Led Zeppelin Seeks Extension in ‘Experience’ Trademark Fight
Led Zeppelin is still working to secure U.S. trademark control of “The Led Zeppelin Experience,” with new filings indicating the band wants more time to respond after an initial refusal from the government.
The group’s trademark attorneys filed paperwork on March 5 asking for a three-month extension to the response deadline, LedZepNews reported, after a provisional rejection argued the phrase was too similar to the band’s existing Led Zeppelin trademark.
The move comes days before the prior March 9 deadline and, if granted, would give the band until June to make its case for regaining the mark. The application relates to goods and services including clothing and “entertainment services,” and it follows a 2019 U.S. trademark for the same name that was later abandoned after renewal paperwork was not filed.
The fight also keeps attention on the still-murky project behind the branding; after the government’s provisional refusal became public, the earlier rejection raised questions about whether the planned Experience concept could move forward in any form, including an exhibition-style project.
While the band has maintained trademark registrations for “The Led Zeppelin Experience” in the UK and Europe, the U.S. process now appears to be the key hurdle. The latest extension request is a procedural step, but it is also a signal that Led Zeppelin’s legal team is not ready to drop the name yet, keeping the project’s status in play.










