USPTO Adds New Design Search Codes for Sound and Motion Trademarks
The United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”) announced on February 10, 2026 that it has added a new category to its Trademark Design Search Code Manual for sound and motion marks. The Manual now includes new Category 30, which adds seven codes to enable trademark applicants and practitioners to more readily identify relevant sound and motion marks in clearance searches.
Sound marks and motion marks are non-traditional marks that feature an auditory or visual element. For example, NBC has trademark protection for its three-note musical chime sound, and Columbia Pictures owns a trademark registration for its introductory sequence of a flash of light emitted over a torch-bearing woman.
Previously only searchable by general keyword in the USPTO’s database, users can now more accurately search the trademark database using these specific, coded sub-categories of sound and motion marks:
- Motion (such as growing, fading, or flickering)
- Musical sounds
- Human speech or singing
- Human non-speech sounds (such as whistling, clapping, breathing, sneezing, coughing, chewing, crowd noise, yells, and shouts)
- Animal sounds
- Natural sounds (such as weather, wind, water, fire, and explosions)
- Machine, object, mechanical, and electrical sounds
The initiative arose in response to feedback from users, and the USPTO’s improvement of their search system offers a more efficient method for analyzing risk and assessing availability for new non-traditional marks.