1. What Trademark Licensing Involves and How the Related Company Doctrine Works
A trademark license is a contractual permission granted by the owner of a trademark to another party to use that mark in connection with specific goods or services, subject to conditions the licensor imposes to protect the mark's value and integrity.
The related company doctrine under Lanham Act § 5 provides the legal mechanism by which a licensee's use of the mark accrues to the benefit of the trademark owner rather than creating a competing claim of ownership in the licensee. For the doctrine to apply, the licensor must control the nature and quality of the goods or services sold by the licensee under the mark. Without that control, the licensee's use does not inure to the registrant's benefit and may instead be treated as use that undermines the mark's validity. Every trademark license, no matter how short-term or limited in scope, must be structured in a way that preserves the licensor's right and practical ability to monitor and enforce quality standards.
The license agreement must define the scope of the rights granted with enough precision that both parties understand what the licensee may do and what remains reserved to the licensor or other licensees. Scope provisions cover the specific marks being licensed by registration number and common law use, the specific goods and services for which use is authorized, the geographic territory, the duration of the license, and whether the rights are exclusive, non-exclusive, or sole. Scope provisions should be commercially workable for the licensee while preserving the licensor's ability to enforce the mark against unauthorized third-party uses.
What License Scope Terms Must Address and How Exclusivity Affects Both Parties' Rights
An exclusive license generally gives the licensee the sole right to use the mark within the defined scope, unless the agreement expressly reserves limited use rights to the licensor. A non-exclusive license allows the licensor to use the mark itself and to grant the same rights to multiple licensees simultaneously. A sole license grants rights to one licensee while the licensor retains direct use rights but cannot license the same field to additional parties.
Enforcement rights in trademark cases depend heavily on the agreement language and applicable law, not solely on whether the license is exclusive. The agreement should state whether the licensee may bring infringement actions, whether the trademark owner must be joined as a party, who controls infringement litigation strategy, and how any recovery is allocated between the parties. Even exclusive licensees may need the trademark owner's participation in enforcement unless the agreement and applicable law support independent standing, and the circuit-specific precedent on licensee standing should be evaluated before any enforcement decision is made.
Field-of-use restrictions limit the license to specific categories of goods or services even within a broader trademark registration. A licensor who owns a trademark registered for clothing, accessories, and home goods may license the mark exclusively for clothing to one party and for accessories to another, maintaining the home goods category for direct use or future licensing. Geographic restrictions define the territory in which the licensee may use the mark, which is particularly important for international licensing where trademark rights exist on a country-by-country basis and different parties may hold rights in different territories under the same mark.
How Trademark Licensing Differs from Assignment and Why Goodwill Must Stay Attached
A trademark license grants the right to use a mark without transferring ownership. A trademark assignment transfers ownership of the mark itself, including the goodwill associated with it, from the assignor to the assignee.
Lanham Act § 10 requires that a trademark assignment include the goodwill of the business in connection with which the mark is used. An assignment without goodwill, sometimes called an assignment in gross, is generally invalid under U.S. .rademark law and can result in the assignee receiving no enforceable trademark rights despite paying for the transfer. The goodwill requirement exists because a trademark derives its legal significance from its connection to a source: an assignment that separates the mark from the business it represents severs that connection and leaves the assignee with a symbol that signifies nothing. Parties that structure transactions as assignments but retain the underlying business goodwill with the transferor have created the same problem as a naked license.
Confusing a license with an assignment creates ownership and enforcement disputes that arise years after the transaction is closed. A licensee who exercises all the rights of an owner, pays no royalties, holds all the goodwill of the licensed business, and never transfers the mark back to the licensor may have functionally acquired ownership through conduct even if the document calls itself a license. Courts examining these arrangements look at whether the licensor retained any meaningful rights in the mark, whether quality control was exercised, and whether the economic substance of the relationship was consistent with a license or with a sale. Trademark assignments and trademark and copyright practice requires structuring the agreement to reflect its true economic nature, because a license that functions as an assignment and an assignment that lacks goodwill create legal problems that cannot be corrected after the fact.
| License Type | Licensor Can Use? | Other Licensees Permitted? | Ownership Transfer? | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exclusive | Generally no, unless reserved | No (within scope) | No | Single partner; premium arrangements |
| Non-exclusive | Yes | Yes | No | Character licensing; broad distribution |
| Sole | Yes | No | No | One partner plus licensor direct use |
| Assignment | N/A (owner changes) | N/A | Yes, with goodwill | Sale of brand; business acquisition |
2. Why Quality Control Is the Central Obligation in Every Trademark License
Trademark law grants exclusive rights not as a reward for creativity but as a means of identifying the source of goods and services to consumers. A license that permits someone else to use the mark without the licensor maintaining control over what that mark represents in the marketplace severs the source identification function and can destroy the mark.
The quality control obligation requires the licensor to set standards for the goods or services the licensee will offer under the mark and to take steps to monitor and enforce those standards throughout the license relationship. The standards do not need to be elaborate. A simple approval requirement for marketing materials, periodic product sampling, or inspection rights that the licensor actually exercises can satisfy the quality control requirement. What the doctrine does not permit is a formal quality control clause that neither party treats as a real obligation.
Courts look at what the licensor actually did to monitor quality, not what the license agreement says the licensor may do. A licensor who grants a license, collects royalties, and never reviews samples, visits the licensee's facilities, approves marketing materials, or takes any action to verify whether the licensee's goods or services meet the mark's standards has created a naked license. The consequence is catastrophic and not limited to the licensed relationship: a finding of naked license abandonment makes the mark unenforceable against all parties, including infringers who have no connection to the licensee. Quality control should be built into both the agreement and the operating relationship from the first day of the license term, not treated as a boilerplate provision to be revisited only in disputes.
What Constitutes a Naked License and How Courts Have Evaluated Quality Control Adequacy
The naked license doctrine is not a technical trap. It is the legal consequence of treating a trademark license as a pure revenue stream while ignoring the connection between the mark and the quality of the goods it represents.
Courts evaluating whether a licensor maintained adequate quality control examine several factors: whether the license agreement contained specific quality standards, whether the licensor had the right to inspect and actually exercised it, whether the licensor approved samples or marketing materials, whether the licensor received and addressed customer complaints, and whether there was any mechanism by which the licensor would have known if quality declined. In Barcamerica International USA Trust v. Tyfield Importers, 289 F.3d 589 (9th Cir. 2002), the court found a naked license where the licensor granted rights to a winemaker without establishing standards or conducting inspections, relying instead on personal trust in the licensee. That informal reliance was insufficient, and the mark was held abandoned.
The practical lesson is that the quality control mechanism must be real and documented, but it need not be burdensome. A licensor who establishes product specifications in the agreement, approves initial samples before the licensee goes to market, reviews annual samples, and maintains a record of that approval process has created a defensible quality control record. A licensor who signs a license agreement with a quality control clause, deposits it in a file, and never references it again has created the record of a naked license. Trademark infringement and brand protection and trademark law claims are substantially harder to pursue when the licensor cannot demonstrate that quality was monitored throughout the license term.
The distinction between a trademark license and a franchise has significant legal consequences that many parties discover only after the relationship has begun operating. A franchise under the FTC Franchise Rule at 16 C.F.R. Part 436 is defined to include any continuing commercial relationship in which the franchisee is granted the right to offer goods or services under the franchisor's trademark, the franchisor has a significant level of control over the franchisee's method of operation, and the franchisee pays a fee. A trademark license that includes detailed operational controls, quality standards, and training requirements may meet this definition, triggering FTC presale disclosure obligations even though the parties called the arrangement a license. State franchise registration and disclosure laws in states that have enacted them impose additional obligations. The line between a license with quality control and a business format franchise can be narrow, and the commercial terms of the arrangement, particularly the fee structure and the degree of operational control, determine which side of the line the relationship falls on.
3. How Royalties, Sublicensing, and Post-Termination Obligations Are Structured
The commercial terms of a trademark license create ongoing obligations on both sides, and the provisions governing royalties, sublicensing, and what happens when the license ends are among the most frequently disputed in trademark licensing relationships.
Royalty structures in trademark licenses take several forms: running royalties based on a percentage of net sales, flat annual license fees, minimum annual royalty guarantees with a running royalty above the minimum, or one-time lump sum payments. Running royalties based on net sales require the agreement to define what counts as net sales, how deductions are calculated, and what audit rights the licensor holds to verify the licensee's royalty reports. A licensor who relies on the licensee's unaudited self-reporting without audit rights and without periodic royalty reviews has limited practical ability to verify that royalties are being calculated correctly, particularly when the license covers complex product categories with varying margin structures.
Sublicensing provisions determine whether the licensee may grant use rights to third parties under the license. Without an express sublicensing right, the licensee generally cannot sublicense the mark to others. When sublicensing is permitted, the agreement should specify whether licensor approval is required for each sublicensee, whether quality control obligations pass through to sublicensees, and what happens to sublicense agreements when the master license terminates. A sublicensee whose rights derive entirely from the master license is at risk when the master license ends, and failure to address the sublicensee's situation in the termination provisions creates disputes that the licensor and licensee both have incentive to avoid. Sublicensing provisions should be drafted with the same precision as the primary license scope to prevent inadvertent gaps in quality control coverage.
What Post-Termination Obligations Must Cover and How Licensees Wind Down Use
The termination of a trademark license does not automatically end the licensee's use of the mark, and a license that does not specify the post-termination wind-down period and obligations leaves the licensor with limited ability to enforce the cutoff.
Post-termination provisions should specify the date by which the licensee must cease all use of the licensed mark, the treatment of inventory bearing the mark that was manufactured before termination, the disposition of domain names, social media accounts, and other online identifiers incorporating the mark, the return or destruction of marketing materials and packaging bearing the mark, and the licensing of any trade dress or design elements developed in connection with the licensed mark. A licensee who continues to use a mark after the license terminates is liable for trademark infringement under Lanham Act § 32, and the post-termination provisions establish both the deadline and the scope of that liability.
A sell-off period for existing inventory should be expressly negotiated in the agreement. Without an express sell-off right, continued sale of goods bearing the mark after termination can create infringement exposure even if the goods were manufactured during the license term. An express provision that specifies the duration, limits the sell-off to existing inventory only and not new production, and maintains the quality control obligation during the sell-off period is significantly more protective of the licensor's interests than relying on equitable interpretation. Unauthorized use of trademark and trademark cancellation proceedings claims arising from post-termination conduct are substantially easier to resolve when the license agreement clearly defines the permitted wind-down period and the obligations that apply during it.
4. Frequently Asked Questions about Trademark Licensin
Trademark licensing questions arrive from brand owners who want to expand their market presence through licensing relationships without the operational complexity of direct expansion, from businesses that want to use a well-known mark under a license and want to understand their obligations, from licensees who received a termination notice and want to understand how long they can continue selling existing inventory, and from parties who have been operating informally under a brand arrangement and want to understand whether they have a trademark license, a franchise, or neither.
What Is Trademark Licensing and How Does It Work?
Trademark licensing is a contractual arrangement in which a trademark owner grants another party the right to use the mark in connection with specified goods or services, in a defined territory, for a defined period, subject to quality standards the licensor maintains. The license does not transfer ownership of the mark: the licensor retains ownership and the right to enforce the mark against infringers. Lanham Act § 5 provides that a related company's use of the mark under the licensor's control inures to the benefit of the registrant. The quality control obligation is the defining legal requirement: a license without genuine quality control is a naked license that can result in loss of the trademark's enforceability.
What Is a Naked License and Why Is It so Dangerous?
A naked license occurs when a trademark owner grants rights to use the mark without maintaining adequate quality control over the licensee's goods or services. Courts have held that a naked license causes the mark to lose its significance as a source identifier, which constitutes abandonment under Lanham Act § 45. A naked license finding can severely damage or eliminate enforceable rights in the mark, and later termination of the license or improved quality control may not cure the abandonment problem for the period in which uncontrolled use occurred. The danger is that the consequences are not limited to the licensed relationship: abandonment makes the mark unenforceable against third-party infringers as well. A licensor who can prove it established standards, exercised inspection rights, and actually monitored quality throughout the license term has a defensible position.
What Is the Difference between a Trademark License and a Trademark Assignment?
A trademark license grants the right to use a mark without transferring ownership. A trademark assignment transfers ownership of the mark, and Lanham Act § 10 requires that the assignment include the goodwill associated with the mark. An assignment without goodwill is generally invalid under U.S. .rademark law and may leave the assignee with no enforceable rights despite paying for the transfer. Confusing a license with an assignment creates ownership and enforcement disputes that emerge long after the transaction closes. A license that functions as an assignment because the licensor retains no meaningful rights, exercises no quality control, and allows all goodwill to reside with the licensee may be recharacterized by a court, with consequences for both the validity of the mark and the enforceability of any restrictions on the licensee's conduct.
When Does a Trademark License Become a Franchise?
A trademark license crosses into franchise territory when the arrangement meets the FTC Franchise Rule's three-part definition: the franchisee is granted the right to use the licensor's mark, the licensor maintains significant control over the franchisee's method of operation or provides significant assistance, and the franchisee pays a fee. Many trademark licenses that include detailed operational specifications, training requirements, approved supplier lists, and ongoing operational support satisfy this definition even if the parties call the arrangement a license. Triggering the FTC Franchise Rule requires the franchisor to provide a Franchise Disclosure Document to prospective franchisees before any sale, and states with franchise registration laws impose additional pre-sale obligations. Parties who structure what is functionally a franchise as a trademark license to avoid these obligations face significant legal exposure if the arrangement is later reclassified.
10 Jun, 2026









