Business Strategy
How to Protect Your Adult Wellness Brand IP When Working with a Chinese Manufacturer
· رؤى التصنيع من Evokomoribi
TL;DR
The five IP risks adult wellness brands face when sourcing from China — design copying, mold sharing, trademark squatting, trade secret leakage, and counterfeit production — are all manageable with the right contractual and registration framework in place before production begins. The core protection stack is: NDA signed before sharing any design file, mold ownership clause in every purchase order (who paid, exclusive use, right to transfer), China trademark registration with CNIPA before the product reaches market, international design registration in your target markets, and an annual supply chain audit to verify molds are stored and used exclusively for your orders. This guide explains each layer in practical terms — what the documents must contain, what registration costs and timelines look like, and which IP risks cannot be fully eliminated.

Sourcing adult wellness products from a Chinese manufacturer creates real IP exposure — not because Chinese manufacturers are fundamentally dishonest, but because IP protection in cross-border manufacturing requires specific legal instruments that most first-time importers never put in place. Without an NDA, a mold ownership clause, and a China trademark registration, your product design, your tooling investment, and your brand name are all available to a competitor willing to place an order with the same factory.
The good news is that this exposure is almost entirely preventable. The IP protection framework described in this guide costs less than USD 5,000 to put in place and creates legal barriers that are genuinely effective — not just in Chinese courts, but as a deterrent that credible manufacturers will respect because their reputation depends on it.
Quick Answer
The minimum IP protection stack for adult wellness brands sourcing in China is five layers: (1) NDA signed before sharing any design sketch, specification, or branding file — a reputable manufacturer signs within 48 hours; (2) mold ownership clause in every purchase order confirming buyer paid for the tool, exclusive use for buyer's orders only, and buyer's right to transfer the mold on 30-day notice; (3) China trademark registration with CNIPA before product launch — China uses first-to-file, not first-to-use, so registering after launch is already too late; (4) international design registration in your primary sales markets (EU Registered Community Design or US Design Patent); (5) supply chain audit annually to verify the mold is physically in storage and has not been used for unauthorised production runs. A manufacturer who refuses any of these five steps is not a safe partner, regardless of price.
The Five IP Risks in Adult Wellness China Sourcing
Understanding what can go wrong is the first step to preventing it. Adult wellness brands face five distinct IP risks when working with Chinese manufacturers — each with a different probability, a different cost, and a different prevention mechanism.
| IP Risk | Description | Probability | Potential Cost | Prevention |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Design copying | Factory sells same product design to a competitor under a different brand name | Medium — common with catalog OEM products | Lost market exclusivity; margin erosion | ODM with buyer-owned mold; design registration |
| Mold sharing | Factory uses your paid mold for other buyers' production runs | Low with written clause; high without | USD 3,000–8,000 tooling investment wasted; competitors get identical product | Mold ownership clause + annual audit |
| Trademark squatting | Factory or related party registers your brand name in China before you do | Low but high-impact when it occurs | USD 10,000–50,000+ in dispute costs; loss of China market access | CNIPA trademark registration before launch |
| Trade secret leakage | Factory shares your product brief, material specs, or formula with a third party | Medium without NDA; low with signed NDA from established manufacturer | Competitor product launch; lost first-mover advantage | NDA before any design disclosure |
| Counterfeit production | Factory produces unauthorised runs of your branded product outside agreed orders | Low with reputable manufacturers; higher with unverified suppliers | Brand damage; grey market undercutting; consumer safety liability | Manufacturer due diligence; serialised packaging; supply chain audit |
Layer 1: NDA — Non-Disclosure Agreement
An NDA is the first document that should be signed in any adult wellness sourcing relationship — before product sketches, before reference photos, before a Pantone colour file, and before any branding brief. The purpose of the NDA at this stage is not primarily to create a legal weapon (though it does), but to identify whether the manufacturer is a credible long-term partner. A credible manufacturer with an established international client base signs an NDA without hesitation because they sign them regularly. A factory that objects, delays, or asks to "discuss after we receive your order" is signalling that they do not manage confidentiality as a standard operating procedure.
What the NDA Must Contain
| NDA Clause | Why It Matters | Common Omission |
|---|---|---|
| Definition of confidential information | Must explicitly cover product sketches, CAD files, material specifications, branding files, Pantone references, and PCB schematics | Generic "business information" definition excludes product-specific content |
| Prohibition on disclosure to third parties | Prevents the factory from sharing your brief with subcontractors, sister companies, or component suppliers | Clause covers the factory entity but not its affiliates or subcontractors |
| No independent commercialisation | Prohibits the factory from developing and selling a similar product using your design as a reference | Omitted entirely — common in template NDAs |
| Duration | Minimum 3 years; ideally 5 years — adult wellness product cycles are long | 12-month duration inadequate for product lifecycle |
| Governing law and jurisdiction | Specify Chinese law (People's Republic of China) and Guangdong Province courts for enforceability in China | Foreign governing law (UK, US) creates enforcement barriers in China |
| Liquidated damages | Fixed penalty amount (USD 50,000–200,000) for breach — more actionable than "actual damages" which are hard to quantify | No damages clause; NDA is not deterrent without teeth |
The NDA should be signed in both English and simplified Chinese. An English-only NDA is theoretically enforceable in a Chinese court but practically weaker — a Chinese-language version eliminates the argument that terms were misunderstood. Reputable B2B manufacturers in Dongguan will have a bilingual NDA template already — if they do not, provide your own, translated by a certified Chinese legal translator.
Layer 2: Mold Ownership Documentation
If you invest in a custom mold — for a new product shape, a modified tip geometry, or a custom control panel — you are paying for a physical asset that will be stored at the factory. Without explicit documentation in the purchase order, the factory's default position is that molds stored on their premises are their property. This is not a malicious interpretation — it is the standard commercial assumption in Chinese manufacturing absent a written clause to the contrary.
What the Mold Ownership Clause Must Specify
The mold ownership clause must be included in the purchase order (not just the NDA), because the purchase order is the document that governs the specific transaction. It must state: (1) the specific mold or molds being commissioned, identified by product model and mold description; (2) that the full tooling cost has been paid by the buyer; (3) that the mold is the exclusive property of the buyer and may not be used for any other customer's production without written consent; (4) that the factory will store the mold in serviceable condition at no additional cost; (5) that the buyer has the right to transfer the mold to another manufacturing facility on 30 days' written notice, with the factory obligated to release the mold within that period; and (6) a physical description of the mold (dimensions, weight) sufficient to identify it.
Mold Ownership: Cost and Exclusivity Reference
| Mold Type | Typical Cost | Ownership Implication Without Clause | Ownership With Clause |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minor modification to existing mold | USD 500–2,000 | Factory retains mold; can reverse modification for other buyers | Buyer owns modification; factory cannot reverse |
| New mold (factory-designed to your brief) | USD 2,000–5,000 | Factory retains design and mold; sells to competitors after 12–18 months | Buyer owns mold; factory cannot produce for other buyers |
| New mold (buyer-provided CAD) | USD 3,000–8,000 | Factory retains physical mold by default | Buyer owns mold and design; full transfer rights |
| Custom PCB + new mold | USD 6,000–15,000 | Factory retains mold and PCB design; can produce for competitors | Buyer owns both mold and PCB design; firmware excluded unless specified |
After the mold ownership clause is signed, request a photograph of the mold with a dated reference card (date + your company name) and store it in your records. This creates a baseline for the annual audit — if the mold's condition changes, or if it appears to have been used more than your own order volumes would explain, you have a reference point for the conversation.
Layer 3: China Trademark Registration
China uses a first-to-file trademark system, not first-to-use. This means that the party who files the trademark application first owns the mark in China — regardless of who has been using it longer, who created it, or who has registered it in other countries. Adult wellness brands that launch products in China (including on Tmall, JD.com, or via distributors) without first registering their trademark are exposed to trademark squatting — where a factory employee, a trading company, or a competitor files the mark and then demands payment to transfer it or simply blocks the brand from operating.
CNIPA Registration: Timeline and Cost
| Registration Stage | Timeline | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Application filing | Day 1 | CNY 300 (approx. USD 42) per class, per mark | File in Class 10 (medical devices, intimate products) and Class 35 (retail/wholesale services) as minimum |
| Formal examination | 1–3 months after filing | Included | CNIPA checks for formality errors; rarely rejected at this stage |
| Substantive examination | 9–12 months after filing | Included | CNIPA checks for conflicts with prior registrations |
| Publication period | 3 months (opposition window) | Included | Third parties can oppose; rare for adult wellness marks |
| Registration certificate | 12–18 months total | Included in application fee | Valid 10 years; renewable |
| Attorney fees (China IP firm) | N/A | USD 300–600 per class | Recommended for non-Chinese applicants; handle translation and filing |
File the trademark application before you show the brand to any factory, not after. The moment you share branding files with a Chinese manufacturer — even under NDA — the brand name exists in China and can theoretically be filed by a third party. In practice, reputable manufacturers do not do this, but the cost of filing early (USD 600–1,200 for two classes through an attorney) is negligible relative to the cost of a squatting dispute.
Priority filing: if you have already registered the trademark in the EU, US, or another Paris Convention country, you can file a priority claim in China within 6 months of that registration date — your China filing date will be backdated to the original foreign registration. This is an important mechanism for brands that are expanding to China from an existing market.
Layer 4: International Design Registration
A trademark protects your brand name and logo. It does not protect your product shape. If you have invested in a custom mold — a unique product geometry, a distinctive silhouette, a proprietary control interface — that design can be copied by a competitor after it appears on the market unless you have registered it as an industrial design in your target sales markets.
Design Registration by Market
| Market | Registration Type | Cost | Timeline | Protection Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| European Union | EU Registered Community Design (RCD) via EUIPO | EUR 350 for first design; EUR 190 each additional | 4–6 weeks from filing | 5 years, renewable to 25 years |
| United Kingdom | UK Registered Design via UKIPO | GBP 50 for first design online | 4–8 weeks | 5 years, renewable to 25 years |
| United States | US Design Patent via USPTO | USD 760–1,500 (small entity) + attorney USD 1,500–3,000 | 18–30 months | 15 years from grant |
| China | Design Patent via CNIPA | CNY 500 (approx. USD 70) + attorney USD 200–400 | 6–12 months | 15 years |
| International (WIPO) | Hague System — covers 96 contracting parties | CHF 397 base + CHF 11 per additional design, per country | 6–12 months | 5 years, renewable to 15–25 years per country |
For adult wellness brands selling primarily in the EU, the Registered Community Design offers the best cost-to-coverage ratio: one filing, one fee, protection in all 27 EU member states simultaneously. File before the product launches publicly — in most jurisdictions, design registration is invalidated by prior disclosure. The EU has a 12-month grace period for the designer's own disclosure, but do not rely on it as a strategy.
Layer 5: Annual Supply Chain Audit
Contractual IP protection — NDA, mold ownership clause, trademark registration — creates legal remedies if infringement occurs. An annual supply chain audit is the operational mechanism that detects infringement before it becomes a market-scale problem. It is also a powerful deterrent: factories that know they will be audited annually are significantly less likely to use your mold for unauthorised runs, because the probability of discovery is high and the relationship cost is clear.
Annual Audit Checklist
| Audit Item | How to Verify | Red Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Mold physical condition | Live video tour of mold storage area; photograph with date card | Mold not in expected storage location; different condition than prior photo |
| Production run records | Request production log showing all runs completed on the mold since last audit | Production volume recorded exceeds your order history |
| Mold shot count | Compare shot counter reading against your own order units (each shot = set of units per cavity) | Shot count inconsistent with documented production for your orders |
| Current buyer list | Ask directly: are any other buyers currently ordering from this mold? | Evasive or inconsistent answer |
| Subcontracting status | Confirm no production has been subcontracted to third-party facilities | Admission of subcontracting without your written consent |
| Staff continuity | Confirm that the account manager and production lead familiar with your project are still employed | Complete turnover of relevant staff — IP knowledge goes with them |
The audit can be conducted remotely via video call for established relationships, or in person (or through a third-party audit firm) for new relationships or after any change in factory ownership or management. SGS, Bureau Veritas, and QIMA all offer supply chain audit services at approximately USD 400–600 per day.
IP Protections That Cannot Fully Eliminate Risk
It is worth being clear about what IP protection cannot do. No NDA prevents a factory employee from memorising your product design and taking it to a new employer. No mold ownership clause prevents a factory from producing a functionally similar product using a different mold they tool at their own cost. No trademark registration stops a manufacturer in China from producing an unbranded copy of your product for export to markets where your trademark is not registered.
The most effective structural protection is not legal — it is relational. A manufacturer with a significant, long-term business relationship with you has a strong commercial incentive to protect your IP because the value of the relationship exceeds the value of any individual competitor order they could gain by violating it. This is why manufacturer due diligence, relationship depth, and working with established manufacturers who have reputational skin in the game matters as much as the legal framework.
IP Protection Cost Summary
| Protection Layer | One-Time Cost | Annual Cost | Time to Implement |
|---|---|---|---|
| NDA (bilingual, attorney-drafted) | USD 300–800 | None | 1–2 weeks |
| Mold ownership clause (added to PO template) | USD 200–500 (legal review) | None | 1 week |
| China trademark (CNIPA, 2 classes) | USD 700–1,400 including attorney | None (renewable at year 10) | 12–18 months to grant |
| EU Registered Community Design | EUR 350–700 per design | EUR 90–190 per design (at 5-year renewal) | 4–6 weeks |
| US Design Patent | USD 3,000–5,000 including attorney | None | 18–30 months |
| Annual supply chain audit (remote) | None | USD 0–600 (self vs. third-party) | Ongoing |
| Total (minimum effective stack) | USD 1,500–3,000 | USD 0–600 | Start immediately; trademark 12–18 months |
What to Do If Your IP Is Infringed
If you discover that a Chinese manufacturer is producing and selling a copy of your product — whether under their own brand, under a client's brand, or as an unbranded export — your first action should be to document the infringement before doing anything else. Purchase a sample of the infringing product. Record every listing URL, factory address, and shipment detail you can find. This evidence record is essential for any enforcement action and becomes much harder to assemble after the infringing party becomes aware they have been identified.
If you hold a China design patent or trademark, you can file a complaint with the CNIPA or initiate proceedings with the local market supervision bureau — Chinese IP enforcement through administrative channels is faster and cheaper than court litigation, and results in factory inspections and product seizure within weeks in well-documented cases. If the infringement is occurring on Alibaba or Made-in-China, both platforms have IP complaint processes that can result in listing removal within 5–10 business days. If you are selling on Amazon and the infringing product appears there, the Amazon Brand Registry complaints process is your fastest tool — it operates on a 3–5 business day timeline with strong seller protections.
Conclusion
IP protection in adult wellness China sourcing is not complicated — it is mostly a matter of doing the right things in the right sequence, before production begins rather than after the first infringement is discovered. Sign the NDA before sharing anything. Document mold ownership in every purchase order. Register your trademark in China before your product reaches market. Register your product design before it appears publicly. Audit your supply chain once a year. The total cost is USD 1,500–3,000 for the minimum effective stack — a fraction of the loss from a single infringement incident.
Evokomoribi signs NDA agreements before any project discussion, includes mold ownership and exclusivity clauses in every OEM/ODM purchase order, and supports annual supply chain audits — virtual or in-person — as a standard part of our B2B manufacturing partnerships.
أسئلة ذات صلة
How do I protect my adult wellness product design when working with a Chinese manufacturer?
Five-layer protection: (1) NDA signed before sharing any design file — must cover product sketches, CAD files, Pantone references, and PCB schematics, with a liquidated damages clause and Chinese-law governing jurisdiction; (2) mold ownership clause in every purchase order confirming buyer ownership, exclusive use, and the right to transfer the mold to another factory on 30-day notice; (3) China trademark registration with CNIPA before product launch — China is first-to-file, not first-to-use, so filing after launch is already too late; (4) EU Registered Community Design or US Design Patent to protect the product geometry in your primary sales markets; (5) annual supply chain audit — physical mold location verified, production run records checked, shot count compared against your own order history.
How much does it cost to register a trademark in China for an adult wellness brand?
China trademark registration (CNIPA) costs approximately CNY 300 (USD 42) per class per mark in government fees, plus USD 300–600 per class in attorney fees for non-Chinese applicants — total USD 700–1,400 for two classes (Class 10 for adult wellness products and Class 35 for retail/wholesale services). The process takes 12–18 months from filing to registration certificate. The critical timing rule: file before showing the brand to any Chinese manufacturer or supplier, not after. If you already have a trademark registered in the EU or US, you can file a priority claim in China within 6 months and backdate the China filing to your original foreign registration date.
What is the profit margin difference between dropshipping and private label in adult wellness?
Dropshipping adult wellness products typically delivers a gross margin of 15–30% and net margin of 5–15% after platform fees and customer acquisition costs — often unprofitable at early-stage paid advertising costs. Private label from a Chinese OEM manufacturer at 500 units MOQ delivers gross margins of 55–70% (factory cost approximately USD 9.50 for a product retailing at USD 54.99) and net margins of 25–45% after Amazon FBA fees. At 200 units per month, the difference is approximately USD 5,000 per month in additional net profit for private label over dropshipping.
What is the minimum investment required to start an adult wellness private label brand?
Minimum private label entry: USD 3,000–5,000 total. Breakdown: 30% deposit on a 300-unit order at USD 8–12 per unit equals USD 720–1,080; 70% balance before shipment equals USD 1,680–2,520; sea freight to your market USD 300–600; samples before bulk USD 50–150; packaging design USD 200–500. Total first-order budget including samples and shipping: approximately USD 3,000–4,500. Customs duties and FBA prep (if not done at factory) add USD 200–500. Plan for USD 5,000 as a comfortable first private label budget. Add USD 700–1,400 for China trademark registration if you plan to sell through Chinese distributors or manufacture long-term in China.
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