Professional Trademark Assignment Attorney Service

Trademark Assignment Drafting and USPTO Recordation

Trademark assignment attorney services powered by AI and licensed attorneys. Whether you need a full trademark assignment with goodwill for a business sale or a partial assignment for select goods and services, our team drafts enforceable transfer agreements with USPTO recording compliance, starting at just $49.

By Jessica Henwick, Editor-in-ChiefLegally reviewed by David Chen, Esq.

What Is a Trademark Assignment and Why Does It Matter?

A trademark assignment is a legal instrument that permanently transfers ownership of a registered or unregistered mark from one party (the assignor) to another (the assignee). Unlike a trademark license, which grants temporary permission to use a mark, an assignment conveys all rights, title, and interest in the mark itself, including the right to enforce it against infringers, file renewals, and license it to third parties. Trademark assignment transfers ownership of a registered or unregistered mark to another party.

The Lanham Act, the federal statute governing trademarks in the United States, imposes specific requirements on how trademarks may be assigned. Under Section 10 of the Lanham Act (15 U.S.C. § 1060), a registered mark or an application for registration may be assigned to a successor, but the assignment must include the goodwill of the business associated with the mark. This requirement exists because trademarks function as source identifiers for consumers. When a mark is divorced from the business it represents, it loses its ability to indicate consistent quality and origin, which is the fundamental purpose of trademark registration.

At Legal Tank, our trademark assignment attorney service produces documents that satisfy both federal recording requirements and the substantive legal standards needed to maintain the validity of the assigned mark. Whether you are buying a brand as part of a contract drafting engagement for a business acquisition, spinning off a product line, or restructuring intellectual property holdings within a corporate group, our platform delivers assignment agreements that protect the chain of title and ensure the USPTO will accept the recorded transfer.

Assignment in gross without transfer of goodwill may invalidate the trademark. This is the single most important rule in trademark assignment law and the most common mistake in DIY transfers. An assignment in gross occurs when a mark is transferred without the goodwill of the business, effectively stripping the mark of its consumer-protection function. Courts have repeatedly invalidated trademarks that were transferred through assignments in gross, meaning the assignee can lose all rights in the mark they paid for. Our professional document review can also evaluate existing assignment agreements to identify goodwill transfer deficiencies before they become litigation risks.

Types of Trademark Assignments We Draft

From full assignments with goodwill to security interest filings, our trademark assignment services cover every transfer type with federal compliance and proper goodwill documentation.

Full Assignment with Goodwill

Complete ownership transfer

Transfers complete ownership of the trademark along with the goodwill of the business associated with the mark. The most common and legally secure form of trademark assignment used in business sales and acquisitions.

Partial Assignment

Select goods/services only

Assigns rights in the trademark for only certain goods or services covered by the registration. The assignor retains the mark for the remaining goods or services. Requires careful drafting to avoid consumer confusion.

Intent-to-Use Assignment

Pre-registration applications

Transfers a trademark application filed on an intent-to-use basis under Section 1(b) of the Lanham Act. Federal law restricts ITU assignments to successors in interest to the applicant's business or portion thereof.

International Assignment

Multi-jurisdiction transfers

Transfers trademark rights across multiple jurisdictions, requiring coordination with the USPTO, WIPO Madrid Protocol registrations, and foreign trademark offices. Includes analysis of territorial goodwill requirements.

Security Interest Assignment

Collateral / financing

Records a security interest in a trademark as collateral for a loan or financing arrangement. The lender receives conditional rights to the mark that activate upon default by the borrower, subject to UCC Article 9 requirements.

Not sure which assignment type fits your situation? Start with our free trademark assignment template to review the structure, or use our AI-Assisted tier ($49) for a document that guides you through goodwill transfer, mark identification, and USPTO recording requirements.

How Our Trademark Assignment Service Works

Two paths to a professionally drafted trademark assignment agreement. Choose the one that fits your timeline, budget, and the complexity of your mark transfer.

AI-Generated Path

1

Select your assignment type

Choose from full assignment with goodwill, partial assignment, intent-to-use transfer, international assignment, or security interest recording. Each type has a dedicated workflow.

2

Provide mark and party details

Enter the trademark registration number or application serial number, assignor and assignee legal names, the goods and services covered, consideration amount, and any conditions or restrictions on the transfer.

3

AI drafts your assignment agreement

The system generates a comprehensive trademark assignment agreement with proper goodwill transfer language, representations and warranties, USPTO recordation cover sheet data, and execution blocks.

4

Download with recording instructions

Receive your completed assignment in PDF and DOCX with step-by-step instructions for recording the transfer through the USPTO Electronic Trademark Assignment System (ETAS).

Starting at $49 · Delivered in minutes

Start AI assignment drafting

Attorney-Drafted Path

1

Submit your assignment request

Describe the marks being transferred, the business context (sale, merger, restructuring), the parties involved, and any special conditions such as retained rights, territory restrictions, or pending litigation.

2

Attorney reviews your IP portfolio

A licensed intellectual property attorney reviews the marks, confirms registration status, identifies related marks that should be included, and assesses goodwill transfer requirements for your specific situation.

3

Custom drafting with Lanham Act compliance

Your attorney drafts the assignment from scratch, incorporating goodwill transfer provisions, representations and warranties of title, indemnification clauses, cooperation obligations, and anti-assignment-in-gross protections.

4

Review and negotiate

Review the draft with your attorney, negotiate terms with the counterparty if needed, and refine provisions for non-competition, transition assistance, and domain name transfers that accompany the mark.

5

Execute and record with USPTO

Sign the final assignment, and our team prepares and submits the recordation documents to the USPTO through ETAS. Receive confirmation of recording with the updated chain of title for your records.

From $149 · 24-72 hour delivery

Attorney drafting plans

Trademark Assignment Compared: AI vs. Attorney vs. DIY

Not sure which trademark transfer option is right for you? This detailed comparison covers the factors that matter most when assigning intellectual property rights.

AI-Generated

Attorney-Drafted

DIY / Templates

Price
From $49
From $149
Free - $30
Delivery Time
Minutes
24-72 hours
Varies
Goodwill Transfer Language
Standard provisions
Custom analysis
Often missing
USPTO Recording Prep
Instructions included
Full submission handling
Not included
Assignment in Gross Protection
Built-in safeguards
Attorney-verified
Not addressed
Representations & Warranties
Standard clauses
Negotiated custom terms
Minimal or absent
Partial Assignment Drafting
Supported
Complex splits handled
Rarely supported
Intent-to-Use Compliance
Section 1(b) checks
Full statutory analysis
Not addressed
International Mark Transfers
Single jurisdiction
Multi-jurisdiction coordination
Not available
Security Interest Filings
Basic collateral language
UCC-9 coordination
Not available
Indemnification Clauses
Standard
Custom negotiated
Absent
Best For
Single-mark transfers
Portfolio / M&A / complex
Simple, low-value marks

Many clients use our AI-generated assignment for straightforward single-mark transfers, then add attorney review for complex portfolio assignments, M&A transactions, or international mark transfers that require multi-jurisdiction coordination.

Why Choose Legal Tank for Trademark Assignment Services

Six reasons businesses and IP owners trust Legal Tank for their trademark transfer legal review needs.

Goodwill Transfer Guaranteed

Every trademark assignment we draft explicitly includes the transfer of goodwill associated with the mark. This eliminates the risk of an assignment in gross, which could invalidate the trademark and leave the assignee with no enforceable rights.

USPTO Recording Compliance

We prepare your assignment for recording through the USPTO Electronic Trademark Assignment System (ETAS), including proper cover sheet data, party identification, and mark identification. Attorney-drafted assignments include full submission handling.

Lanham Act Section 10 Compliance

Our assignments comply with Lanham Act Section 10 requirements for registered mark transfers, including proper identification of the registration, goodwill conveyance, and successor-in-interest documentation for pending applications.

Related Mark Identification

When you assign one trademark, related marks covering similar goods or services should typically be assigned together to avoid consumer confusion. Our attorney service identifies all related marks in your portfolio that should be included.

Transparent, Published Pricing

Every service tier is priced upfront: $49, $149–$299, or $249-$1,499. No hourly billing surprises, no mandatory consultations just to learn the cost, and no hidden document fees for additional marks or USPTO recording preparation.

Fast Turnaround for Closings

Business sales and M&A transactions often need trademark assignments on tight deadlines. Our AI path delivers in minutes for urgent closings, and attorney rush service is available for same-day or next-day delivery.

Trademark Assignment Pricing

Transparent pricing with no hidden fees. Choose the service level that matches the complexity of your trademark transfer and the level of attorney involvement you need.

AI-Assisted

$49

AI-generated trademark assignment agreements

  • Full assignment with goodwill language
  • Partial assignment support
  • Mark identification & registration data
  • Representations & warranties
  • USPTO recording instructions
  • PDF & DOCX export
  • Delivered in minutes
  • One revision included
Get Started
Most Popular

Attorney Review

$149-$299

Attorney-verified with custom provisions

  • All assignment types supported
  • Attorney-verified goodwill analysis
  • Custom representations & warranties
  • Indemnification provisions
  • Related mark identification
  • USPTO recordation document prep
  • Priority 24-48 hour delivery
  • Two revisions included
  • Direct attorney communication
Most Popular

Attorney-Drafted

$549

Fully custom, attorney-drafted assignments

  • Multi-mark portfolio transfers
  • International assignment coordination
  • M&A / business sale integration
  • Security interest filings
  • Dedicated IP attorney assigned
  • Full USPTO recording submission
  • 3-5 day delivery (rush available)
  • Unlimited revisions
  • Phone consultation included
Order Now

Understanding Trademark Assignment Law

Trademark assignment law in the United States is governed primarily by the Lanham Act (15 U.S.C. § 1051 et seq.), the federal statute that establishes the system for trademark registration and protection. Lanham Act Section 10 governs the assignment of registered trademarks. Specifically, Section 10 (15 U.S.C. § 1060) provides that a registered mark or a mark for which an application to register has been filed shall be assignable with the goodwill of the business in which the mark is used, or with that part of the goodwill of the business connected with the use of and symbolized by the mark.

The concept of goodwill sits at the center of trademark assignment law. In intellectual property terms, goodwill represents the commercial magnetism of a brand: the reputation, customer recognition, and positive associations that a mark carries in the marketplace. When a mark transfer includes goodwill, the assignee receives not just the legal right to use the symbol, word, or design, but the underlying business value that the mark represents. Trademark assignments must include the goodwill of the business associated with the mark. Without this transfer, consumers would be deceived into believing the new owner provides the same quality of goods or services as the original owner, undermining the core consumer-protection function of trademark law.

Key Statute: Lanham Act Section 10 (15 U.S.C. § 1060)

USPTO requires recording of trademark assignments to maintain chain of title. Section 10 of the Lanham Act provides that an assignment shall be void against any subsequent purchaser for valuable consideration without notice, unless the assignment is recorded in the USPTO within three months after the date thereof or prior to the subsequent purchase. This means unrecorded assignments create significant legal risk: if the assignor sells the same mark to a second buyer who records first, the first assignee may lose all rights. Our trademark assignment attorney service includes USPTO recording preparation to eliminate this risk.

The assignment recordation process at the USPTO is handled through the Electronic Trademark Assignment System (ETAS). To record an assignment, the submitter must provide a cover sheet identifying the conveying party (assignor), the receiving party (assignee), the registration or application numbers of the marks being assigned, and the executed assignment document itself. The USPTO examines the submission for completeness but does not evaluate the substantive validity of the assignment. This means a recorded assignment can still be challenged in court if it constitutes an assignment in gross or fails to meet other legal requirements.

Warning: Assignment in Gross Risk

An assignment in gross occurs when a trademark is transferred without the associated goodwill of the business. Courts treat assignments in gross as abandonment of the mark, meaning the assignee acquires no enforceable trademark rights despite paying for the assignment. In Sugar Busters LLC v. Brennan, the Fifth Circuit held that when a mark is assigned without the underlying goodwill, the assignment is invalid and the mark is deemed abandoned. To avoid this outcome, every trademark assignment must explicitly convey the goodwill, customer lists, formulas, supplier relationships, and business processes associated with the mark. Never use a generic bill of sale to transfer trademark rights.

Intent-to-use (ITU) applications present special assignment challenges. Under Section 10(a)(1) of the Lanham Act, an application filed under Section 1(b) (intent-to-use) may be assigned only to a successor of the applicant's business, or to a portion thereof to which the mark pertains, if that business is ongoing and existing. This restriction prevents trafficking in ITU applications, which would allow parties to warehouse trademarks without any genuine intent to use them. Assignments of ITU applications that violate this rule render the application void, and the assignee cannot obtain registration. Our licensing agreement service offers an alternative for parties who want to grant rights in a mark without a full ownership transfer.

Pro Tip: Assign All Related Marks Together

When assigning a trademark, identify and include all related marks in the transfer. If you own a word mark, design mark, and stylized mark for the same brand, assigning only one creates a split in ownership that can lead to consumer confusion and potential trademark infringement claims between the assignor and assignee. The same principle applies to marks covering related goods or services. A comprehensive trademark assignment identifies every registration and application that should travel with the primary mark. Our attorney-drafted tier includes a full portfolio review to identify all related marks.

International trademark assignments add additional complexity. If a mark is registered through the Madrid Protocol, the assignment may need to be recorded with both the USPTO and the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). Some foreign jurisdictions have different goodwill transfer requirements or may not recognize assignments that are valid under U.S. law. For multi-jurisdiction transfers, our attorney-drafted tier coordinates the assignment across all relevant trademark offices to ensure the assignee obtains enforceable rights in every territory. If you are also transferring copyrighted materials associated with the brand, our copyright assignment service can handle the copyright transfer as part of a comprehensive IP assignment package.

Key Elements of a Trademark Assignment Agreement

A comprehensive trademark assignment agreement must address multiple legal requirements to ensure the transfer is valid, enforceable, and properly recorded. Here are the essential components our attorneys include in every assignment we draft.

Mark Identification

Complete identification of each mark being assigned, including the registration number, application serial number, description of the mark (word, design, composite), the international class(es), and the specific goods or services covered.

Goodwill Transfer

Explicit language conveying the goodwill of the business associated with the mark, including customer relationships, brand reputation, supplier agreements, formulas, trade secrets, and business processes connected to the mark's use.

Representations & Warranties

The assignor's representations that they are the lawful owner, the mark is valid and subsisting, there are no pending disputes or claims of trademark infringement, and no third party has superior rights to the mark.

Consideration & Payment

The purchase price or other valuable consideration exchanged for the assignment. Even nominal consideration ($1) should be stated to confirm the assignment is not a gift, which could raise tax and enforceability issues.

Cooperation Obligations

The assignor's obligation to execute any additional documents, provide information, and take actions reasonably necessary to perfect the assignment, record it with the USPTO, and transfer related domain names and social media accounts.

Indemnification & Remedies

Provisions allocating liability between the parties for pre-assignment and post-assignment use of the mark, including indemnification for claims of trademark infringement arising from the assignor's prior use.

Background Reading on Goodwill Transfer and the Lanham Act

Frequently Asked Questions About Trademark Assignment Services

Everything you need to know about trademark assignments, USPTO recording, goodwill requirements, and the difference between assignments and licenses.

What is a trademark assignment?
A trademark assignment is a legal document that permanently transfers ownership of a trademark from one party (the assignor) to another party (the assignee). Unlike a license, which grants temporary permission to use a mark, an assignment transfers all rights, title, and interest in the mark itself. Trademark assignments can cover registered marks, pending applications, and common law (unregistered) marks. Under the Lanham Act, a valid trademark assignment must include the goodwill of the business associated with the mark to avoid being classified as an invalid assignment in gross. At Legal Tank, our trademark assignment attorney service drafts enforceable assignment agreements that comply with USPTO recording requirements and protect both the assignor and assignee.
How do I assign a trademark?
To assign a trademark, you need a written trademark assignment agreement signed by the assignor (current owner) that identifies the mark, its registration or application number if applicable, specifies the scope of rights being transferred, includes transfer of the associated goodwill, and states the consideration (payment or other value) exchanged. Once executed, the assignment should be recorded with the USPTO within three months to maintain the chain of title and protect the assignee against subsequent purchasers. Our trademark assignment service handles the entire process: drafting the agreement, identifying all marks covered by the transfer, ensuring goodwill is properly conveyed, and preparing the USPTO recordation documents.
Does a trademark assignment need to be recorded with the USPTO?
Recording a trademark assignment with the USPTO is not legally required for the assignment to be valid between the parties, but it is strongly recommended and practically essential. Under Lanham Act Section 10, an unrecorded assignment is void against any subsequent purchaser for value without notice. Recording establishes the public chain of title, allows the new owner to file maintenance documents and renewals in their own name, and prevents disputes with third parties who might claim they purchased the mark without knowledge of the prior assignment. The USPTO charges a fee per mark for electronic recording through the Electronic Trademark Assignment System (ETAS). Our attorney service includes preparation of all USPTO recordation documents.
What should a trademark assignment include?
A properly drafted trademark assignment should include: identification of the assignor and assignee with full legal names and addresses; a complete description of the marks being assigned including registration numbers, application serial numbers, and any unregistered common law marks; an explicit transfer of the goodwill associated with each mark; the consideration exchanged; representations and warranties about ownership, validity, and absence of encumbrances; an obligation of the assignor to cooperate with future filings; governing law and dispute resolution provisions; and proper execution blocks with notarization where required. Our trademark assignment agreement includes all of these elements plus additional protective clauses for indemnification, non-competition, and transition assistance.
What is an assignment in gross?
An assignment in gross is a trademark assignment that transfers the mark without the associated goodwill of the business. Under both the Lanham Act and common law trademark principles, an assignment in gross is generally considered invalid because trademarks exist to identify the source of goods or services. When a mark is separated from the business goodwill it represents, consumers can no longer rely on the mark as a source identifier, which defeats the fundamental purpose of trademark law. Courts have invalidated trademarks that were transferred through assignments in gross, meaning the assignee may lose all rights in the mark. This is why every trademark assignment drafted by Legal Tank explicitly includes the transfer of goodwill to ensure the assignment is enforceable.
Can a trademark be assigned without goodwill?
Technically, a trademark assignment can be executed without goodwill, but doing so creates an assignment in gross that risks invalidating the trademark entirely. Federal courts have consistently held that a trademark cannot be sold or assigned apart from the goodwill of the business in which it is used. If the assignee uses the mark on goods or services that are materially different from those associated with the mark under the assignor, the assignment may be challenged by competitors or the USPTO. The safest approach is to always include the transfer of goodwill, along with any formulas, customer lists, supplier relationships, and business processes associated with the mark. Our trademark assignment attorney service ensures every assignment includes proper goodwill transfer language.
How much does it cost to record a trademark assignment?
The USPTO charges a fee per mark for recording a trademark assignment electronically through the Electronic Trademark Assignment System (ETAS). If you have multiple marks being assigned, the fee applies to each mark separately. Beyond the government filing fee, the cost of the assignment agreement itself varies by method. At Legal Tank, our AI-Assisted trademark assignment starts at $49 and includes the drafted agreement with USPTO recording instructions. Our Attorney Review tier ($149–$299) includes attorney-verified assignment drafting, goodwill transfer analysis, and preparation of USPTO recordation documents. Custom attorney-drafted assignments for complex multi-mark or international transfers start at $500 and include full recordation handling.
What is the difference between trademark assignment and licensing?
A trademark assignment permanently transfers all ownership rights in the mark from the assignor to the assignee. After the assignment, the assignor has no remaining rights and cannot use the mark. A trademark license, by contrast, grants temporary permission to use the mark while the licensor retains ownership and must maintain quality control over the licensee's use. Assignments are typically used in business sales, mergers, and acquisitions where the buyer wants full ownership. Licenses are used when the mark owner wants to expand distribution or allow third parties to use the brand while maintaining control. If you need a licensing arrangement rather than a permanent transfer, our licensing agreement service can help you draft a comprehensive trademark license with quality control provisions.

Ready to Get Your Trademark Assignment Drafted?

Start with an AI-generated assignment agreement or request custom attorney drafting. Goodwill transfer included, USPTO recording-ready, and delivered fast with pricing you can see before you start.

IP Filings That Coordinate With a Trademark Assignment

A trademark assignment is one matter type within the firm's legal drafting practice. Adjacent IP transfers and license filings follow.