Some trademarks (like those for EU) cover all member states.
Getting "global protection" for your trademark is expensive and requires filing in multiple countries. It does rack up both legal and filing fees.
But just a US trademark is not prohibitively expensive... and would mean you would get registered trademark rights that could be enforced in a US court.
Getting "global protection" for your trademark is expensive and requires filing in multiple countries. It does rack up both legal and filing fees.
But just a US trademark is not prohibitively expensive... and would mean you would get registered trademark rights that could be enforced in a US court.