TTABlog Test: Is PRO-GO for Bendable Lotion Containers Confusable with HANDY PRO-GO for Plastic Pails?
The USPTO refused to register the mark PRO-GO for "lotion containers sold empty for domestic use, namely bendable tubing for personal transport of such lotions," concluding that confusion is likely with the registered mark HANDY PRO-GO for "portable plastic containers, namely, pails." Applicant Sun Tube argued that the goods are different and the cited mark is dominated by the word HANDY. How do you think this came out? In re Sun Tube, LLC, Serial No. 97365902 (May 22, 2026) [not precedential] (Opinion by Judge Elizabeth K. Brock).
The Goods: Of course, even if the goods are not identical, they can be related under Section 2(d). The examining attorney submitted excerpts from nine websites, contending that each showed the involved goods being sold under a single mark. The Board reviewed each website and found that the first three did not show bendable tubing for personal transport of lotions, and another one was a foreign website that had no probative value. Only four were probative.
In sum, we find that four websites . . . show that the broader category of lotion containers may be sold under the same website house mark as plastic pails, but also sometimes not, and of these four websites that offer both types of goods, only the latter three include tube containers that might be considered “bendable” like Applicant’s. Given the potential differences in the lotion container products and Applicant’s own identification (and the lack of evidence that such differences are not consequential), as well as the limited number of entities offering both types of goods, we are not persuaded that the goods are sufficiently related such that confusion is likely.
The Marks:The Board found the marksk to be "similar in appearance and sound, to an extent, and the entirety of Applicant’s PRO-GO mark is identical to the PRO-GO component of Registrant’s mark." However, it was "not convinced that HANDY PRO-GO and PRO-GO have similar meanings and create similar commercial impressions.
When viewed in connection with the goods in the Cited Registration, i.e., plastic pails, we agree with Applicant’s assessment that this might suggest professional painters’ buckets, however, some of these meanings may change. Here, PRO-GO for travel lotion containers certainly leans on the “go” aspect of travel and portability, but the other meanings of PRO do not carryover as well; travel lotion containers for personal use do not so clearly suggest a professional use in the same manner as a plastic pail.
The Board concluded that the marks create different commercial impressions. "Overall, we do not find the find the marks sufficiently similar, which weighs against a conclusion that confusion is likely."
With the first and second DuPont factors weighing in applicant's favor, the Board reversed the refusal.
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Text Copyright John L. Welch 2026.


















