Specimen guide for Nutritional supplements

Examples of trademark specimens for Nutritional supplements.

What is a trademark specimen?

When you apply for/renew a US trademark, you must prove to the USPTO that your trademark is "used in commerce", i.e., that your goods/services are available for purchase or ordering to US customers. In practice, you will prove the use in commerce by submitting a so-called specimen, which is usually a photograph or a screenshot of your trademark used together with the goods or services you applied for (e.g., depicted on the product packaging, on your storefront, etc.).

What is considered a sufficient specimen will depend on multiple factors, including whether you offer goods (Classes 1-34) or services (Classes 35-45).

In this guide, we will look specifically at trademark specimens for nutritional supplements - the best format, requirements, and examples from the USPTO.

What is a proper specimen for nutritional supplements?

When trademarking a brand of nutritional supplements, your products will likely fall under Class 5, which is a goods class including vitamins and various supplements for both humans and pets.

Therefore, the most suitable specimens for nutritional supplements will include:

  • Photos of the product
  • Photo of the packaging or a label attached to the product

What requirements does my specimen for nutritional supplements have to meet?

Besides the format mentioned above, your specimen must meet a few general requirements to be accepted. For goods class such as nutritional supplements, these requirements include the following:

Legibility

The mark must be clearly visible, meaning it must be legible, not cropped off, etc.

Correct mark version

The mark shown on the specimen has to match the mark in the original trademark application exactly. For example, if you applied for a mark consisting of a graphical element and the brand name, the specimen can't display just the graphical element.

Realness

The specimen must be a real photograph, not a digitally altered or created image.

Showing connection

The specimen has to show a clear connection between the mark and the applied-for goods. Compared to the previous rules, this one is more broad and can translate to different things in practice because it's related to your use of the trademark.

For example, if you submit a photo of the product bearing the mark, that connection will be inherently there. However, if you submit a picture of a container bearing the mark, it should suggest what product it contains. Otherwise, if the connection cannot be inferred from the packaging alone, the specimen can't prove that the mark is used in connection with the applied-for goods, and the USPTO will likely refuse it.

Therefore, for packaging, make sure they clearly indicate what you are selling and that this information matches the items listed in your trademark application. This can be achieved in a number of ways - by including a product depiction or description (you don't have to use the exact same wording from your trademark application), making the product visible through the packaging, or at least taking a picture with the packaging open and showing the product inside. A label should indicate what the product is as well.

We also have to note that the actual mark can play a role here. Some marks include wording or imagery that suggests what the goods are, so putting them on the packaging makes fulfilling this requirement easier. However, having such a mark is by no means necessary.

Generally, to meet this criterion, a good rule of thumb is to ask: "Is it clear from the specimen that the trademark belongs to the items I said I was selling in my trademark application?"

Can I submit a website screenshot as a specimen for nutritional supplements?

There's nothing wrong with submitting this type of specimen for nutritional supplements; it's just that it must meet more requirements than the previous types:

  • The screenshot has to show that the goods can be purchased by US customers (in practice, it's enough to show the price in USD).
  • The screenshot has to show the means of ordering (e.g., button "Add to cart").
  • You must provide the URL and the date of taking, either on the specimen itself or by filling it out in the form.
  • The specimen has to be an actual screenshot of a page the examiner can access, not a mockup or an altered screenshot.
  • The specimen must include a picture or sufficient textual description of the product.
  • As we already mentioned above, the specimen must show the mark associated with the goods. Screenshots sometimes get refused if the examiner believes the trademark is associated with the website itself rather than the goods listed in your trademark application.

Meeting all these expectations can be challenging, and sometimes, brand owners have to change their websites before they can take a screenshot and submit it as a specimen. This is why we usually recommend clients provide photo evidence for tangible products if they can. If they can't, then we move on to screenshots.

If you still want to submit a screenshot, your safest bet would be one which shows the trademark depicted directly on the product.

Examples of suitable and unsuitable specimen for Nutritional supplements

specimen

The mark Doctor's Advantage, registered for "Vitamins", is displayed on the product packaging. The shape of the bottle and mentions of "multivitamins", "dietary supplements", and "doctor formulated" all add to the overall impression that the product is a vitamin. View source

specimen

The mark is displayed on the packaging. In this case, the packaging is more general, but it clearly references Panadol as a painkiller. Panadol is registered for "Analgesic preparation" in Class 5, so these references make the connection apparent. View source

specimen

This specimen from Doctor's Advantage was originally refused because it was merely advertising material and didn't prove actual use in commerce. Advertising materials are generally not acceptable as specimens for goods. View source

specimen

This specimen was refused due to it being a draft label and not showing the applied-for mark as actually used in commerce in Class 5. View source

specimen

This specimen was refused because it showed the use of the applied-for mark, Vitamin Support, in connection with retail store services featuring vitamins and not the vitamins themselves. Note the products depicted on the page carry other logos. View source

Submit specimen with ease

Whether you are registering a new trademark, proving its use in commerce, or prolonging its validity, we are here to make sure your submission with the USPTO goes through.

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