---
title: "Product Compliance and IP Clearance - Flapen"
canonical_url: "https://flapen.com/guides/product-sourcing/compliance-and-ip"
last_updated: "2026-07-19T11:34:23.216Z"
locale: en
meta:
  description: "Confirm your product meets its market's safety rules and infringes no one else's rights before you pay."
  "og:description": "Confirm your product meets its market's safety rules and infringes no one else's rights before you pay."
  "og:title": "Product Compliance and IP Clearance - Flapen"
---

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# **Product Compliance and IP Clearance**

Confirm your product meets its market's safety rules and infringes no one else's rights before you pay.

## Two risks, one outcome Compliance and infringement are separate problems that end the same way — a listing pulled and inventory you cannot sell. Compliance is about your product meeting the safety, testing, and labeling rules of the market you ship into. Infringement is about your product or its packaging copying something another party already owns. Neither shows up in a supplier quote. A factory can make a compliant-looking sample and still hold none of the documentation your category requires, and it will rarely tell you that the design you sent resembles a patented one. Clear both before you pay, because tooling and a purchase order are the two costs you cannot recover.**Clearance is a gate, not a step** A product that fails either check is not a cheaper product to fix later — it is a product you should not have ordered. ## Where compliance lives Compliance is defined by your product category and your destination market together, not by your supplier. The same item can be unregulated in one market and heavily gated in another. You determined the mandatory certifications before contacting suppliers; widen that now to the full compliance scope below, before production is booked and while the requirement can still shape the product.**Full compliance scope**- Safety standards the category must meet in your destination market. - Testing by an accredited lab, with a report tied to your specific product. - Labeling and marking the product and packaging must carry. - Documentation you must hold and be able to produce on request. - Restricted or gated status that requires approval before you can list. Where a category is gated, the marketplace will not let you list until you submit the invoices, test reports, or authorizations it asks for. Treat that as a requirement to satisfy up front, not a surprise at launch. ## Clearing intellectual property IP clearance is the mirror image of registering your own mark. The earlier trademark guide was about acquiring a brand name you own; clearance is about confirming your product, name, and packaging do not sit on top of rights someone else already holds. The same three categories that can protect you can also block you.**Patent** confirm your design does not fall within a live claim.**Trademark** confirm your name and marks are not confusable with a registered one.**Copyright** confirm your artwork, text, and imagery are original to you. Search each patent and trademark register that applies to your destination market. A design that is free to use in one market can be patented in another, so clearance follows the same market boundaries as compliance. When a search is close to the line, that is the point to involve a professional rather than guess. ## A three-step clearance sequence Run the same sequence before tooling and before the purchase order, so both risks stay in front of the money.**1****Define** Fix the destination market, the exact product, and the packaging, so you know precisely what you are clearing against.**2****Search** Check the safety and labeling rules for the category, then search the patent and trademark registers for the same market and confirm your creative assets are original or licensed.**3****Resolve** Redesign, relabel, or rename anything that fails, and re-clear it. A borderline result usually warrants professional review before you proceed. Only after all three pass should tooling be cut or a deposit sent. Reordering these steps moves the cost somewhere you cannot see it. Both are sunk once paid Tooling is built for your design and a purchase order books production — neither refunds because a rule or a right surfaced afterward. Clearance settles what you are allowed to sell. What it will cost to land the goods is the next question.Was this page helpful? [**Samples and Quality Control** Test samples against a written standard, negotiate from limits you set, and inspect before releasing final payment.](https://flapen.com/guides/product-sourcing/samples-and-quality) [**Calculating True Landed Cost** Rebuild your margin on the full cost of getting a unit sellable — not the supplier's quote alone.](https://flapen.com/guides/product-sourcing/landed-cost)