For many small business owners, choosing a business name is one of the most exciting early milestones. But protecting that name with a trademark often gets pushed down the priority list — usually because of cost, complexity, or the assumption that “we’ll deal with it later.” The reality is that timing your trademark correctly can save significant stress, expense and brand confusion down the track.

So when is the right time to trademark your business name — and is it worth the investment?


What Does Trademarking Actually Do?

A registered trademark gives you exclusive legal rights to use your business name (or logo, slogan, etc.) in connection with specific goods or services within Australia. Importantly, registering a business name with ASIC does not give you ownership rights — it simply allows you to trade under that name.

A trademark, on the other hand, is what gives you enforceable protection.

When Is the Right Time in the Business Lifecycle?

There’s no one-size-fits-all answer, but there are clear stages where trademarking makes the most strategic sense.

  1. Before You Invest Heavily in Branding (Often Ideal)

If you’re about to:

  • Launch publicly
  • Build a website
  • Print signage
  • Spend on marketing
  • Develop packaging

…it is often wise to at least conduct a trademark search first.

Why? Because rebranding later can be far more expensive than the trademark itself. Many small businesses only discover a conflict after they’ve built momentum — and that’s when the pain really hits.

Best for: businesses confident in their name and ready to grow.

2 Once You’ve Proven the Concept (Common for Start-Ups)

Some founders prefer to validate the business first before incurring legal costs. This can be reasonable if:

  • Cash flow is tight
  • The concept is still evolving
  • The name may change
  • The business is still testing market fit

However, this approach carries risk — particularly if your brand gains traction quickly.

Best for: lean start-ups still testing viability.

3 Before Scaling or Expanding (Critical Trigger Point)

If your business is about to:

  • Expand interstate
  • Franchise
  • Launch new product lines
  • Seek investment
  • Build significant brand equity

…then trademark protection becomes far more urgent.

At this stage, your brand has real commercial value — and exposure.

Best for: growing businesses entering their scale phase.


Does Trademarking Increase Business Value?

In many cases, yes.

A registered trademark is an intangible asset that can:

  • Strengthen brand equity
  • Improve buyer confidence
  • Support licensing opportunities
  • Reduce legal risk
  • Enhance goodwill on sale

For businesses thinking long term — especially those you’ve built with Feedsy-style client engagement and brand consistency — protecting the name helps ensure the value you’re creating actually belongs to you.

Potential buyers and investors often view registered IP favourably because it reduces uncertainty.


Key Pros of Trademarking
  • Exclusive rights
    You gain legal ownership in your class of goods/services.
  • Stronger brand protection
    Helps prevent confusingly similar competitors.
  • Valuable business asset
    Can be sold, licensed or transferred.
  • Deterrent effect
    Many disputes never start once your mark is registered.
  • National protection
    Covers all of Australia (not just your local area).

Potential Cons and Considerations
  • Upfront cost
    Government fees plus legal advice can add up.
  • Ongoing management
    Trademarks require renewal and monitoring.
  • Not always necessary early
    Very early-stage or hobby businesses may not need immediate protection.
  • Scope limitations
    Protection only applies to nominated classes and jurisdictions.
  • Risk of choosing the wrong mark
    A poorly chosen name may be hard to register or defend.

Why Seeking Legal Advice Matters

Trademark law has nuances that many business owners underestimate. Professional advice can help you:

  • Conduct proper clearance searches
  • Choose the correct classes
  • Assess registrability risk
  • Avoid costly objections
  • Structure ownership correctly
  • Develop an IP protection strategy

Perhaps most importantly, legal guidance helps ensure you’re not building brand equity on shaky foundations.


The Bottom Line

For many small businesses, the “right time” to trademark is before significant brand investment and certainly before major growth plans. While the upfront cost can feel like a hurdle, the potential cost of rebranding, legal disputes, or lost goodwill is often far higher.

If your business name is central to your long-term plans — and you’re investing time, money and reputation into building it — it’s well worth having an informed conversation with a qualified IP lawyer or trademark attorney.

Because in business, the brand you build should ultimately be one you truly own.

If this article has inspired you to think about your unique situation and, more importantly, what you and your family are going through right now, please get in touch with your advice professional.

This information does not consider any person’s objectives, financial situation, or needs. Before making a decision, you should consider whether it is appropriate in light of your particular objectives, financial situation, or needs.

(Feedsy Exclusive)

Disclaimer: The information contained in this article is general in nature and does not take into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Please consider whether the information is appropriate to your circumstance before acting on it and, where appropriate, seek professional advice.