One of the most common brand protection mistakes Illinois founders make is assuming that registering their business name with the state equals trademark protection. It doesn’t. Registration and trademark are fundamentally different legal concepts, and confusing them can leave your brand completely unprotected.
What Registration Actually Does
When Illinois founders talk about “registering” their business name, they typically mean one or more of these filings:
- LLC/Corporation name registration: Filing Articles of Organization or Incorporation with the Illinois Secretary of State. This reserves your business name for state formation purposes and allows you to operate as that entity. It does not give you trademark rights.
- DBA (“Doing Business As”) registration: An assumed name certificate filed with your county clerk. Lets you operate under a name different from your legal entity name. Again, no trademark rights.
- Domain name registration: Purchasing a domain from a registrar. Gives you control over a web address, nothing more. Not trademark protection.
- Fictitious name registration: In some states (not typically applicable in Illinois), a separate filing for operating under a trade name. No trademark rights.
What a Trademark Actually Does
A trademark is a legal right—not a filing—that arises from using a distinctive mark (name, logo, slogan, sound, or other identifier) in commerce to identify the source of goods or services. Trademark rights give you the exclusive right to use your mark for your specific goods/services in your geographic territory and allow you to:
- Stop others from using confusingly similar marks
- Sue for trademark infringement and recover damages
- Use the ® symbol (if federally registered)
- Block counterfeit goods at U.S. Customs
- Protect your brand globally through international trademark treaties
Common Registration: The Difference at a Glance
| Filing Type | What It Protects | Who Processes It | Gives Trademark Rights? |
|---|---|---|---|
| LLC/Corp formation | Entity name for state formation purposes | IL Secretary of State | No |
| DBA/Assumed name | Trade name for operating purposes | County clerk | No |
| Domain registration | Web address | Domain registrar | No |
| Federal trademark | Brand name/logo in commerce | USPTO | Yes — nationwide |
| State trademark (IL) | Brand name/logo in Illinois only | IL Secretary of State | Yes — IL only |
How Trademark Rights Actually Arise
In the U.S., trademark rights arise in two ways:
1. Common Law Rights (Use-Based)
You acquire trademark rights simply by using a distinctive mark in commerce. The moment you start selling products or services under a name, you have common law trademark rights in the geographic area where you’re actually doing business. No filing required.
The limitation: common law rights are geographically limited to where you operate and can be hard to prove and enforce without registration.
2. Federal Registration (USPTO)
Registering your mark with the United States Patent and Trademark Office gives you:
- Nationwide priority from your filing date
- Constructive notice to the public (prevents “innocent infringer” defense)
- Incontestability after 5 years of continuous use
- Right to use ®
- Presumption of validity in litigation
- Access to federal courts for infringement claims
Why Illinois Founders Need Federal Trademark Registration
Common scenarios where lack of federal trademark registration causes expensive problems:
- A competitor in another state registers your name at the USPTO while you’re operating under common law rights—they can demand you change your name in new markets
- You try to expand nationally and discover a registered mark that conflicts with yours
- You try to raise venture capital or get acquired and the acquirer discovers an unprotected brand with potential infringement exposure
- Someone infringes your mark and you lack the federal registration needed to pursue strong remedies
FAQ: Registration vs. Trademark
Can someone else trademark my LLC name?
Yes. The Illinois Secretary of State approves your LLC name for state formation purposes, but that approval has no relationship to trademark rights. Someone can file a federal trademark application for the same name (for different goods/services or in states where you haven’t established common law rights).
Does registering a domain protect my brand name?
No. Domain registration has nothing to do with trademark rights. However, if you have a registered trademark and someone registers a domain that is confusingly similar and uses it in bad faith, you may have recourse under the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (ACPA) or ICANN’s UDRP process.
Fitter Law helps Illinois founders register trademarks, conduct clearance searches, and protect their brand. Learn about our trademark services or view our flat-fee packages.