A Handle Is Not a Trademark: Brand Protection Basics Before You Launch
Before you commit to a brand name, it helps to understand what you actually own when you grab it. A handle is not ownership. A domain is not ownership. A business name is not a trademark. And brand protection is territorial. None of that means you need a lawyer on day one — but knowing the difference can save you from building on a name you can’t keep.
This is general education, not legal advice. Rules vary by country and situation. For anything that matters, check official sources or a qualified professional in your jurisdiction.
A handle is not ownership
A social media handle is a username a platform lets you use under its own terms of service. The platform can rename it, reclaim it for an inactive account, or remove it. Securing @yourbrand everywhere is good practice for consistency, but it gives you a place to post — not a legal right to the name.
A domain is not ownership of the name
Registering a domain gives you the right to use that web address while you keep paying for it. It doesn’t grant you rights to the brand name itself. Someone else can hold a trademark on a name even if you own a matching domain, and vice versa. The two are separate systems.
A business name is not a trademark
Registering a business or company name generally lets you legally operate under that name. A trademark is a different thing: a right connected to using a name, logo, or mark to identify particular goods or services. You can have one without the other. If your brand name is central to how customers recognise you, the trademark question is the one that actually protects it.
Protection is territorial
Trademark rights are usually granted within a specific country or region. A name protected in one place is not automatically protected elsewhere. If you intend to operate across markets, that territoriality is worth understanding early, before a name becomes expensive to defend or impossible to use somewhere you want to expand.
A sensible early-stage checklist
- Before committing, do a basic search for existing businesses, trademarks, and domains using the name.
- Secure the handles and domain you’ll actually use, for consistency — while understanding what they do and don’t give you.
- Decide whether the name is core enough to your brand to be worth formal protection later.
- If you plan to operate internationally, factor territoriality in from the start.
- For real stakes, confirm specifics with official registries or a professional in your region.
The honest version
Most early brands skip this and only learn the distinctions when a name they’ve built on turns out to belong to someone else. You don’t need to over-engineer it on day one — you just need to know that grabbing a handle, a domain, and a business name is the start of using a name, not proof that you own it.
Frequently asked questions
Does owning a social media handle mean I own my brand name?
No. A handle is a username a platform lets you use under its terms — it can be changed, reclaimed, or lost. Owning a handle is not the same as owning rights to the name itself.
Is registering a business name the same as a trademark?
No. A business or company name registration generally lets you operate under that name; a trademark is a separate right tied to using a name or mark for particular goods or services. They are different things with different protections.
Why is brand protection described as territorial?
Because trademark rights are usually granted country by country (or region by region). Securing a name in one place does not automatically protect it everywhere, which matters if you plan to operate internationally.