trademarked.uk

Trademark classes · By business type

Which trademark classes does a supplement brand need?

Most supplement brands register in class 5 (Pharmaceuticals) and class 35 (Advertising & retail).

Vitamins and dietary supplements are classified with pharmaceuticals, because they're taken for health rather than enjoyment. Powders or bars sold as food, and ready-to-drink products, can pull in the food and drink classes too.

Last reviewed June 2026

Before you file in class 5, make sure the name is free. If it's already taken, your application can be refused — and the £205 IPO fee isn't refunded. Checking takes seconds and costs nothing.

Check your name in class 5 →

The classes supplement brands usually register in

Also worth considering

Depending on how far your range extends, you may also want:

Related business types

Frequently asked questions

What trademark class is a supplement brand in?
Most supplement brands register in classes 5 and 35. Class 5 covers pharmaceuticals; Class 35 covers advertising & retail. You only ever register the classes that match what you actually sell.
Do supplement brands need to register in more than one class?
Often, yes. A trademark is only protected in the classes you register, and you pay a fee for each one. Many supplement brands file in classes 5 and 35 together, then add others as the business grows.
How much does it cost a supplement brand to register a trademark?
Filing direct with the UK IPO costs £205 for the first class and £60 for each additional class, so a supplement brand covering classes 5 and 35 pays about £265. The fee isn't refunded if your mark is refused — which is why checking the name is free first matters. See the full cost breakdown .

Check your name before you file

A trademark only protects you in the classes you register — and only if the name's free to begin with. Search the UK and EU registers in seconds. Free, no sign-up.

Check your name free →

These are the classes supplement brands most commonly register, not a full legal specification — when you file, you list the exact goods or services you need. This is general information, not legal advice. See also our guide to registering a UK trademark, or browse other business types.