1. What Trademark Infringement Requires and How the Likelihood of Confusion Test Works
The central legal question in every trademark infringement case is whether the defendant's use of a mark is likely to cause consumer confusion. The analysis is multi-factorial and fact-intensive, and no single factor controls the outcome.
The Second Circuit's Polaroid factors, established in Polaroid Corp. .. Polarad Electronics Corp., 287 F.2d 492 (2d Cir. 1961), are the most widely cited likelihood of confusion framework and have been adopted in various forms across all federal circuits. The factors include the strength of the plaintiff's mark; the similarity between the two marks in appearance, sound, and meaning; the proximity of the products or services in the marketplace; the sophistication of the buyers; evidence of actual consumer confusion; the defendant's intent in adopting the mark; the quality of the defendant's product; and the likelihood that the plaintiff will bridge the gap into the defendant's market if not already there. Courts do not add up the factors mechanically. They weigh them against the specific facts, and a particularly strong showing on one factor can overcome a weak showing on several others.
The strength of the mark is evaluated on two dimensions: conceptual strength and commercial strength. Conceptual strength ranks marks from strongest to weakest as fanciful (invented words like Kodak or Xerox), arbitrary (real words with no connection to the product, like Apple for computers), suggestive (words that hint at but do not describe the product), descriptive (words that directly describe the product's features), and generic (the common name of the product, which cannot be protected at all). A fanciful or arbitrary mark receives the broadest protection because the only meaning it carries in the marketplace comes from the trademark owner's investment. A descriptive mark receives narrower protection and requires proof of secondary meaning before any infringement claim succeeds. Trademark likelihood of confusion analysis is where most infringement cases are resolved, because a plaintiff who cannot establish likelihood of confusion under the applicable circuit's test has not established infringement regardless of how similar the marks appear.
How the Polaroid Factors Are Weighed and What Actual Confusion Evidence Does to the Analysis
Evidence of actual consumer confusion, while not required to prove likelihood of confusion, is the most powerful available evidence in a trademark infringement case and often determines the outcome when other factors are mixed.
Actual confusion can be established through consumer surveys showing that a percentage of respondents confused the two marks or believed they were affiliated, through anecdotal evidence of consumers who specifically mistook one company's product for the other's, through misdirected communications where customers contacted the plaintiff believing they were contacting the defendant, or through social media posts and reviews that demonstrate confusion in real time. Consumer survey evidence is contested on methodology: the survey's universe of respondents, the control group design, the questions asked, and the survey administration procedures are all challenged by defense experts, and a methodologically flawed survey carries little weight regardless of what it found.
Intent evidence also carries outsized weight. A defendant who chose a mark with knowledge of the plaintiff's prior registration, who previously sought to license the plaintiff's mark and was refused, or whose internal communications show awareness of the plaintiff's brand before adopting a similar one has demonstrated bad faith that courts treat as a strong signal that the defendant expected confusion. Intent does not create liability where there is no likelihood of confusion, but where the other factors are close, the defendant's intent frequently determines which way the balance tips.
2. Who Can Be Liable for Trademark Infringement Beyond the Company That Used the Mark
Direct infringement is the obvious category: the company that used an infringing mark in commerce is directly liable. But trademark law extends liability further, to parties who enabled or profited from the direct infringer's conduct.
Contributory infringement, established in Inwood Laboratories, Inc. .. Ives Laboratories, Inc., 456 U.S. 844 (1982), holds a party liable if it knowingly induced another to infringe or continued to supply a product to someone it knew or had reason to know was using the product to infringe. Applied to online marketplaces, the Inwood standard asks whether the platform had actual knowledge of specific infringement and continued to provide services that allowed it to continue. A manufacturer that supplied generic products knowing the distributor was passing them off under the plaintiff's brand, a marketplace that received specific notice of an infringing seller and took no action, or a supplier that continued fulfilling orders for a brand it knew was counterfeit each faces contributory liability when specific knowledge of identified infringement is shown.
Depending on the degree of control and financial interest, plaintiffs may also argue vicarious liability, although marketplace cases more often turn on contributory infringement and specific knowledge. The vicarious theory applies when a party has the right and ability to supervise the infringing activity and has a direct financial interest in it, and courts have applied it with some care in platform contexts where the right to supervise and the financial interest must both be specifically established. Unauthorized use of trademark and trademark infringement suit analysis must identify all potentially liable parties, because the direct infringer is often a judgment-proof entity while the enabling platform has both assets and ongoing conduct addressable through injunctive relief.
What Trademark Dilution Requires and Why Famous Marks Get Broader Protection
Trademark dilution is a separate cause of action from infringement that protects famous marks against uses that erode the mark's distinctiveness, regardless of whether any consumer confusion results.
The Trademark Dilution Revision Act of 2006 amended Lanham Act § 43(c) to require that the plaintiff's mark be famous, meaning it is widely recognized by the general consuming public as a designation of the source of the mark owner's goods or services. Niche fame is not enough. A mark well-known within a specific industry but not among the general public does not qualify for dilution protection. Dilution by blurring occurs when a defendant's use of a mark similar to the famous mark causes consumers to associate the famous mark with the defendant's goods or services, weakening the mark's distinctiveness as a unique identifier. Dilution by tarnishment occurs when the defendant uses the famous mark in a way that creates a negative association, typically by connecting the famous mark to inferior, unsavory, or offensive goods.
Neither theory requires proof of actual consumer confusion or competition between the parties. A company that used a famous mark's name for an unrelated product in a completely different category could face dilution by blurring even if no consumer would ever confuse the two products. This is the specific protection that registered famous marks receive that ordinary marks do not, and it is the reason that brand owners whose marks have achieved genuine nationwide recognition treat dilution as a separate enforcement priority from standard likelihood of confusion analysis.
| Claim | Legal Basis | Proof Required | Mark Eligibility | Competition Required |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infringement (registered) | Lanham Act § 32 | Likelihood of confusion | Any registered mark | No |
| Infringement (unregistered) | Lanham Act § 43(a) | Likelihood of confusion; prior use | Any mark with prior use | No |
| Dilution by blurring | Lanham Act § 43(c) | Association that impairs distinctiveness | Famous marks only | No |
| Dilution by tarnishment | Lanham Act § 43(c) | Association that harms reputation | Famous marks only | No |
How Counterfeiting Claims Increase Damages and Enforcement Pressure
Counterfeiting is legally distinct from ordinary trademark infringement, and the remedies available to a brand owner who establishes counterfeiting are substantially more powerful than those available in a standard infringement case.
Civil counterfeiting remedies are more severe than ordinary infringement remedies. When the defendant intentionally uses a counterfeit mark knowing it is counterfeit, Lanham Act § 1117(b) generally requires treble damages and attorney fees unless the court finds extenuating circumstances. This is meaningfully different from ordinary willful infringement, where treble damages and fee awards require the court to exercise discretion and find the case exceptional. The intentional knowledge standard is high, but a defendant who manufactured or distributed goods bearing a copied version of a registered trademark has typically created a record that satisfies it.
Criminal counterfeiting under 18 U.S.C. § 2320 applies to trafficking in goods or services using counterfeit marks and carries substantially higher penalties for repeat offenses, counterfeit drugs, military goods, serious bodily injury, or death. Lanham Act § 34 authorizes courts to issue ex parte seizure orders allowing a brand owner to seize counterfeit goods, freeze assets, and obtain expedited discovery to identify supply chain participants before the defendant can destroy evidence or move inventory. The combination of mandatory civil damages, criminal referral potential, ex parte seizure authority, and platform takedown tools available through Amazon Brand Registry and similar programs makes counterfeiting enforcement a qualitatively different matter from standard infringement litigation. Brand protection and trademark law and trademark counseling in counterfeiting cases require coordinating civil strategy with potential criminal referrals to maximize both the disruption of the operation and the recovery available to the brand owner.
3. What Defenses Trademark Infringement Defendants Use and Which Ones Courts Accept
A defendant in a trademark infringement case has several available defenses, but most of them require specific factual predicates that are harder to establish than they initially appear.
Fair use is the most commonly asserted defense and exists in two forms. Classic or descriptive fair use applies when a defendant uses words in their ordinary descriptive sense to describe their own product, not as a trademark. A company that uses the word "crispy" to describe its fried chicken is not infringing a registered CRISPY trademark if it is using the word descriptively, not as a source identifier. Nominative fair use applies when a defendant uses the plaintiff's trademark to refer to the plaintiff's own product, such as in comparative advertising, commentary, or criticism. Both forms require that the defendant not use the plaintiff's mark as a designation of the defendant's own source, and the line between descriptive use and trademark use is contested in most fair use defenses.
Prior use is an absolute defense when the defendant can demonstrate use of the mark in commerce before the plaintiff did, either before registration or in a geographic area where the plaintiff's mark had not yet established priority. Laches can bar or limit a claim when the plaintiff unreasonably delayed enforcement while the defendant continued investing in the accused mark, creating prejudice that makes it inequitable to require abandonment after years of use. Trademark cancellation proceedings at the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board can challenge the validity of the plaintiff's registration itself, which eliminates the enhanced remedies available to registered mark holders even if the underlying likelihood of confusion claim survives.
How Online Marketplace and Keyword Advertising Infringement Claims Work
Online trademark infringement has become one of the highest-volume categories of trademark litigation, primarily through third-party marketplace sellers and keyword advertising on search engines.
Amazon's marketplace model has produced substantial trademark litigation because the platform lists third-party sellers alongside authorized products, and infringing goods can appear in search results under the trademark owner's own mark. Amazon Brand Registry gives trademark owners tools to remove infringing listings, but it does not resolve the question of Amazon's own liability for facilitating the infringement. Courts applying the Inwood contributory infringement standard ask whether Amazon had specific knowledge of identified infringing products and failed to act. A general brand registration alerting Amazon to the existence of a trademark does not typically establish the specific knowledge needed to trigger contributory liability for individual infringing sellers.
Keyword advertising presents a different analysis. A competitor who purchases the plaintiff's trademark as a search keyword does not necessarily infringe the trademark, because the appearance of a competitor's ad in search results does not confuse most consumers about the source of the products. Courts are divided on how the initial interest confusion doctrine applies to keyword advertising, and some circuits find infringement when the keyword use causes consumers to click on a competitor's advertisement due to an association with the plaintiff's mark, even if the confusion is dispelled before purchase. Trademark infringement claims in keyword advertising require showing that the specific use created more than momentary confusion that was dispelled before the consumer made any decision, which is a higher bar than standard infringement claims require.
4. Frequently Asked Questions about Trademark Infringement
Trademark infringement questions arrive from small business owners who discovered a competitor using a name similar to their registered mark and want to know whether they have a valid claim, from defendants who received a cease and desist letter and want to evaluate whether it is legitimate or overreaching, from online sellers whose Amazon listings were removed under a brand registry complaint, and from brand owners evaluating whether to pursue litigation or an administrative opposition at the USPTO. Those situations generate the following answers.
What Is Trademark Infringement and How Is It Different from Using a Similar Brand Name?
Trademark infringement is the unauthorized use of a mark in commerce in a way that is likely to cause consumer confusion about the source, affiliation, or sponsorship of goods or services. It differs from merely using a similar name in that liability requires the similarity, combined with the other factors in the likelihood of confusion analysis, to be enough that a substantial number of ordinary consumers would be confused. Two marks can be similar without being confusingly similar if the products are sold in completely different markets to sophisticated buyers. Trademark infringement is not determined by how the trademark owner feels about the similarity. It is determined by whether an ordinary consumer is likely to be confused.
Do I Need a Registered Trademark to Bring an Infringement Claim?
No. Lanham Act § 43(a) allows infringement claims for unregistered marks based on prior use, even without a federal registration. However, a registered mark provides significant advantages: constructive notice nationwide, a legal presumption of validity and ownership that the defendant must overcome, access to federal court without establishing specific commerce requirements for unregistered claims, and eligibility for the mandatory damages available in counterfeiting cases under Lanham Act § 1117(b). Trademark registration before a dispute arises, rather than after, is the difference between litigating from strength and litigating from a position where both the mark's validity and priority must be established from scratch.
What Remedies Are Available When a Trademark Infringement Claim Succeeds?
A successful infringement plaintiff can obtain a permanent injunction prohibiting future use of the infringing mark, which is typically the most valuable remedy because it stops the ongoing harm. Monetary remedies under Lanham Act § 35 include actual damages, the defendant's profits attributable to the infringement, and in exceptional cases, enhanced damages and attorney fees. For counterfeiting where the defendant intentionally used the mark knowing it was counterfeit, Lanham Act § 1117(b) generally requires treble damages and attorney fees unless the court finds extenuating circumstances. Ordinary willful infringement requires the additional showing that the case is exceptional, which is a higher bar than the mandatory damages structure applicable to knowing counterfeiting.
I Received a Cease and Desist Letter Claiming Trademark Infringement. What Should I Do?
A cease and desist letter is a formal notice that the sender believes a legal claim exists. Ignoring it risks escalation to litigation and an argument that any subsequent infringement was willful, which affects the damages calculation. The first step is evaluating whether the claim has merit: does the sender have a valid registration or provable prior use, is there a genuine likelihood of confusion under the applicable multi-factor test, and are viable defenses available? A letter that overclaims, applies the wrong legal standard, or involves a mark the sender could not enforce at trial is an overreach that should be responded to substantively rather than simply complied with. Trademark and copyright counsel should review the letter and the marks at issue before any response is sent or any concession is made.
11 Feb, 2026

