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World's Largest IP Survey Reveals Increased Awareness and Trust in IP

Geneva, November 13, 2025
PR/2025/944

Global awareness and trust in intellectual property (IP) systems has reached new heights globally, according to WIPO Pulse 2025, the world's most comprehensive survey of IP perception and awareness.

The expanded survey - now reaching 35,500 respondents aged 18-65 in 74 countries - demonstrates growing global recognition of IP's critical role in protecting innovation and creativity and reveals significant increases in IP understanding across all categories of IP since the inaugural survey of 2023. 

WIPO Director General Daren Tang said: “Getting good data on how the public views IP is important to ensuring that we know how to grow public support for it. The good news from our survey is that IP is increasingly winning hearts and minds all over the world. Public awareness of IP has grown and attitudes towards IP has become more positive. But there is work ahead – there are still disparities in IP awareness among certain age groups towards awareness and certain types of IP remain relatively unknown.”  

Mr. Tang added: "We have been working with the global IP community to be better at communicating the value of IP to those on the ground. This year’s WIPO Pulse results demonstrate the positive impact of our collective efforts, while providing crucial data points on where to better focus our communication and engagement efforts.”

2025 WIPO Pulse Survey Report, PDF
(image: WIPO)

Key Findings: Rising Awareness and Trust

WIPO Pulse 2025 measures how much people know about IP through self-reporting and knowledge tests, creating an "Awareness Index" that reveals gaps between what respondents think they know and what they actually know.

The research also examines public attitudes toward IP-protected products and services, tracks how people engage with innovation in areas like healthcare and renewable energy and evaluates public opinion on IP's economic benefits and common misunderstandings about IP rights. 

IP awareness has increased across all categories.  Public awareness has grown across all main IP rights categories since 2023, with trademarks and copyright growing from 30% to 36% and 38% to 44% respectively. While copyright remains the most widely understood IP right, the results indicate that people worldwide are becoming more knowledgeable about all five main IP rights, though patents and designs lag in popular understanding among the general public. 

The expanded survey reveals significant regional developments. The Asia-Pacific region has made substantial progress since 2023 in raising awareness of all IP rights. The biggest leap among the IP rights surveyed in Asia – Pacific was for geographical indications which increased from 26% to 35% followed by copyright and trademarks going from 32% to 40% and 26% to 34% respectively. Western European also increased their overall IP awareness levels. The most important increase was awareness of trademarks with a 5% increase going from 30% to 35%.  While Asia-Pacific and Western Europe made progress since 2023, they are still on the lowest level of awareness when compared to the rest of the regions in the study.

Awareness and Perception Among Women and Youth:  Women and young people were traditionally underserved by the IP system so they have been important target groups to survey. The results show that the Asia-Pacific region drives the overall increase in global awareness, showing remarkable progress among both women and youth. In Asia-Pacific states, women's awareness increased across all five IP rights, with copyright and trademark awareness rising from 31% to 40% and 26% to 34% respectively. Youth in the same region demonstrated similar gains, with copyright awareness climbing 9 percentage points from 27% to 36%, while patents, trademarks and geographical indications each saw 7-percentage-point increases (16% to 23%, 24% to 31%, and 24% to 31% respectively). Western European states also recorded positive trends: women's trademark awareness grew from 29% to 35% and copyright from 41% to 44%, while youth awareness increased across all five IP rights, most notably in trademarks (20% to 30%) and copyright (25% to 34%). However, youth awareness declined in Latin America, the Caribbean, and Eastern Europe, highlighting the need for continued targeted engagement in these regions.

Strong trust in IP rights. Strong global consensus is emerging on IP's fundamental value, with people across diverse economies consistently recognizing IP rights' power to ensure fair compensation for creators and build consumer confidence.  When asked to rate their agreement with key IP attributes, respondents scored on average around 4 (from 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree)) across all tested categories, indicating widespread agreement that spans from basic IP protection.

Confidence in IP's Role in the Economy: Public confidence in the positive impact of IP on the economy remains strong overall, with positive perceptions remaining relatively stable at 64%. Respondents were asked to react to five statements that suggested IP as a challenge to economies. Overall, less respondents agreed with those statements (53% to 51%). This trend varies significantly by region: Western European states declined from 54% to 44%. Similarly, Asia-Pacific states showed a decline from 63% to 58%.

About WIPO

The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) is the United Nations agency that serves the world’s innovators and creators, ensuring that their ideas travel safely to the market and improve lives everywhere.

We do so by providing services that enable creators, innovators and entrepreneurs to protect and promote their intellectual property (IP) across borders and acting as a forum for addressing cutting-edge IP issues. Our IP data and information guide decisionmakers the world over. And our impact-driven projects and technical assistance ensure IP benefits everyone, everywhere.

For more information, please contact the News and Media Division at WIPO:
  • Tel: (+41 22) 338 81 61 / 338 72 24
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