Madrid System set to expand

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Madrid System set to expand

In the past month the Madrid System for international trademark registration received a big boost with the Philippines joining in April and Colombia and Mexico on the cusp of becoming members

On March 28, the Constitutional Court in Colombia ruled that the law approving the country's accession was enforceable, removing the last hurdle to accession. An official was later quoted as saying the instrument of accession would be deposited with WIPO in June. Designations would then become available three months later.

On April 25, the Mexican Senate unanimously voted to approve the legislation that will allow it to join. And the following week the Philippines said it had deposited its instrument of accession with WIPO.

The last countries to join the Madrid System were Israel and Kazakhstan in 2010, and before that Liberia in 2009 and Madagascar in 2008. More important is that Colombia would be the first country other than Cuba to accede in Latin America, which has long been the biggest regional gap in the Madrid system. Countries such as Argentina and Brazil might then be encouraged to accelerate their legislative processes to join the treaty to which their neighbors and trading partners have become parties.

Mexico also is significant given the size of its economy. "Mexico is a G20 country so its membership would be a big step for Madrid," said Laura Cruz, External Relations Manager, Latin America at INTA. "There are also positive signs in the Dominican Republic, and Peru is interested too. We are seeing a trend in the region of governments opening up markets to encourage global trade, and recognizing how the Madrid Protocol can support that."

WIPO will hold its annual Madrid System Users Meeting tomorrow morning from 11:00 am until 2:00 pm in Room 103 AB, with a representative from the Philippines flying in to discuss its recent accession. In a newly expanded session, there will also be more time to ask questions of the three other invited offices—Egypt, Switzerland and the EU.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Partners Alex Wilson and Andreas Kramer say bigger law firm rivals don’t necessarily gain by having a wider jurisdictional reach
VO, which has offices in the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany, is the second European IP firm to secure external backing this week
The Bardehle Pagenberg attorneys-at-law discuss the firm’s Managing IP EMEA Awards 2026 success, Unified Patent Court litigation strategy, and evolving European patent trends
A patent battle between two legal tech companies and a loss for Elon Musk’s xAI against OpenAI were also among the top talking points
With drug prices a hot topic in the US, courts are seemingly more reluctant to prevent the entry of generics to the market
Academic Eden Sarid joins us during Pride Month to discuss queer expression and IP law, Patagonia v Pattie Gonia, and how queer and AI-generated creations both pose novelty concerns
Patent attorney Michael Henson joins the firm to lead its freshly launched blockchain and digital assets practice
A dispute over mammogram technology, and a development in the case between GSK and Moderna were also among the top talking points in recent weeks
With rankings for Western Europe set to be published on June 25, we sat down with our research lead to find out what practitioners and law firms can expect
Peter O’Sullivan, a professional services executive, says he is looking forward to helping Pearce IP become the leading life sciences firm in Australia and New Zealand
Gift this article