Strategy

How to File an IP Complaint on Amazon

Connor Mulholland

Connor Mulholland

· 7 min read
How to File an IP Complaint on Amazon
TL;DR

If someone is selling counterfeits, stealing your images/content, or using your brand name without authorization, file an IP complaint through Brand Registry. Three violation types: trademark (brand name/logo misuse), copyright (stolen images/text), and patent (copied design/functionality). Document violations thoroughly before filing. False complaints carry penalties — only file with legitimate evidence.

Types of IP violations

Amazon recognizes three types of intellectual property violations, each with different evidence requirements, filing processes, and enforcement outcomes:

Violation Type What It Covers Registration Needed Evidence Required Enforcement Speed
TrademarkBrand name, logo, registered marks used without authorizationRegistered trademarkRegistration number + screenshots1-3 days
CopyrightProduct images, listing text, A+ Content, Brand Store content copiedAutomatic (registration helps)Original files + comparison1-5 days
PatentProduct design or functionality copiedUtility or design patentPatent number + evidence of infringement1-4 weeks
CounterfeitFake products sold under your brand nameTrademark + Brand RegistryTest buy + product comparison1-3 days (strongest enforcement)

Counterfeit complaints receive the strongest enforcement — Amazon may suspend the infringing seller's account immediately. Use this category only for genuine counterfeit situations, never as a competitive tactic.

When to file

File an IP complaint when you have clear, documented evidence of infringement. Common scenarios:

  • Image theft: Another seller is using your product photos on their listing
  • Content theft: Your bullet points, descriptions, or A+ Content appear on another listing
  • Brand name misuse: An unauthorized seller is using your brand name in their title or listing
  • Listing hijacker: An unauthorized seller has added themselves as a seller on your product page, potentially selling counterfeit goods
  • Design copy: A competitor's product clearly copies your patented design
  • Counterfeit products: Someone is selling fake versions of your branded products

When NOT to file:

  • A competitor sells a similar (but not copied) product — similarity is not infringement
  • An authorized reseller is selling your genuine product (even at a lower price) — this is legitimate reselling
  • A competitor uses generic category terms you don't have exclusive rights to
  • You're angry at a competitor but don't have specific IP rights being violated

The filing process step by step

Through Brand Registry (recommended)

  1. Log into Brand Registry (brandregistry.amazon.com)
  2. Navigate to Protect → Report a Violation
  3. Select violation type (trademark, copyright, or patent)
  4. Enter the infringing ASIN(s) and seller information
  5. Describe the violation with specific details — what was copied, when you created the original, how it differs from your IP
  6. Upload evidence (screenshots, original files, registration certificates)
  7. Submit and note the case ID for tracking

Without Brand Registry

  1. Visit Amazon's Report Infringement form (amazon.com/report/infringement)
  2. Provide your contact information and IP registration details
  3. Identify the infringing content with URLs and ASINs
  4. Include a sworn statement that you are the rights owner
  5. Submit — processing is slower than Brand Registry submissions

Evidence requirements by violation type

Trademark complaints

  • Your trademark registration number (USPTO, WIPO, or equivalent)
  • Screenshots showing unauthorized use of your mark on the infringing listing
  • Proof of ownership (registration certificate or assignment documents)
  • Clear explanation of how the mark is being used without authorization

Copyright complaints

  • Original files with creation metadata (dates, file properties)
  • Side-by-side comparison of original and infringing content
  • Publication records showing your content existed first
  • Copyright registration number (optional but strengthens claim)
  • DMCA-compliant declaration of ownership

Patent complaints

  • Patent number and relevant claims
  • Evidence showing how the infringing product copies your patented design or functionality
  • Side-by-side comparison of patent claims vs infringing product
  • Claim chart mapping specific patent claims to the infringing product's features

Counterfeit complaints

  • Test buy order confirmation and delivered product photos
  • Comparison between genuine product and suspected counterfeit
  • Specific differences (packaging, materials, quality, labeling)
  • Your trademark registration and brand authorization documentation

Automate this with Jarvio; no coding required.

Start free trial

What happens after filing

Amazon's IP team reviews your complaint through a multi-step process:

  1. Initial review (1-3 days): Amazon verifies your identity and IP rights
  2. Notification: The accused seller receives notice of the complaint
  3. Investigation: Amazon reviews the evidence and may request additional information from either party
  4. Action: If the violation is confirmed, Amazon takes action — listing removal, content modification, seller warning, or account suspension
  5. Follow-up: You receive notification of the resolution

Possible outcomes:

Violation Severity First Offense Repeat Offense
Content theft (copyright)Content removed, warning issuedListing removed, account warning
Brand name misuse (trademark)Listing modified or removedListing removed, account restriction
CounterfeitListing removed, account warningAccount suspension
Patent infringementListing removed (after investigation)Listing removed, possible account action

What about false or retaliatory complaints

False IP complaints are a known problem on Amazon. Some sellers weaponize the IP complaint system to attack competitors. Amazon has implemented safeguards:

  • Pattern detection: Amazon tracks complaint filing patterns and flags accounts that file many complaints that are later dismissed
  • Counter-notice process: Accused sellers can file counter-notices with evidence that no violation occurred
  • Penalties for abuse: Sellers who file false complaints may lose Brand Registry privileges, receive account warnings, or face legal liability

If you believe you've received a false IP complaint, see our policy warning response guide.

Proactive IP protection

The best IP strategy is prevention. Set up monitoring before violations occur:

  • Monitor your ASINs daily: Check for unauthorized sellers adding themselves to your product pages
  • Image reverse search: Periodically search for your product images being used on other listings
  • Brand name monitoring: Search for your brand name across Amazon to catch unauthorized usage
  • Competitor listing checks: Review new listings in your subcategory for copied content
  • Amazon Transparency: Enroll eligible products in Amazon's authentication program to prevent counterfeit sales entirely. See our hijacker prevention guide

If you receive an IP complaint

If another brand files an IP complaint against you:

  1. Read the complaint carefully — understand exactly what violation is alleged
  2. Assess honestly — are you actually infringing? If yes, remove the infringing content immediately and respond cooperatively
  3. If the complaint is false: File a counter-notice with evidence (supplier invoices, design documentation, content creation records)
  4. Document everything — keep records of all communications and evidence
  5. Don't ignore it — unresolved IP complaints accumulate and can lead to account restrictions

For detailed guidance on responding to account-level issues, see our account suspension appeal guide.

Brand Registry IP tools

Brand Registry provides several tools beyond basic IP complaint filing:

  • Report a Violation: Streamlined IP complaint filing with faster processing
  • Project Zero: Self-service counterfeit removal for brands with a proven track record of accurate reports (removes counterfeits instantly without Amazon review)
  • Transparency: Product serialization program — every unit gets a unique code that Amazon scans during fulfillment, preventing counterfeits from entering the supply chain
  • IP Accelerator: Amazon's network of vetted IP law firms for trademark registration and IP strategy

For Brand Registry setup, see our Brand Registry guide.

What this looks like in practice

Jarvio
I think someone is copying my product images and listing content. What should I do?
Running IP violation scan across the marketplace... 🔍 Found 3 potential violations: 1. ⚠️ COPYRIGHT VIOLATION (High confidence) ASIN B0FAKE1 — new seller 'BudgetGoods' • Using your EXACT main image (pixel-match confirmed) • 3 of your 5 bullet points copied verbatim • A+ Content layout closely mirrors yours Evidence strength: STRONG — clear copyright infringement 2. ⚠️ TRADEMARK VIOLATION (High confidence) ASIN B0FAKE2 — seller 'DiscountDirect' • Using your brand name 'EcoKitchen' in their product title • Not an authorized reseller of your products • Product is a different (likely inferior) product using your brand name Evidence strength: STRONG — clear trademark misuse 3. ⚠️ LISTING HIJACKER (Medium confidence) Your ASIN B09KX7 — seller 'FastShip99' • Added themselves as a seller on YOUR product listing • Offering at $5 less than your price • No evidence they have genuine product (possible counterfeit) Evidence strength: MODERATE — need to confirm if counterfeit 📋 RECOMMENDED ACTION PLAN: ✅ Violation 1 (Copyright — image theft): 1. I've prepared screenshots with timestamps showing: - Your original image upload date - Their listing with your image - Side-by-side comparison 2. File through Brand Registry → Report a Violation → Copyright 3. Include your original image files as evidence of ownership ✅ Violation 2 (Trademark — brand name misuse): 1. I've documented: - Your trademark registration number - Screenshots of their unauthorized brand name usage - Their seller profile (no authorized reseller agreement) 2. File through Brand Registry → Report a Violation → Trademark ✅ Violation 3 (Potential counterfeit — listing hijacker): 1. Before filing: order a test buy to confirm product quality If counterfeit: file Counterfeit complaint (strongest enforcement) If genuine but unauthorized: file trademark complaint 2. I've set up ongoing monitoring for new sellers on your ASINs ⏱️ Expected timeline: Violations 1 & 2 should be resolved within 3-5 business days. Violation 3 requires the test buy first (7-10 days). Want me to draft the formal complaint text for violations 1 and 2?
Yes, draft both complaints and set up ongoing monitoring.
Done. Here's what I've prepared: 📝 COMPLAINT 1 (Copyright): 'The seller at ASIN B0FAKE1 is using copyrighted images and listing content that belong to [Your Brand]. Specifically: - Main product image: identical to our original uploaded on [date] - Bullet points 1, 3, and 4: copied verbatim from our listing ASIN B09KX7 We are the copyright owner of all content on ASIN B09KX7. Attached: original image files with creation metadata, side-by-side comparison.' 📝 COMPLAINT 2 (Trademark): 'The seller at ASIN B0FAKE2 is using our registered trademark "EcoKitchen" (Registration #[number]) in their product title without authorization. This seller is not an authorized reseller and their product is not manufactured by or affiliated with our brand. Attached: trademark registration certificate, screenshots of unauthorized usage.' Both complaints are ready to submit through Brand Registry → Report a Violation. 🔔 ONGOING MONITORING CONFIGURED: • Daily scan for new sellers on all 12 of your ASINs • Image similarity detection across marketplace (catches partial copies) • Brand name mention monitoring (alerts when 'EcoKitchen' appears on non-authorized listings) • Price monitoring on your ASINs (unauthorized sellers often undercut) • Alerts delivered to Slack + email when potential violations detected I'll also run a monthly comprehensive IP audit to catch anything the daily scans miss.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a trademark to file an IP complaint?
For trademark violations, yes — you need a registered trademark. For copyright violations (stolen images, text), copyright protection is automatic upon creation but registration strengthens your claim. For patent violations, you need a registered utility or design patent. Brand Registry makes the filing process significantly easier.
Can filing a false IP complaint get me in trouble?
Yes. Filing frivolous or false IP complaints can result in your own account being penalized, loss of Brand Registry privileges, and even legal liability. Amazon tracks complaint patterns — if your complaints are repeatedly dismissed or retracted, your ability to file future complaints may be restricted.
How long does Amazon take to act on IP complaints?
Amazon typically reviews complaints within 1-3 business days. If the violation is clear-cut, the infringing listing can be removed or modified within a week. Complex cases (especially patent disputes) may take 2-4 weeks. If you havent received a response in 5 business days, follow up.
What if the infringer creates a new listing after removal?
Repeat infringers can be reported with reference to the original case. Amazon is more aggressive with repeat violations — penalties escalate from listing removal to account warnings to suspension. Document the pattern across cases.
Can I file an IP complaint without Brand Registry?
Yes, but it is harder. Without Brand Registry, you file through Amazons general IP violation form (Report Infringement). The process is slower, requires more documentation, and you dont have access to Brand Registrys streamlined reporting tools.
What about Amazon's counterfeit penalties?
Amazon has a zero-tolerance policy for counterfeits. A single confirmed counterfeit report can result in immediate listing removal and account suspension for the infringing seller. This is the strongest enforcement category — use it only for genuine counterfeit situations.
Connor Mulholland

Connor Mulholland

Ready to automate your Amazon operations?

Start your free trial

Related articles