Mercado Libre counterfeit protection is the process brands use to detect, report, remove, and prevent fake or IP-infringing listings across Mercado Libre’s marketplace ecosystem.
For rights holders, this usually means combining:
- Mercado Libre’s Brand Protection Program
- The official Mercado Libre rights enrollment process
- Trademark, copyright, patent, design, or utility model enforcement
- Marketplace monitoring
- Evidence collection
- Seller tracking
- Counter-notice management
- Repeat offender documentation
- Ongoing measurement of takedown results
The goal is not only to remove one counterfeit listing. It is to reduce the visibility, availability, and commercial impact of fake products using your brand across one of Latin America’s most important ecommerce ecosystems.
That matters because Mercado Libre is now far larger than the platform many brands first started monitoring years ago. In 2025, Mercado Libre reported $65 billion in annual gross merchandise value, 2.4 billion items sold, and more than 120 million annual unique buyers. In Q1 2026 alone, it reported $19 billion in GMV, 722 million items sold, and more than 84 million unique active buyers.
TL;DR
- Mercado Libre’s main IP enforcement route is the Brand Protection Program, also known as BPP or PPPI.
- Rights holders and authorized agents can use the program to report listings that infringe trademarks, copyrights, industrial models and designs, patents, and utility models.
- The program is free to join, but brands must enroll the relevant IP rights before they can report infringements.
- Rights must be enrolled for each country where the brand wants to report infringing listings.
- BPP members can report Mercado Libre listings and websites using Mercado Pago as a payment processor when those websites infringe their rights.
- After a report is submitted, the listing is paused and the seller has 4 calendar days to reply. If the seller does not reply, the listing is automatically removed.
- If the seller replies, the rights holder has 4 calendar days to accept or reject the response. If the rights holder rejects it, the listing is permanently removed.
- Mercado Libre can sanction repeat offenders, including temporary suspension or permanent account shutdown.
- Manual reporting works for isolated cases, but when counterfeits spread across countries, categories, and seller accounts, individual reports cannot keep pace.
Why Mercado Libre counterfeit protection matters
Mercado Libre is not just another marketplace for brands operating in Latin America. It is a major ecommerce, payments, logistics, and advertising ecosystem, with operations across multiple countries.
That scale creates opportunity for legitimate sellers. It also creates room for bad actors to exploit brand demand with counterfeit products, copied images, misleading titles, unauthorized use of logos, and suspicious seller networks.
For brands, the risks usually go beyond one fake listing. Counterfeit activity on Mercado Libre can lead to:
- Lost revenue from diverted sales
- Customer confusion between official and fake products
- Negative reviews caused by low-quality goods
- Warranty and customer service issues
- Brand dilution in key Latin American markets
- Pressure on authorized distributors
- Repeat seller activity across countries
- Fake websites using Mercado Pago to process payments
Mercado Libre has invested in stronger platform-side enforcement. Its sustainability reporting says 95% of listings taken down for IP violations were identified proactively, and that more than 93,000 intellectual property rights are registered in its ecosystem.
But proactive platform enforcement does not remove the need for brand-side monitoring. Counterfeiters adapt quickly. They change keywords, reuse images, create new seller accounts, modify packaging photos, hide brand names, or move across local Mercado Libre domains.
How Mercado Libre protects brands
Mercado Libre’s main tool for rights holders is the Brand Protection Program. The program allows IP owners and authorized representatives to report infringing listings through a dedicated reporting tool.
Mercado Libre describes the program as a way to safeguard IP across Mercado Libre and Mercado Pago. Members can report listings or websites that use Mercado Pago when they believe those listings or websites infringe their rights.
Mercado Libre Brand Protection Program features
| Feature | What it helps brands do |
| Rights enrollment | Register trademarks, copyrights, patents, designs, utility models, and related rights for enforcement |
| Listing reporting | Report Mercado Libre listings that infringe enrolled IP rights |
| Bulk reporting | Submit multiple reports instead of handling each case one by one |
| Saved search criteria | Reuse searches and filters to speed up monitoring |
| Multi-country monitoring | Search for listings across the countries where Mercado Libre operates |
| Case management | Track report status and review seller responses |
| Team access | Create different user profiles so multiple team members can work in the same account |
| Reports by date, complainant, and seller | Analyze enforcement activity and seller behavior |
| Mercado Pago website reporting | Report websites that infringe rights and use Mercado Pago as a payment processor |
Mercado Libre also says each approved report helps improve its detection systems, which means consistent reporting can support better future detection.
What can brands report on Mercado Libre?
Brands can report more than obvious counterfeit products. Mercado Libre’s Brand Protection Program covers several types of intellectual property rights, including trademarks, copyrighted works, industrial models and designs, patents, and utility models.
That makes the program useful for a wider set of marketplace issues.
| Type of issue | Possible IP basis | Example |
| Counterfeit product | Trademark infringement | A seller offers fake products using your brand name or logo |
| Copied product images | Copyright infringement | A seller uses your official product photos without permission |
| Copied product descriptions | Copyright infringement | A seller copies your official website or catalog copy |
| Fake packaging | Trademark or design rights | A product uses packaging that imitates your protected branding |
| Knockoff product shape | Industrial design, model, or patent | A product copies the protected appearance or function of your product |
| Misleading compatibility claim | Trademark misuse | A generic accessory uses your brand name in a way that suggests official affiliation |
| False official distributor claim | Trademark or misleading use of brand | A seller implies they are authorized when they are not |
| Fake website using Mercado Pago | Trademark, copyright, or related rights | A copycat website uses your brand and processes payments through Mercado Pago |
The key is to connect the listing to a specific IP right. A report that says “this seller is suspicious” is weaker than a report that says “this listing uses our registered trademark in the title and product images to sell a counterfeit product.”
What cannot always be solved through BPP?
The Brand Protection Program is designed for intellectual property infringements. That distinction matters.
Not every commercial conflict is automatically an IP violation. For example, a seller offering genuine products without permission may create channel conflict, pricing issues, or distributor tension, but it may not always qualify as an IP infringement by itself.
Before reporting, brands should check whether the listing involves a specific legal basis, such as:
- Fake product using your trademark
- Unauthorized use of your logo
- Copied copyrighted images
- Copied copyrighted descriptions
- Misleading claims of official affiliation
- Infringement of protected designs or patents
- A website using your brand to mislead buyers and process payments through Mercado Pago
If the issue is purely unauthorized resale of genuine goods, brands may need a different strategy. That can include distributor controls, selective distribution policies, test buys, contractual enforcement, seller mapping, or legal escalation depending on the country and product category.
How to remove a counterfeit from Mercado Libre
To remove a counterfeit listing from Mercado Libre, brands should first enroll in the Mercado Libre Brand Protection Program, register the relevant IP rights, collect evidence from the listing, submit a report through the BPP tool, and monitor any seller counter-notice.
Note: Steps 4–5 cover BPP enrollment, which must be completed before you can search and submit reports through the platform (Steps 6–10). If your brand is already enrolled, skip to Step 6.
Step 1. Confirm the listing is likely infringing
Start by reviewing the listing carefully. Do not rely on one signal alone. A low price can be suspicious, but low price by itself does not prove counterfeiting.
Look for combined signals such as:
- Brand name used in the title or description
- Logo visible on the product, packaging, or images
- Product images copied from your official website
- Packaging that does not match your authentic products
- Seller claims such as “replica,” “similar,” “compatible,” “inspired by,” or “same as original”
- Product specifications that do not match your catalog
- Unusually low price compared with authorized channels
- Seller account with many similar branded products
- Repeated listings using the same photos or descriptions
- Negative buyer reviews mentioning quality, authenticity, or delivery issues
Step 2. Collect evidence before reporting
Document the listing before submitting a report. Sellers can edit, pause, or delete listings once they suspect enforcement activity.
Collect:
- Listing URL
- Seller name
- Seller profile URL
- Product title
- Product description
- Product images
- Price
- Available quantity, if visible
- Shipping origin
- Category
- Product variations
- Buyer reviews or complaints
- Screenshots showing the infringement
- Screenshots of any authenticity claims
- Your matching registered IP right
- Your official product image, if relevant
- Any evidence that the seller is connected to other infringing listings
Keep the evidence even after the listing is removed. Repeat infringer documentation is often more valuable than a single takedown.
Step 3. Match the infringement to the right IP claim
Choose the strongest IP basis for the report.
| If the listing does this | Consider reporting under |
| Uses your brand name or logo on fake goods | Trademark |
| Uses your official product photos | Copyright |
| Copies your official product description | Copyright |
| Copies a protected product shape or ornamental design | Industrial design or model |
| Copies a protected invention or technical feature | Patent or utility model |
| Uses your brand to operate a fake website with Mercado Pago | Trademark, copyright, or related rights |
| Claims official distribution without authorization | Trademark or misleading brand use, depending on facts |
The clearer your claim, the easier it is for the platform and the seller to understand the issue.
Weak report language:
This seller is fake. Please remove.
Stronger report language:
This listing uses our registered trademark in the title and shows goods bearing our logo. The seller is not authorized by our company, and the product images show packaging that does not match our authentic product. We are reporting this listing as trademark infringement and suspected counterfeit activity.
Step 4. Enroll in Mercado Libre’s Brand Protection Program
Brands must join the Brand Protection Program before using the dedicated reporting tool.
Mercado Libre says any rights holder or agent can join the program. If the registration is handled by a representative, a current power of attorney from the rights holder is required.
Mercado Libre also says brands do not need an existing Mercado Libre or Mercado Pago account to enroll. A new account is created after enrollment.
To enroll, use the official Mercado Libre rights enrollment form and prepare the relevant documentation. Requirements vary depending on the type of right, but for trademarks, Mercado Libre says brands need to attach a copy of the certificate issued by the trademark office of the corresponding country.
Common documentation includes:
- Rights holder information
- Company information
- Contact details
- IP registration certificate
- Registration number
- Country of registration
- Expiration date
- Class information, if applicable
- Representative information, if applicable
- Power of attorney, if filing as an agent
- Public business name and email that may be shared with sellers
Step 5. Enroll rights for the countries you need to enforce in
Mercado Libre operates across multiple countries, so country coverage is important.
Mercado Libre says members can report in every country where Mercado Libre or Mercado Pago operates, but they must enroll their rights for each country where they want to report.
For example:
- To report infringing listings in Argentina, you should have the relevant rights enrolled for Argentina.
- To report in Mexico, you should enroll in the relevant Mexican rights.
- To report across several local marketplaces, you need to make sure your rights coverage supports each target country.
This is one of the most common reasons brands struggle with regional enforcement. They find infringing listings across several Mercado Libre domains, but only have one country’s IP rights ready in the portal.
Step 6. Search for infringing listings
Once your account and rights are approved, use the BPP tool to search for listings.
Mercado Libre’s Brand Protection Program allows members to search across the countries where it operates, refine results, save search criteria, report listings individually or in bulk, and access reports by date, complainant, and seller.
Use a mix of search approaches:
| Search type | What to look for |
| Brand keywords | Exact brand name, abbreviations, misspellings, product lines |
| Product keywords | Product type, model name, SKU, collection name |
| Local language terms | Spanish and Portuguese words buyers use to find the product |
| Counterfeit indicators | “Replica,” “similar,” “compatible,” “type,” “style,” “premium copy” |
| Seller search | Repeat sellers using multiple listings or categories |
| Image-based review | Listings using copied photos, catalog images, or fake known images |
| Price filters | Listings significantly below normal retail or authorized resale prices |
| Category filters | Product categories where your brand is most exposed |
| Country filters | High-risk markets or countries where you have registered rights |
For Mercado Libre, local language matters. Counterfeiters may not use the same keywords across Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, or Uruguay. Spanish and Portuguese variations can materially change detection coverage.
Step 7. Submit the report through BPP
When submitting a report, be specific and concise. Identify the listing, the right being enforced, and why the listing infringes that right.
A strong report should include:
- The listing URL
- The seller name or ID
- The specific IP right being enforced
- The country where the right is registered
- The registration number, if required
- The infringement type
- Screenshots or supporting evidence
- A short explanation of why the product is counterfeit or infringing
Avoid vague claims. Mercado Libre’s process gives sellers the chance to respond, so your report should be clear enough to withstand a counter-notice.
Step 8. Monitor the seller response
After a report is submitted, Mercado Libre pauses the listing. The seller is notified and the listing is marked as inactive due to the report. The seller then has 4 calendar days to reply.
If the seller does not reply within 4 calendar days, the listing is automatically removed.
If the seller replies, they may submit arguments or documents, such as purchase invoices or authorization from the rights holder. For image-related reports, the seller may also have the option to change the images and send them as a counter-notice.
Step 9. Accept or reject the counter-notice
If the seller replies, the rights holder has 4 calendar days to review the response.
There are two outcomes:
| Rights holder decision | What happens |
| Accepts the seller response | The listing is reinstated |
| Does not answer within 4 calendar days | The listing is automatically reinstated |
| Rejects the seller response | The listing is permanently removed |
This makes response management critical. If your team misses the deadline, a listing you reported may come back online.
Step 10. Track repeat sellers
A removed listing is not always the end of the problem. Counterfeit sellers can relist the same product, change images, modify keywords, or move across accounts.
Track:
- Seller name
- Seller profile URL
- Repeated product titles
- Reused images
- Shared descriptions
- Similar pricing
- Shipping origin
- Store names
- Connected accounts
- Country-level activity
- Counter-notice patterns
- Removal outcomes
Mercado Libre says it sanctions listings and websites that commit infringements and can suspend or shut down accounts of repeat offenders. Strong repeat offender documentation can help you escalate beyond individual takedowns.
How the Mercado Libre reporting process works
The Mercado Libre BPP process is not just a one-way takedown form. It includes a seller response window and a rights holder review window.
| Stage | What happens | What brands should do |
| 1. Rights holder submits report | Mercado Libre pauses the listing and notifies the seller | Save the case ID and evidence |
| 2. Seller has 4 calendar days to reply | Seller can submit arguments, invoices, authorization, or image changes | Monitor the case status |
| 3. Seller does not reply | Listing is automatically removed | Record the outcome |
| 4. Seller replies | Rights holder has 4 calendar days to review | Compare seller evidence with your own records |
| 5. Rights holder accepts reply or misses deadline | Listing is reinstated | Avoid missing deadlines for active cases |
| 6. Rights holder rejects reply | Listing is permanently removed | Track seller and listing behavior |
| 7. Repeat infringement review | Seller may face sanctions depending on behavior | Build repeat offender evidence |
This workflow is one reason brands need a consistent operational process. Reporting is only part of the work. Monitoring replies, validating documents, rejecting weak counter-notices, and tracking repeat sellers are what make enforcement more effective.
How to report websites using Mercado Pago
Mercado Libre’s Brand Protection Program is not limited to marketplace listings. Members can also report websites that infringe their rights and use Mercado Pago as a payment processor.
This matters because many counterfeit operations do not stay inside marketplaces. A seller may use Mercado Libre to build visibility, then direct buyers to an external website, social profile, or checkout page. In other cases, a fake website may use Mercado Pago to process payments while impersonating a legitimate brand.
For suspected fake websites using Mercado Pago, collect:
- Website URL
- Screenshots of the homepage
- Screenshots of product pages
- Checkout screenshots showing Mercado Pago
- Brand/logo misuse
- Copied product images
- Fake contact information
- Payment flow evidence
- Domain registration details, if available
- Any connection to Mercado Libre sellers, ads, or social profiles
Then report the website through the relevant BPP process if your rights are enrolled.
Evidence checklist for Mercado Libre reports
Use this checklist before submitting a report.
| Evidence | Why it matters |
| Listing URL | Identifies the exact item being reported |
| Seller profile URL | Helps connect repeat activity |
| Screenshots | Preserves evidence if the listing changes |
| Product title | Shows trademark or product-name misuse |
| Product description | Shows copied content or misleading claims |
| Product images | Shows copied photos, fake packaging, or logo misuse |
| Price | Supports risk analysis when combined with other signals |
| Quantity available | Helps estimate commercial exposure |
| Reviews | May reveal buyer complaints about authenticity |
| IP registration details | Links the report to enforceable rights |
| Official product reference | Shows how the fake differs from the genuine item |
| Prior reports against the same seller | Supports repeat offender escalation |
Common mistakes when reporting counterfeits on Mercado Libre
Reporting without enrolled rights
Mercado Libre requires rights enrollment before brands can report through BPP. If your rights are not enrolled in the relevant country, you may not be able to report in that marketplace.
Treating unauthorized resale as automatic counterfeiting
Unauthorized resale can be commercially damaging, but it is not always the same as counterfeiting. Build the report around the IP infringement, not just the lack of authorization.
Missing the counter-notice deadline
If the seller replies and the rights holder does not respond within the required window, the listing may be reinstated. This can undo the work of the original report.
Using generic report language
Generic claims are easier to challenge. Explain exactly which right is being infringed and how.
Ignoring seller networks
Removing one listing may not reduce the wider issue if the same seller or connected sellers are operating across categories, countries, or accounts.
Only searching in English
Mercado Libre enforcement needs Spanish and Portuguese search coverage. Local language variations can uncover listings that English-only monitoring misses.
Mercado Libre counterfeit protection strategy for brands
A mature Mercado Libre counterfeit protection strategy should include four layers: rights readiness, detection, enforcement, and seller disruption.
1. Rights readiness
Make sure your brand has the necessary rights enrolled for the countries that matter most.
Prioritize:
- Core trademarks
- Product line names
- Logo marks
- Copyrighted product images
- Protected designs
- Relevant patents or utility models
- High-risk markets
- Countries with high sales exposure
- Countries with distributor conflict
2. Detection
Build a monitoring system that reflects how counterfeiters actually list products.
Monitor:
- Exact brand names
- Misspellings
- Local slang
- Product names
- SKU names
- Image reuse
- Packaging photos
- Seller store names
- Suspicious pricing
- Country-specific domains
- Mercado Pago-linked fake websites
3. Enforcement
Create a consistent process for report submission and response management.
Track:
- Reports submitted
- Listings paused
- Listings removed
- Listings reinstated
- Seller counter-notices
- Missed response deadlines
- Repeat sellers
- Countries with highest infringement
- Reasons for successful and unsuccessful reports
4. Seller disruption
Focus on repeat sellers, not just isolated listings.
Build seller profiles that include:
- Seller identity
- Listing volume
- Repeated products
- Connected accounts
- Common images
- Common descriptions
- Country coverage
- Counter-notice behavior
- Removal history
- Estimated exposure
The more structured your seller intelligence is, the easier it becomes to prioritize high-risk infringers and reduce recurring counterfeit activity.
Mercado Libre vs Mercado Pago enforcement
Mercado Libre and Mercado Pago are connected, but they create different enforcement situations.
| Platform area | What brands can report | Example |
| Mercado Libre marketplace | Product listings that infringe enrolled IP rights | Fake branded goods sold through a Mercado Libre listing |
| Mercado Pago | Websites using Mercado Pago as payment processor while infringing rights | A fake brand website using Mercado Pago checkout |
| Both | Cross-channel activity connected by seller, payment, or brand misuse | A seller promotes fake goods on Mercado Libre and directs buyers to an external site using Mercado Pago |
This broader view is useful because counterfeiters rarely operate in only one place. They may combine marketplace listings, websites, social accounts, paid ads, and payment processors to create a more convincing buyer journey.
How Red Points helps brands protect Mercado Libre
Mercado Libre’s Brand Protection Program gives rights holders a direct way to report IP infringements. But the platform still depends on brands finding the right listings, submitting strong reports, managing counter-notices, and tracking repeat offenders.
Red Points helps brands scale that work through automated brand protection software built to detect, validate, enforce, and measure online infringements across marketplaces, websites, social media, ads, domains, and other digital channels.
For Mercado Libre, this can include:
- Continuous marketplace monitoring
- Keyword detection in Spanish, Portuguese, and other relevant languages
- Image matching to identify copied product photos and packaging
- Detection of suspicious pricing and seller behavior
- Seller clustering and repeat offender tracking
- Evidence capture before listings change
- Prioritization of high-risk incidents
- Takedown workflow management
- Counter-notice tracking
- Reporting on enforcement outcomes and seller patterns
- Cross-channel detection when marketplace abuse connects to fake websites or social profiles
A validation layer filters false positives before any enforcement action is submitted — so only confirmed infringements are actioned. (Source: G2 reviews)
Red Points processes 5.1M+ enforcements per year across marketplaces and other digital channels, with continuous coverage across Mercado Libre’s regional domains.
If your brand is dealing with counterfeits across Mercado Libre’s markets, request a demo to see how Red Points helps detect, validate, and remove infringing listings at scale.
What to do next
If you are dealing with counterfeit or IP-infringing listings on Mercado Libre, start by confirming that your rights are enrolled in the Brand Protection Program for the countries where you need to enforce.
Then build a repeatable workflow:
- Monitor high-risk keywords, products, and sellers.
- Collect evidence before submitting reports.
- Match every report to a specific IP right.
- Submit reports through BPP.
- Track seller replies and counter-notice deadlines.
- Document repeat sellers.
- Expand monitoring beyond Mercado Libre when sellers move to fake websites, social accounts, or other marketplaces.
The strongest Mercado Libre protection strategies do not stop at removal. They use every report to improve detection, understand seller behavior, and reduce the chance that the same counterfeit activity comes back under a new listing.
Frequently asked questions
To remove a counterfeit from Mercado Libre, enroll in the Brand Protection Program, register the relevant IP rights, collect evidence from the listing, submit a report through the BPP tool, and monitor the seller response. If the seller does not reply within 4 calendar days, the listing is automatically removed. If the seller replies, the rights holder has 4 calendar days to accept or reject the response.
Mercado Libre’s Brand Protection Program is a free tool that lets rights holders and authorized agents report listings on Mercado Libre and certain websites using Mercado Pago when they believe those listings or websites infringe their intellectual property rights.
Yes. Mercado Libre says membership in the Brand Protection Program is free of charge.
Rights holders and authorized agents can join the Brand Protection Program. If an agent or representative enrolls on behalf of the rights holder, Mercado Libre requires a current power of attorney.
Brands can enforce trademarks, copyrighted works, industrial models and designs, patents, and utility models through Mercado Libre’s Brand Protection Program. On Mercado Pago, rights holders can also protect trademarks and related rights.
No. Mercado Libre says you do not need an existing Mercado Libre or Mercado Pago account to enroll in the Brand Protection Program. A new account is created after enrollment.
Yes, but you need to enroll the rights for each country where you want to report. If you want to report listings in Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, or Chile, for example, make sure your rights coverage supports enforcement in those specific countries.
After a rights holder submits a report, Mercado Libre pauses the listing and notifies the seller. The seller has 4 calendar days to reply. If the seller does not reply, the listing is automatically removed. If the seller replies, the rights holder has 4 calendar days to review the response and decide whether to accept or reject it.
Yes. Sellers can submit a counter-notice with arguments and documentation, such as invoices or authorization from the rights holder. If the report concerns images, the seller may also be able to change the images and send them as part of the counter-notice.
If the seller replies and the rights holder does not answer within 4 calendar days, the listing may be automatically reinstated. That is why brands need a clear process for monitoring open cases.
Yes. Mercado Libre says it sanctions infringing listings and websites and can suspend or shut down accounts of repeat offenders.
Yes. Brand Protection Program members can report websites that infringe their rights and use Mercado Pago as a payment processor.
You can report an unauthorized seller if the listing infringes your intellectual property rights, such as by selling counterfeit goods, misusing your trademark, copying copyrighted images, or falsely implying official affiliation. Unauthorized resale of genuine goods is not always an IP infringement by itself, so the report should be based on the specific right being violated.
You should collect the listing URL, seller profile, product title, images, description, screenshots, price, quantity, reviews, and the relevant IP registration details. Strong reports clearly connect the listing to a specific trademark, copyright, design, patent, or utility model.
Brands should monitor exact brand names, misspellings, product names, local Spanish and Portuguese search terms, copied images, suspicious pricing, seller profiles, and repeat listing patterns. For larger brands, automated detection and seller clustering are usually needed to keep up with volume.


