1. Our trademarks
Go Green Organic Clean may claim common-law trademark and service-mark rights in brand assets actually used in commerce, including the company name, logo, service names, and distinctive presentation of the brand. Common-law rights are not the same as federal registration.
- Go Green Organic Clean - house mark for cleaning services and customer education.
- Go Green stylized leaf logo - logo/service mark.
- Healthy Home Clean - service name used for a residential cleaning package.
- Deep Refresh - service name used for a deep-cleaning package.
2. Registration status
No federal trademark registrations are listed here as of July 3, 2026. The admin legal roadmap tracks USPTO clearance, filing decisions, serial numbers, office actions, renewals, and approved symbol use.
3. Fair use of our marks
You may refer to Go Green Organic Clean truthfully in the following ways without a license:
- News, reviews, editorial coverage, or commentary.
- Truthful comparative advertising that is not confusing.
- Descriptive use of ordinary words, such as green cleaning.
- Customer reviews and testimonials that reflect real experience.
4. Prohibited uses
- Use that is likely to confuse customers about source, sponsorship, affiliation, endorsement, or partnership.
- Competitive use that implies Go Green Organic Clean approves, licenses, or operates another business.
- Domain names, social handles, ads, or business names that copy or closely imitate our marks.
- Modified logo files, recolored logos, stretched logos, or logos placed on merchandise without written permission.
5. Logo and press requests
Journalists, bloggers, partner vendors, and event organizers may ask for approved brand files by emailing press@gogreenorganicclean.com. Approved files may be used only for the purpose stated in the written approval.
6. No patent marking
This page is not a virtual patent-marking page, and Go Green Organic Clean does not claim any patent, patent application, or patent-pending status on this page. If the company later files or obtains patent rights, counsel should create a separate reviewed notice with the specific product, process, application number, or issued patent number.
