Vietnam Vietnam Trademark Monitoring

Monitor Vietnamese trademark filings from the Intellectual Property Office of Viet Nam through one structured BrandCat dashboard.

The Intellectual Property Office of Viet Nam (IP Viet Nam) is an important Southeast Asian trademark office and a practical jurisdiction to monitor for brands active in ASEAN markets, manufacturing, ecommerce, software, consumer goods, retail, food, education, health, cosmetics, and regional expansion.

WIPO’s World Intellectual Property Indicators 2025 lists Viet Nam among the top 20 trademark offices globally by application class count in 2024, making it one of the most relevant Southeast Asian offices to include in a broader trademark watch setup. Source: WIPO


Review Vietnamese Trademark Matches in One Clean List

BrandCat shows IP Viet Nam matches in a structured results view so you can quickly scan trademark names, owners, applicants, classes, filing dates, serial or registration numbers, and status from one place.

Vietnamese trademark records use a Latin-based script, so they are generally readable without full translation or script conversion. The practical value is keeping those records in the same normalized monitoring dashboard as your other trademark offices, instead of leaving Vietnam as another separate registry to check manually.

IP Viet Nam trademark monitoring results list in BrandCat
Example of Vietnamese trademark matches inside BrandCat’s results list.

Vietnamese Accent Support for Better Search

Vietnamese uses Latin letters, but accents and Vietnamese-specific characters still matter for search. Names such as Công ty Luật TNHH, Việt Nam, Cà phê, or Đồng Nai may appear with full Vietnamese diacritics, while reviewers may type the plain Latin form.

BrandCat supports accent-insensitive search for Vietnamese records, so a search like Cong ty Luat TNHH can still match records containing Công ty Luật TNHH. That helps prevent simple accent differences from hiding relevant trademark results.

For offices such as China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and Russia, BrandCat may use translation, transcription, or script normalization to make records easier to review. Vietnamese records are different because they are already Latin-script, but accents still matter. BrandCat keeps the original Vietnamese text visible while supporting accent-insensitive search, so plain Latin queries can still line up with names that include Vietnamese diacritics.

IP Viet Nam trademark results filtered with accent-insensitive search in BrandCat
Example of Vietnamese accent-insensitive filtering inside BrandCat.

Useful Southeast Asia Coverage

Vietnam is one of the most important Southeast Asian jurisdictions to keep visible in a broader brand monitoring setup. It is especially relevant for brands connected to regional distribution, manufacturing, ecommerce, SaaS, consumer products, franchises, education, healthcare, food, cosmetics, and local market entry.

Monitoring IP Viet Nam records helps surface filings that may indicate local brand adoption, regional expansion, distributor activity, or potential conflicts in a market that can be easy to overlook if you only monitor the largest global offices.


Open Full IP Viet Nam Trademark Details

Once a result looks relevant, BrandCat opens it in a normalized detail view. That makes Vietnamese filings easier to review than raw registry pages and keeps IP Viet Nam records comparable with the rest of your monitored offices.

Depending on the record, this can include serial number, registration number, status, application, registration, and expiry dates, owner and correspondent information, and Nice class details.

IP Viet Nam trademark detail view
Example of a single Vietnamese trademark record inside BrandCat.

Why IP Viet Nam Monitoring Matters

Vietnamese trademark monitoring is useful when you want broader Southeast Asia visibility without manually checking another registry. It can help identify local filings, regional expansion, potentially conflicting marks, and class-level activity that may not appear in your main US, EU, China, Japan, Korea, or WIPO Madrid review.

In practical terms, IP Viet Nam monitoring helps you:

- track Vietnamese trademark applications and registrations
- review owners, correspondents, classes, dates, and status in one place
- search Vietnamese records with or without accents
- compare Vietnamese results with other monitored jurisdictions
- add Southeast Asia coverage without creating another manual checking routine


Class-Based Filing Volume Context

WIPO reports trademark filing activity using the number of classes specified in applications. That means headline filing totals should be read as class-count activity rather than a simple count of unique marks.

For practical monitoring, that distinction is useful. It helps reviewers understand not only that a mark was filed, but also which goods or services are involved and whether those classes overlap with the brands being monitored.


Weekly Monitoring Without Manual Checking

BrandCat monitors Vietnamese trademark data and matches it against your protected keywords inside the same dashboard used for other supported offices. That means IP Viet Nam filings can be reviewed alongside USPTO, CNIPA, EUIPO, WIPO, India, Brazil, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, and other jurisdictions.

Instead of repeatedly checking Vietnamese trademark records by hand, you can focus on the filings that actually matter.


Try BrandCat Free

Monitor Vietnamese trademark activity, along with domains and other major trademark offices, from one dashboard.

Choose your monitoring plan


Yearly payment plan

Each keyword covers both Domain Lookalike monitoring and Trademark scans across major trademark offices including USPTO, CNIPA, EUIPO, UKIPO, JPO, KIPO and others.

15-day money-back guarantee - No contracts - Cancel anytime

Monthly payment plan


Each keyword covers both Domain Lookalike monitoring and Trademark scans across major trademark offices including USPTO, CNIPA, EUIPO, UKIPO, JPO, KIPO and others.


15-day money-back guarantee - No contracts - Cancel anytime