Nestlé ‘perplexed’ as UK shuns trademark for Kit Kat shape

By Oliver Nieburg

- Last updated on GMT

Related tags Kit kat Trademark European union United kingdom Uk

Nestlé refused UK trademark for the shape of the four-fingered KIt Kat
Nestlé refused UK trademark for the shape of the four-fingered KIt Kat
The UK Intellectual Property Office (IPO) has rejected Nestlé’s application to trademark the four-finger Kit-Kat shape after opposition from Mondelez International-owned Cadbury.

The decision​ comes in spite of an EU ruling in Nestlé’s favour last year which caused the Swiss food giant to state it was, “perplexed and disappointed with this national decision by the UK Intellectual Property Office.”

Nestlé disappointed; Mondelez welcoming

 “Kit Kat was launched over 75 years ago and is one of the most iconic shapes of any chocolate bar, recognised around the world.”

“The UK is the birthplace of Kit Kat and we are assessing whether to appeal.”

Mondelez International said, “We welcome this ruling although we have no immediate plans to launch such a product in the UK.”

Mondelez is also appealing the EU decision to the EU General Court in Luxembourg.

IPO goes against OHIM decision

In December 2012, the Board of Appeals for the Office of Harmonization for the Internal Market (OHIM), which registers EU Community Trade Marks, overturned an earlier decision​ and allowed Nestlé’s EU-wide trademark application for sweets, bakery products, biscuits, cakes and waffles.

Nestlé had previously been told the shape lacked distinctiveness for chocolate, candy, wafers and confectionery.

Kit Kat four finger
Nestlé seeks protection for the shape of Kit Kat four-fingers

In the UK, IPO hearing officer Allan James said the OHIM Board of Appeals did not have expert evidence at its disposal as he did. He therefore refused the application, except in relation to cakes and pastries.

Nestlé was also ordered to make a contribution towards Cadbury’s costs.

Nestlé tussles

Nestlé and Mondelez have previously been at loggerheads over the color purple. In this legal battle​, Cadbury came up trumps and was granted a UK patent for a particular shade of purple.

Nestlé recently filed a legal complaint​ against Petra Foods in Singapore, alleging that Petra's Take It brand infringes Nestlé's Singaporean trademark on the Kit Kat four-finger and two-finger shapes. Petra Foods intends to fight the case.

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1 comment

Nestlé white compound buttons.

Posted by Sylvia Kliska,

Nestlé should explain why the new packaging containing the "white melts" is labeled white compound chocolate, and previously was accurately named cooking compound, it seems that the ingredients have not changed. So why is it now chocolate, when it seems it contains no cocoa ingredients, I find this very misleading and Nestlé should be challenged to explain the reasoning for the change, maybe I have missed something.

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