. That’s a good investment even when the intelligence tells you to pivot.


What to Do Next

If the search rules out your first choice, you’ve got options. Sometimes a small tweak to the name, adding a word, changing the phrasing, can create enough distance from the existing mark. Your attorney can tell you whether a modification is likely to clear.

If the conflict is too close, it may be time to go back to the drawing board. Frustrating, yes. But infinitely better than building on a name someone else owns.

And once you have a new direction, run another search before filing. Don’t skip it because you’re eager.

Deciding not to file isn’t a setback. It’s a smart business decision. You paid for clarity and you got it. The worst move is ignoring a problematic result and filing anyway, hoping it works out. Hope is not a trademark strategy.

What If I Live Outside the United States?

If you’re running a business that sells to US customers, or plans to, you can absolutely register a trademark with the USPTO from another country.

But there’s a requirement that trips up a lot of international applicants.


You Need a US-Licensed Attorney

Since August 2019, the USPTO has required all applicants domiciled outside the US to be represented by a US-licensed attorney. Not optional. You cannot file or maintain a trademark application on your own if you live abroad.

The rule exists because the USPTO saw a wave of fraudulent and inaccurate filings from foreign applicants, many submitted by unauthorized agents who didn’t understand US trademark law. The attorney requirement cleaned that up.

Doesn’t matter if you’re a sole proprietor or a corporation. If the business is based outside the US, you need US counsel.


How It Works for International Clients

At Indie Law, we work with clients around the world. The process is largely the same as for US-based clients, with a few extra considerations.

The USPTO requires your actual domicile address on the application. Not a PO box, not a registered agent. Your real address, whether that’s in Canada, the UK, Australia, or anywhere else.

International applicants also have additional filing options. If you already hold a trademark registration in your home country, you may be able to file in the US based on that foreign registration under Section 44(e). Or if you have a pending foreign application, Section 44(d) may apply. Both can streamline the process.

If you’re filing on a use-in-commerce basis, you need to show the mark is being used in connection with goods or services in the US. Selling to American customers through an e-commerce site counts. You don’t need a physical location here.


What About Protection in Multiple Countries?

A US trademark registration only protects you in the United States. If you’re doing business in multiple countries, you need protection in each one.

The Madrid Protocol lets you file a single international application through WIPO that designates multiple countries, including the US. It can be more cost-effective than filing separately in each country, though it has its own complexities.

The other option is filing directly in each country. Every country has its own trademark office, its own rules, its own fees.


Mistakes International Applicants Keep Making

Filing without a US attorney. We see this constantly. Someone files on their own, the application gets flagged, and now they need counsel to clean up the mess. Costs more than doing it right the first time.

Assuming a foreign trademark covers the US. It doesn’t. Trademark rights are territorial. A registration in the UK, Canada, or the EU gives you zero protection in the American market.

Using an online filing service instead of an actual attorney. Filing services aren’t law firms. They can submit paperwork. They can’t give legal advice, respond to office actions, or represent you in a dispute.

Living outside the US doesn’t stop you from getting a US trademark. You just need the right legal team handling the filing. The process is straightforward when it’s done properly from the start.

Are Government Filing Fees Included in Indie Law’s Packages?

Fair question. Trademark pricing can be confusing, especially when some firms bundle everything together and others list fees separately without explaining what goes where.


Two Separate Costs

Every trademark application involves two distinct expenses.

There’s what you pay Indie Law for our work: the search, application prep, filing, and communication with the USPTO on your behalf. That’s our attorney fee.

Then there’s what the USPTO charges to process your application. That money goes to the federal government, not to us. That’s the government filing fee.

Two different line items. Two different purposes.


Indie Law’s flat-fee packages cover our attorney services. Government filing fees are separate and paid directly to the USPTO when we file.

We’re upfront about this because we don’t believe in hidden costs. When you work with us, you know exactly what our fees are and exactly what the USPTO fees are before anything gets filed.

As of 2025, the standard USPTO filing fee under multiple classes means $350 per class, per application.


Why We Don’t Bundle

Some trademark services, especially the low-cost online filing companies, advertise a single price and bury the government fee in the fine print. You think you’re paying $199 for a trademark, and then the total at checkout is $549.

Other firms wrap everything into one number, which sounds cleaner but often means you’re paying a premium for not seeing the breakdown.

We think you should know what you’re paying for. The government fee is the same regardless of which attorney you hire. Our job is to make sure your application is done right so that fee isn’t wasted.


Other Government Fees That Might Come Up

The initial filing fee isn’t the only one. Depending on how your application progresses, a few others may apply.

If you filed on an intent-to-use basis, there’s a fee when you submit your Statement of Use proving you’re using the mark in commerce. If you need more time before submitting that proof, each six-month extension has a fee.

After registration, you’ll have maintenance filings due between years 5 and 6, then every 10 years. Each of those has a government fee too.

We walk clients through all of this before they commit. No surprises.

If you’ve been burned by vague pricing or checkout-page surprises from other services, that’s exactly why we do things differently. You’ll always know the full cost before we file anything.

Text reads: "A small designer beat Katy Perry in a 17-year Trademark Battle. Here's what that means for your brand." Indie Law logo on left, blue geometric background.

Content

    A Small Designer Beat Katy Perry in a 17-Year Trademark Battle. Here’s What That Means for Your Brand

    What would you do if a global pop star’s legal team sent you a cease-and-desist letter — and told you to stop using your own name?

    That’s exactly what happened to Katie Perry, an Australian fashion designer who built a clothing brand from the ground up in Sydney. Her brand. Her name. Her business.

    When that letter arrived in 2009, she had a choice: back down, or fight.

    She fought. And in March 2026, nearly 17 years later, Australia’s highest court ruled in her favor, 3–2, against one of the most famous pop stars in the world.

    It sounds like celebrity drama. But for entrepreneurs and business owners? This case is a masterclass in how trademark law actually works — and why registering your brand early might be the most important thing you do for your business.


    The Background: Two Perrys, One Name

    The dispute centers on two people with nearly identical names:

    • Katy Perry — the global pop star behind hits like Firework and Roar
    • Katie Perry — an Australian fashion designer (born Katie Jane Perry, later known as Katie Taylor) who launched her clothing brand in Sydney in 2007

    Same name. Completely different industries. And a legal fight that would take nearly two decades to resolve.

    The designer launched “Katie Perry” as a clothing brand first, and registered the trademark. Around the same time, the pop star was breaking out internationally with “I Kissed a Girl.”

    The singer had already adopted the stage name Katy Perry. But in Australia, specifically in the clothing industry, the designer had arrived first. That single detail would become the foundation of her case.


    When the Legal Battle Began

    Katie Perry (the designer) wasn’t looking for a fight. She was running a small clothing brand in Sydney, the kind of business built on hard work, not headlines.

    Then the letter arrived.

    In 2009, as the pop star prepared for her first Australian tour, her legal team sent a cease-and-desist demanding the designer stop using the name “Katie Perry” for her clothing line.

    The designer refused. She kept selling under the brand name she had already registered — because legally, that name was hers.

    For years, the issue stayed unresolved while both sides continued operating. Then, in 2019, the designer went on the offensive, filing a lawsuit alleging that Katy Perry’s merchandise—including clothing sold at Australian concerts—violated her trademark rights.

    That lawsuit kicked off the long chain of court battles that would eventually reach Australia’s highest court.


    How the Courts Ruled

    The case moved through multiple levels of the Australian court system, and the outcome flipped more than once.

    2023: The Designer Wins

    The Federal Court of Australia ruled that Katy Perry’s merchandise had infringed the designer’s trademark, specifically, clothing sold during Australian tours.

    2024: The Singer Wins on Appeal

    The victory didn’t last. An appeals court reversed course and ruled in favor of the singer, finding that Katy Perry had established a strong enough reputation in Australia that the designer’s trademark might even be subject to cancellation.

    2026: The High Court Has the Final Say

    The designer appealed to the High Court of Australia and won, 3–2.

    The court found:

    • The designer’s trademark was valid
    • It did not mislead consumers
    • It did not damage the singer’s reputation
    • The singer’s companies had infringed the designer’s registered trademark when selling certain merchandise

    Why the Designer Won — And What It Means for You

    Here’s where most articles stop at the legal summary. We’re not going to do that because the real value of this case isn’t what happened in court. It’s what it means for your brand, right now.

    1. She filed early. You should too.

    You’re building something right now. A name, a brand, a reputation. The moment that name starts to matter to you, the moment you’d be devastated to lose it, that’s when you file. Not when you’re bigger. Not when you have more time. Not “eventually.”

    Now.

    The designer launched her clothing brand in 2007 and registered her trademark shortly after. That single decision gave her legal standing that held up for nearly 17 years against a global pop star with virtually unlimited resources. Early registration is one of the most powerful things you can do for your brand.

    2. Filing in the right category matters.

    Katy Perry eventually registered her stage name as a trademark in Australia. But not for clothing. Her registrations mainly covered music recordings and entertainment services.

    Trademarks are registered by specific categories called “classes.” Clothing is one class. Music is another. Entertainment services are another. If you’re not registered in the right class for your actual business, you have a gap in your protection — and someone else can exploit it.

    This is one of the most common mistakes entrepreneurs make when they try to handle trademarks on their own. Getting the classes right from the start is part of what we do for every client.

    3. Fame doesn’t win trademark disputes. Registration does.

    Let’s be honest: most people assume the celebrity wins these things. Better lawyers, bigger budget, more name recognition. Case closed, right?

    Wrong.

    Trademark law doesn’t have a fame exception. The High Court ruled that shoppers were unlikely to confuse a small Australian clothing brand with a global pop star, and the designer’s earlier, properly registered trademark was held.

    If that doesn’t make you feel a little better about going up against larger competitors in your industry, we don’t know what will.


    A True David vs. Goliath Story

    The case attracted global attention partly because of the contrast. On one side: a pop star with virtually unlimited legal resources. On the other: a small business owner in Sydney who just wanted to keep her name.

    The designer has described the fight as being about more than her brand, but proving that small businesses have real legal rights worth defending.

    To be clear: we root for all our clients. But we’d be lying if we said there wasn’t something satisfying about watching a well-filed, well-timed trademark registration hold up for 17 years — against all odds, and all resources.

    And if a small clothing designer can defend her trademark against a global pop star and win? Your brand is absolutely worth protecting, too.


    Wondering if your brand is protected or at risk? Book a free brand protection consultation with our team. We’ll walk you through exactly where you stand.


    What Happens Next in the Case

    The High Court ruling settled the core issue, but the case isn’t entirely over. Some remaining questions, including whether the designer waited too long to file her infringement claims, are being sent back to a lower court for further review.

    The key outcome stands: the designer keeps her “Katie Perry” clothing trademark.


    The Bottom Line

    The Katy Perry vs. Katie Perry dispute may read like celebrity gossip. But after nearly two decades of litigation, Australia’s highest court confirmed something trademark attorneys have always known: trademark rights come down to registration, timing, and the right categories. Not fame. Not resources. Not how many people know your name.

    Just who filed first and who filed correctly.


    Your Brand Deserves Protection Before It Becomes a Battle

    Katie Perry, the designer, spent 17 years defending a trademark she filed early and filed correctly. You don’t have to fight that battle. You just have to start before someone else does.

    At Indie Law, we’ve helped 1,500+ entrepreneurs protect what they’ve built with a 99.7% success rate and flat-fee pricing so you always know what you’re investing. We handle the search, the filing, and everything in between.

    Book your free brand protection consultation today 


    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does being famous automatically win a trademark dispute?

    No, and this case proves it. Trademark law is based on registration, timing, and the specific categories of goods and services involved. Fame and resources can help fund a legal battle, but they can’t override a well-filed, earlier trademark registration.

    Do I need a trademark if I’m a small business?

    Especially if you’re a small business. Without a registered trademark, you could be forced to rebrand, even if you’ve been using your name for years. A federal trademark registration is what gives you the legal standing to defend your brand.

    What are trademark classes, and why do they matter?

    Trademarks are registered for specific categories of goods and services called “classes.” Registering in the wrong class, or missing a class you actually operate in, can leave your brand exposed. This is one of the most common filing mistakes, and it’s exactly what a trademark attorney helps you avoid. How long does the trademark process take? The process typically takes 9–12 months minimum, and sometimes longer. The sooner you file, the sooner your rights are established even while the application is still pending.

    Ready to Talk Through Your Trademark Questions?

    Get clear, friendly guidance so you can protect your brand with confidence.

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    Our Latest Blog

    Your brand is your most important asset. Dive into Indie Law’s resources to guide you through the maze of trademark law and keep your brand safe from copycats and infringers!

    Nike’s Bronny James Trademark Rejected: A “Likelihood of Confusion” Case Explained

    How to Protect Your Brand Before You Launch It

    When Can I Start Using the TM or ® Symbols?

    What If I Decide to Not Apply After Seeing My Search Report?

    What If I Live Outside the United States?

    Are Government Filing Fees Included in Indie Law’s Packages?

    Text reads: "A small designer beat Katy Perry in a 17-year Trademark Battle. Here's what that means for your brand." Indie Law logo on left, blue geometric background.

    Content

      A Small Designer Beat Katy Perry in a 17-Year Trademark Battle. Here’s What That Means for Your Brand

      What would you do if a global pop star’s legal team sent you a cease-and-desist letter — and told you to stop using your own name?

      That’s exactly what happened to Katie Perry, an Australian fashion designer who built a clothing brand from the ground up in Sydney. Her brand. Her name. Her business.

      When that letter arrived in 2009, she had a choice: back down, or fight.

      She fought. And in March 2026, nearly 17 years later, Australia’s highest court ruled in her favor, 3–2, against one of the most famous pop stars in the world.

      It sounds like celebrity drama. But for entrepreneurs and business owners? This case is a masterclass in how trademark law actually works — and why registering your brand early might be the most important thing you do for your business.


      The Background: Two Perrys, One Name

      The dispute centers on two people with nearly identical names:

      • Katy Perry — the global pop star behind hits like Firework and Roar
      • Katie Perry — an Australian fashion designer (born Katie Jane Perry, later known as Katie Taylor) who launched her clothing brand in Sydney in 2007

      Same name. Completely different industries. And a legal fight that would take nearly two decades to resolve.

      The designer launched “Katie Perry” as a clothing brand first, and registered the trademark. Around the same time, the pop star was breaking out internationally with “I Kissed a Girl.”

      The singer had already adopted the stage name Katy Perry. But in Australia, specifically in the clothing industry, the designer had arrived first. That single detail would become the foundation of her case.


      When the Legal Battle Began

      Katie Perry (the designer) wasn’t looking for a fight. She was running a small clothing brand in Sydney, the kind of business built on hard work, not headlines.

      Then the letter arrived.

      In 2009, as the pop star prepared for her first Australian tour, her legal team sent a cease-and-desist demanding the designer stop using the name “Katie Perry” for her clothing line.

      The designer refused. She kept selling under the brand name she had already registered — because legally, that name was hers.

      For years, the issue stayed unresolved while both sides continued operating. Then, in 2019, the designer went on the offensive, filing a lawsuit alleging that Katy Perry’s merchandise—including clothing sold at Australian concerts—violated her trademark rights.

      That lawsuit kicked off the long chain of court battles that would eventually reach Australia’s highest court.


      How the Courts Ruled

      The case moved through multiple levels of the Australian court system, and the outcome flipped more than once.

      2023: The Designer Wins

      The Federal Court of Australia ruled that Katy Perry’s merchandise had infringed the designer’s trademark, specifically, clothing sold during Australian tours.

      2024: The Singer Wins on Appeal

      The victory didn’t last. An appeals court reversed course and ruled in favor of the singer, finding that Katy Perry had established a strong enough reputation in Australia that the designer’s trademark might even be subject to cancellation.

      2026: The High Court Has the Final Say

      The designer appealed to the High Court of Australia and won, 3–2.

      The court found:

      • The designer’s trademark was valid
      • It did not mislead consumers
      • It did not damage the singer’s reputation
      • The singer’s companies had infringed the designer’s registered trademark when selling certain merchandise

      Why the Designer Won — And What It Means for You

      Here’s where most articles stop at the legal summary. We’re not going to do that because the real value of this case isn’t what happened in court. It’s what it means for your brand, right now.

      1. She filed early. You should too.

      You’re building something right now. A name, a brand, a reputation. The moment that name starts to matter to you, the moment you’d be devastated to lose it, that’s when you file. Not when you’re bigger. Not when you have more time. Not “eventually.”

      Now.

      The designer launched her clothing brand in 2007 and registered her trademark shortly after. That single decision gave her legal standing that held up for nearly 17 years against a global pop star with virtually unlimited resources. Early registration is one of the most powerful things you can do for your brand.

      2. Filing in the right category matters.

      Katy Perry eventually registered her stage name as a trademark in Australia. But not for clothing. Her registrations mainly covered music recordings and entertainment services.

      Trademarks are registered by specific categories called “classes.” Clothing is one class. Music is another. Entertainment services are another. If you’re not registered in the right class for your actual business, you have a gap in your protection — and someone else can exploit it.

      This is one of the most common mistakes entrepreneurs make when they try to handle trademarks on their own. Getting the classes right from the start is part of what we do for every client.

      3. Fame doesn’t win trademark disputes. Registration does.

      Let’s be honest: most people assume the celebrity wins these things. Better lawyers, bigger budget, more name recognition. Case closed, right?

      Wrong.

      Trademark law doesn’t have a fame exception. The High Court ruled that shoppers were unlikely to confuse a small Australian clothing brand with a global pop star, and the designer’s earlier, properly registered trademark was held.

      If that doesn’t make you feel a little better about going up against larger competitors in your industry, we don’t know what will.


      A True David vs. Goliath Story

      The case attracted global attention partly because of the contrast. On one side: a pop star with virtually unlimited legal resources. On the other: a small business owner in Sydney who just wanted to keep her name.

      The designer has described the fight as being about more than her brand, but proving that small businesses have real legal rights worth defending.

      To be clear: we root for all our clients. But we’d be lying if we said there wasn’t something satisfying about watching a well-filed, well-timed trademark registration hold up for 17 years — against all odds, and all resources.

      And if a small clothing designer can defend her trademark against a global pop star and win? Your brand is absolutely worth protecting, too.


      Wondering if your brand is protected or at risk? Book a free brand protection consultation with our team. We’ll walk you through exactly where you stand.


      What Happens Next in the Case

      The High Court ruling settled the core issue, but the case isn’t entirely over. Some remaining questions, including whether the designer waited too long to file her infringement claims, are being sent back to a lower court for further review.

      The key outcome stands: the designer keeps her “Katie Perry” clothing trademark.


      The Bottom Line

      The Katy Perry vs. Katie Perry dispute may read like celebrity gossip. But after nearly two decades of litigation, Australia’s highest court confirmed something trademark attorneys have always known: trademark rights come down to registration, timing, and the right categories. Not fame. Not resources. Not how many people know your name.

      Just who filed first and who filed correctly.


      Your Brand Deserves Protection Before It Becomes a Battle

      Katie Perry, the designer, spent 17 years defending a trademark she filed early and filed correctly. You don’t have to fight that battle. You just have to start before someone else does.

      At Indie Law, we’ve helped 1,500+ entrepreneurs protect what they’ve built with a 99.7% success rate and flat-fee pricing so you always know what you’re investing. We handle the search, the filing, and everything in between.

      Book your free brand protection consultation today 


      Frequently Asked Questions

      Does being famous automatically win a trademark dispute?

      No, and this case proves it. Trademark law is based on registration, timing, and the specific categories of goods and services involved. Fame and resources can help fund a legal battle, but they can’t override a well-filed, earlier trademark registration.

      Do I need a trademark if I’m a small business?

      Especially if you’re a small business. Without a registered trademark, you could be forced to rebrand, even if you’ve been using your name for years. A federal trademark registration is what gives you the legal standing to defend your brand.

      What are trademark classes, and why do they matter?

      Trademarks are registered for specific categories of goods and services called “classes.” Registering in the wrong class, or missing a class you actually operate in, can leave your brand exposed. This is one of the most common filing mistakes, and it’s exactly what a trademark attorney helps you avoid. How long does the trademark process take? The process typically takes 9–12 months minimum, and sometimes longer. The sooner you file, the sooner your rights are established even while the application is still pending.

      Ready to Talk Through Your Trademark Questions?

      Get clear, friendly guidance so you can protect your brand with confidence.

      Our Latest Blog

      Your brand is your most important asset. Dive into Indie Law’s resources to guide you through the maze of trademark law and keep your brand safe from copycats and infringers!

      Ready to Talk Through Your Trademark Questions?

      Get clear, friendly guidance so you can protect your brand with confidence.

      Our Latest Blog

      Your brand is your most important asset. Dive into Indie Law’s resources to guide you through the maze of trademark law and keep your brand safe from copycats and infringers!