Generay customer contact us and proceed with us via email and whatsapp as in regstration processes we need a lot of verification codes signs and multiple such verifications.
Its total depends on customer and our mutual understanding as well as nature of process. In some processes we charge 50% advance and in some processes we charge 75% advance atleast.
We offer easypaisa/raast and bank transfer along with online credit card/debit card and paypal.
Yes we are registered firm from SECP, FBR, Chamber and multiple other authorities.
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Private Limited Companies are the most trusted and popular business structures in Pakistan, offering legal protection and credibility. They provide limited liability to shareholders and are ideal for startups and growing businesses seeking long-term success.
Company registration involves two steps: Name Availability and Application for Incorporation.
First, obtain name approval from the Company Registration Office.
After name approval, submit the application online or physically with:
- Name reservation letter/email
- Form 1 (Declaration for incorporation)
- Form 21 (Registered office address)
- Form 29 (First directors’ details)
- Memorandum & Articles of Association
- CNIC/NICOP/POC of subscribers, witness, nominee (for single-member company), or passport (for foreigners)
- Paid challan for registration and filing fees
- Additional documents (if required):
- Authority letter (for physical filing)
- NOC/License (for specialized businesses)
a) Annual return in Form A and Form 29
b) Annual audited accounts in case of private companies having paid-up capital of Rs. 7.5 million or above.
Yes. You have to make an application to the Company. The Company after making such inquiry as it may deem fit shall subject to such terms and conditions, if any, issue the duplicate share certificates. (Section 75 of the of the Companies Ordinance, 1984).
Yes, you may close down your Company subject to certain terms and condition as mentioned under the Company Easy Exit Scheme Regulations, 2014 by filing an application with the concerned Registrar. The Registrar after confirming compliance with the formalities, may strike off the Company under Section 439 of the Companies Ordinance, 1984.
For Individual (Pakistani National): CNIC/NICOP/POC, Mobile number, & Email address. For Individual (Foreign National): Attested copy of valid passport, Attested photograph, Mobile number, & Email address.
- Prescribed application form: TM-1/TM-2.
- Trademark reproductions: 8 clear copies of the sign, logo, or trademark (any color, form, or 3D features).
- Goods/Services list: Specify the goods or services covered by the trademark.
- Power of Attorney: Required if applying through an advocate/agent.
- Payment: Pay Order/Bank Draft of Rs. 3,000 in the name of Director General, IPO-Pakistan.
- For updated fees, visit the Fee & Forms section.
- FTN of IPO-Pakistan: 9010120-7 (may be required by the bank).
- Reply Deadline: Submit a reply within 2 months of the Show Cause Notice.
- Publication: If no objections, the application is published in the Trade Mark Journal.
- Opposition Period: If no oppositions are filed within 2 months, the application is accepted.
- Demand Notice: Issued for registration fee submission.
- Certificate Issuance: Upon fee payment, the Registration Certificate is issued.
Initially Trademark is registered for 10 (Ten) years from the filing date. The Trademarks registration can be renewed after every 10 (Ten) years.
- Copyright Protection: Covers original literary, musical, artistic, and intellectual works.
- Applies to: Both published and unpublished works.
- Exclusive Rights: The owner can:
- Reproduce and distribute the work.
- Create derivative works.
- Perform or display the work publicly.
- Transmit sound recordings digitally.
- Copyright Violations: Unauthorized use is illegal.
- Limitations: Includes "fair use" and "compulsory licenses" under legal conditions.
- More Info: Refer to the copyright law for detailed rights and exemptions.
- Copyright Begins: Protection starts when the work is created in fixed form.
- Ownership: Belongs to the author unless rights are transferred.
- Work for Hire: If created by an employee, the employer owns the copyright (if agreed in writing).
- Joint Work: Co-authors share copyright unless agreed otherwise.
- Material vs. Copyright: Owning a book, painting, or manuscript does not mean owning its copyright.
- Ownership Transfer: Selling a physical copy does not transfer copyright rights.
Any or all of the copyright owner’s exclusive rights or any subdivision of those rights may be transferred, but the transfer of exclusive rights is not valid unless that transfer is in writing and signed by the owner of the rights conveyed or such owner’s duly authorized agent.
- Copyright Protection: Applies to “original works of authorship” fixed in a tangible form.
- Fixation Requirement: The work must be stored in a way that allows it to be perceived, with or without a machine.
- Copyrightable Works Include:
- Literary works (books, articles, computer programs, etc.).
- Musical works, including accompanying lyrics.
- Dramatic works, including accompanying music.
- Pictorial, graphic, and sculptural works (paintings, drawings, designs, etc.).
- Motion pictures and audiovisual works (films, videos, digital content, etc.).
- Sound recordings (songs, speeches, recordings, etc.).
- Architectural works (building designs, plans, etc.).
- Broad Scope: Computer programs and compilations may qualify as literary works.
According to Patents Ordinance 2000, invention is any new & useful product, including chemical products, art, process, method or manner of manufacture, machine, apparatus or other articles in any field of technology and includes any new and useful improvement of any of them is an alleged invention.
- Not Eligible for Copyright: Some materials do not qualify for copyright protection.
- Unfixed Works: Ideas, concepts, and works not fixed in a tangible form.
- Methods & Systems: Procedures, methods, systems, processes, principles, and discoveries.
- Common Property Works: No copyright for:
- Standard calendars, height & weight charts.
- Tape measures, rulers, public domain lists, or tables.
- Not Considered Inventions: The following do not qualify:
- Scientific discoveries, theories, and mathematical methods.
- Purely aesthetic literary, musical, or artistic creations.
- Rules, schemes, or methods for mental acts, business, or games.
- Presentation of information (e.g., raw data).
- Natural substances, even if isolated.
- Copyright is Secured Automatically: Registration is not required to obtain copyright protection.
- Creation & Fixation: Copyright is secured when the work is first fixed in a tangible form.
- Copies vs. Phonorecords:
- Copies: Material objects from which a work can be read or visually perceived (e.g., books, manuscripts, sheet music, film, videotape, microfilm).
- Phonorecords: Material objects that store audio recordings (e.g., cassette tapes, CDs, LPs).
- Example: A song (the “work”) can be fixed in sheet music (“copies”) or recorded on a CD (“phonorecords”).
- Work Created Over Time: If a work is developed gradually, the portion fixed on a particular date is considered created as of that date.
- Advantages of Registration: While not required, registration provides legal benefits and stronger enforcement rights.
A work that was created (fixed in tangible form for the first time) protected from the moment of its creation and is ordinarily given a term enduring for the author’s life plus an additional 50 years after the author’s death. In the case of “a joint work prepared by two or more authors who did not work for hire,” the term lasts for 50 years after the last surviving author’s death. For works made for hire, and for anonymous and pseudonymous works the duration of copyright will be 50 years from publication.
A patent for an invention is grant of exclusive rights to make, use and sell the invention for a limited period of 20 years. The patent grant excludes others from making, using, or selling the invention. Patent protection does not start until the actual grant of a patent. A patent cannot be obtained on a mere idea or suggestion. Patent applications are examined for both technical and legal merit.
The basic theory of the patent system is simple and reasonable. It is desirable in the public interest that industrial techniques should be improved. In order to encourage improvement and to encourage also the disclosure of improvements in preference to their use in secret. Any person devising any improvement in a manufactured article or in machinery or methods for making it, may upon disclosure of his improvement at the Patent Office demand to be given a monopoly in the use of it for a limited period. After that period, it passes into the public domain.
A patent owner has the right to decide who may or may not use the patented invention for the period in which the invention is protected. The patent owner may give permission to, or license, other parties to use the invention on mutually agreed terms. The owner may also sell the right to the invention to someone else, who will then become the new owner of the patent. Once a patent expires, the protection ends, and invention enters the public domain, that is, the owner no longer holds exclusive right to the invention, which becomes available to commercial exploitation by others.
According to Patents Ordinance 2000, invention is any new & useful product, including chemical products, art, process, method or manner of manufacture, machine, apparatus or other articles in any field of technology and includes any new and useful improvement of any of them is an alleged invention.
- Patentable Inventions: Any product or process in any field of technology is patentable if it meets the following criteria:
- Novelty (New and original)
- Inventive Step (Non-obvious advancement)
- Industrial Applicability (Useful in an industry)
- Non-Patentable Inventions: The following are not considered inventions:
- Scientific discoveries, theories, or mathematical methods.
- Purely aesthetic literary, musical, or artistic works.
- Rules, schemes, or methods for mental acts, business, or games.
- Presentation of information.
- Substances existing in nature, even if isolated.
- Exclusions to Patentability: As per Section 7 of the Patents Ordinance 2000 (amended in 2002 & 2006), the following are not patentable:
- Inventions whose commercial exploitation needs to be prevented to protect public order, morality, or animal/plant life and health.
- Intellectual, abstract, or aesthetic inventions (e.g., discoveries, artistic works, computer software, and business methods).
- Medical methods (diagnostic, therapeutic, and surgical procedures for treating humans or animals).
- Biotechnology-based inventions that do not meet patentability requirements.
- New or subsequent use of a known product or process.
- Physical changes in a chemical product where the formula or manufacturing process remains unchanged.
Any of the following persons are entitled to make an application for Patent, Whether alone or jointly with any other person, may make an application for a Patent, namely:- (a) The true and the first inventor or inventors of the invention or his or, as the case may be, their assignee or successor -in -interest; and (b) The legal representative of any deceased person who immediately before his death was entitled to make such application.