Hague Agreement Concerning the International Deposit of Industrial Designs
The Hague Agreement Concerning the International Deposit of Industrial Designs, also known as the Hague system, provides a mechanism for registering an industrial design in several countries by means of a single application, filed in one language, with one set of fees. The system is administered by WIPO.
Instruments
The Hague Agreement consists of several separate treaties, the most important of which are: the Hague Agreement of 1925, the London Act of 2 June 1934, the Hague Act of 28 November 1960, and the Geneva Act of 2 July 1999.The original version of the Agreement is no longer applied, since all states parties signed up to subsequent instruments. The 1934 London Act formally applied between a London Act member that did not sign up to the Hague and/or Geneva Act in relation with other London act states until October 2016. Since 1 January 2010, however, the application of this act had already been frozen. The application of the 1960 Hague Act has also then been frozen on 31 December 2024.
Countries can become a party to the 1999 Act. The applicants from that country can only use the Hague system to obtain protection for their designs in other countries which are signed up to the same Act. For instance, because the European Union has only signed up to the 1999 Act, applicants which qualify to use the Hague system because their domicile is in the European Union can only get protection in countries which have also signed up to the 1999 Act.
Naming
The agreement was concluded at the Dutch city The Hague.Its full name was the "Hague Agreement Concerning the International Deposit of Industrial Designs".
It was renamed in the 1999 Geneva Act, in Article 1, the '''Hague Agreement Concerning the International Registration of Industrial Designs.'''
History
The origins of the Hague System date back to 1925. The Hague Agreement was revised in 1934 and again in 1960. An Additional Act signed in Monaco in 1961, and a Complementary Act signed in Stockholm in 1967 came to supplement what is generally referred to as The Hague Agreement. The latest revision is the Geneva Act, which modernized the system and, as of January 1, 2025, is the sole Act under which new international design applications can be filed.The WIPO-administered Hague System for the International Registration of Industrial Designs once comprised three international treaties: the London Act, which replaced the Hague Agreement of 1925, the Hague Act and the Geneva Act.
The 1934 London Act introduced simplified procedures for the international registration of industrial designs, with a uniform duration of protection of 15 years divided into two periods: the first one of five years, and a second of 10 years, It also established fundamental requirements for application filings. The London Act was meant to encourage more States to accede to the Arrangement. The application of the London Act was frozen with effect from January 1, 2010, and the last designations governed by this Act expired on December 30, 2024. Renewals or modifications of existing registrations under this Act remain possible up to the maximum duration of protection.
The 1960 Hague Act further improved the Hague System by enabling applicants to file in English in addition to French for registration and by providing for the publication of the reproductions of designs. The changes were meant to encourage more participation as the Agreement had limited success and few members. The modifications to the Hague Act 1960 were sufficiently radical that it was qualified as being ‘in fact a wholly new Treaty’. Concluded in 1968, the Locarno Agreement established an international classification for industrial designs. The application of the 1960 Hague Act was frozen from January 1, 2025. From that date, it is no longer possible to file new applications or make designations under this Act, while existing registrations or designations remain valid and can still be renewed or modified. With effect from January 1, 2025, the Common Regulations Under the 1999 Act and the 1960 Act of the Hague Agreement became the “Regulations Under the Geneva Act of the Hague Agreement Concerning the International Registration of Industrial Designs.”
The most recent Act of the Hague Agreement is the Geneva Act – signed on 2 July 1999 – and entered into effect on December 23, 2003. The 1999 Geneva Act was intended to permit a significant expansion of The Hague System, allowing intergovernmental organizations such as the European Union and the African Intellectual Property Organization to become members. The Act introduced more flexibilities, for example to be better adapted to the needs of countries with substantive examination systems, especially those adhering to the common law system. It also introduced the option for an applicant to defer the publication of a registration for up to 30 months, thus affording businesses additional time for strategic decision-making. Furthermore, it simplified the renewal process and extended the minimum duration of protection from 10 to 15 years. The number of parties adhering to the Hague Agreement has seen considerable growth since the 1999 Geneva Act, reaching 82 Contracting Parties, covering 99 countries in 2025. It has been reported that the actual use of the system in terms of filing is not impressive, though growing.
Membership
The Hague System – signed in 1925 and entered into force in 1928 – initially comprised four members: Germany, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Spain and Switzerland. Belgium soon followed in 1929, with France, Morocco and Tunisia joining in 1930. Membership grew between 1928 and 1980, increasing from the initial four to 13 members. The mid-1990s marked the beginning of a period of rapid growth, both in terms of the absolute number of members, as well as geographical distribution. Initially dominated by European nations alongside three African countries, The Hague System gained its first member from the Latin American and Caribbean region when Suriname acceded in 1975, followed by the North Korea becoming the first Asian member in 1992.The accession of OAPI and the EU, extending potential design protection across the then 17 OAPI and 28 EU member states ; and second, in 2014 and 2015, with the addition of Japan, the Republic of Korea and the US, collectively representing approximately one-third of all foreign-filed design applications in 2015 significantly changed the membership. China, the country leading in industrial design activity in 2024, joined the Hague System in 2022.As of September 2025, the Hague System include 82 members covering 99 countries. In 2025, the distribution of members by region is as follows:
- Europe,
- Asia,
- Africa,
- LAC,
- Northern America and
- Oceania
Contracting Parties (member countries)
All contracting parties to one or more of the instruments of the Hague Agreement are members of the Hague Union. A list is shown below:
| Code | Member | The Hague 1925 | London 1934 | The Hague 1960 | Stockholm 1967 | Geneva 1999 | territorial scope |
| OA | OAPI | ||||||
| AL | Albaniadts|19-03-2007dts|19-03-2007dts|19-03-2007Use of the systemQualification to use the Hague systemApplicants can qualify to use the Hague system on the basis of any of the following criteria:
Application requirementsAn application may be filed in English, French, or Spanish, at the choice of the applicant. The application must contain one or more views of the designs concerned and can include up to 100 different designs provided that the designs are all in the same class of the International Classification of Industrial Designs.The application fee is composed of three types of fees: a basic fee, a publication fee, and a designation fee for each designated Contracting Party. Examination and registration procedureThe application is examined for formal requirements by the International Bureau of WIPO, which provides the applicant with the opportunity to correct certain irregularities in the application. Once the formal requirements have been met, it is recorded in the International Register and details are published electronically in the International Designs Bulletin on the WIPO website.If any designated Contracting Party considers that a design which has been registered for protection in that Contracting Party does not meet its domestic criteria for registrability, it must notify the International Bureau that it refuses the registration for that Contracting Party. In every Contracting Party that does not issue such a refusal, the international registration takes effect and provides the same protection as if the design had been registered under the domestic law of that Contracting Party. PublicationStandard publication of Hague applications is 12 months after filing. The applicant, however, can request either immediate publication, or delayed publication of up to 30 months. |
Albaniadts|19-03-2007dts|19-03-2007dts|19-03-2007