Teslaโs attempt to trademark the term โRobotaxiโ in reference to its vehicles has been refused by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for being too generic, according to a new filing. Another application by Tesla to trademark the term โRobotaxiโ for its upcoming ride-hailing service is still under examination by the office.
In addition, applications from Tesla for the trademark on the term โCybercabโ have been halted due to other companies pursuing similar โCyberโ trademarks. That includes one company that has applied for numerous trademarks related to aftermarket Cybertruck accessories.
The USPTO issued Tuesday whatโs known as a โnonfinal office actionโ on the โRobotaxiโ trademark application, which means Tesla has three months to file a response or the office will abandon the application. A trademark lawyer representing Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Tesla applied for the trademarks in October 2024 on the same day that it revealed the Cybercab, the purpose-built electric car that it hopes to one day use in its planned autonomous ride-hailing service. Tesla also submitted two similar trademark applications October 10 for the term โRobobus,โ which are still under examination.
The trademark that was refused was assigned to a USPTO examiner on April 14. Tesla said it would use the word in reference to โ[l]and vehicles; electric vehicles, namely automobiles; automobiles; and structural parts therefor,โ according to the original application.
While the USPTO examiner found there were no conflicting trademarks in existence, it refused the application because it was โmerely descriptive.โ The examiner wrote that the term โRobotaxiโ is โused to describe similar goods and services by other companies.โ
โ[S]uch wording appears to be generic in the context of applicantโs goods and/or services,โ the examiner wrote.
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Tesla will be allowed to submit evidence and arguments to support its argument in favor of the trademark. If it does, the USPTO wants Tesla to provide โ[f]act sheets, instruction manuals, brochures, advertisements and pertinent screenshots of applicantโs website as it relates to the goods and/or services in the application, including any materials using the terms in the applied-for mark.โ
In other words, Tesla needs to give the agency specific plans for how and why it deserves the โRobotaxiโ trademark.
The examiner also wrote that Tesla will need to tell the USPTO if โcompetitorsโ use the terms โROBO, ROBOT, or ROBOTIC to advertise similar goods and/or services.โ
Teslaโs other application for the โRobotaxiโ trademark would cover the use of the word when offering transportation services, including โcoordinating travel arrangements for individuals and for groups,โ โarranging time-based ridesharing services,โ and offering vehicle sharing or rentals. That application was also assigned to a USPTO examiner on April 14, but no decision has been filed.
This story has been updated to include information about the โCybercabโ trademark applications.


