Fender vs Strat Copies: The Legal Battle Over the Stratocaster Shape

Here’s a question worth sitting with: if a shape becomes so ubiquitous that it’s used to illustrate the word “guitar” in a dictionary, does it still belong to whoever invented it?

That’s not a hypothetical. When Fender tried to trademark the Stratocaster body shape in the United States, courts ultimately ruled that the design had become “so common that it is depicted as a generic electric guitar in a dictionary.” Fender lost. The shape, it was decided, had escaped into the broader world and couldn’t be pulled back.

That was in the early 2000s. Now Fender is trying again, this time in Europe, and the guitar world is paying very close attention.

What Happened in Germany: The Düsseldorf Court Ruling

In early 2026, Fender secured a ruling in the Regional Court of Düsseldorf establishing copyright protection for the Stratocaster body shape under German and European law. The court declared the design a “work of original creative expression” rather than a purely functional object. That’s a meaningful distinction. Copyright and trademark are different legal tools, and Fender is now wielding a new one.

There’s a catch though. The case was a default judgement — the defendant, a Chinese manufacturer selling near-identical Strat copies on AliExpress for around €62 (approx. AUD $101), simply didn’t show up to defend itself.

A default judgement against a no-show AliExpress seller is very different from a contested legal battle. But Fender appears to be treating it as a broader mandate.

Cease and Desist Letters: Which Guitar Brands Are Being Targeted

According to the Wall Street Journal, Fender sent cease-and-desist letters to guitar builders telling them to stop production of any Strat-shaped guitars and to recall and destroy existing instruments.

The first company to go public was LSL Instruments, a small California-based boutique builder. LSL makes fewer than 500 guitars a year and argued publicly it posed no competitive threat to a manufacturer the size of Fender. A GoFundMe campaign quickly raised more than $45,000 (approx. AUD $70,000), with the company warning that fighting the case could jeopardise its future.

LSL’s central argument: Leo Fender never secured copyright protection over the Stratocaster body shape during his lifetime. Only the headstock was protected. The shape spent decades in the public domain by default, copied constantly and largely unchallenged.

Then it got bigger. Reports emerged that PRS had also received a cease and desist over its Silver Sky. PRS isn’t a Chinese AliExpress operation. It’s one of the most respected guitar manufacturers on earth, and the Silver Sky is a genuine instrument used by serious players.

The Stratocaster’s History: Why the Shape Is Impossible to Own

The Stratocaster was designed between 1952 and 1954 by Leo Fender, Bill Carson, George Fullerton, and Freddie Tavares. Its distinctive double cutaway body, elongated horns, and contoured back were designed for better balance and comfort when playing standing up. It was a proper design breakthrough. Not just a guitar but a rethink of what a guitar could feel like to hold.

For most of the 70 years since, nobody worried too much about the copies. Japanese manufacturers were making Strat-shaped guitars through the 70s and 80s. Entire cottage industries built around S-style bodies flourished. Decades of Strat copies flooded the market with little challenge from Fender. The company even acknowledged this implicitly when it launched Squier as its own budget alternative to the copies.

That history of tolerance is now the core problem with Fender’s legal position. The 2009 US ruling noted that the litigation involved over 20,000 pages of evidence showing how many companies had been using these body shapes unchallenged. Fender’s own inaction was used against it.

Counterfeit vs Tribute: Why This Distinction Matters

Be clear about what this fight is really about. On one side: cheap, direct-copy counterfeits from factories producing guitars indistinguishable from Fender’s in shape, colour, and headstock, sold for a fraction of the price. Nobody sensible defends those. They’re rip-offs.

On the other side: boutique builders who make S-style guitars the way custom car builders make cars inspired by classic shapes. LSL’s Saticoy. PRS’s Silver Sky. Guitars that share a silhouette but are entirely their own thing in terms of construction, materials, and intent. These aren’t fakes. They’re tributes, interpretations, or in some cases outright improvements.

The penalty figure being cited is up to €250,000 (approx. AUD $405,500) per infringement, per exchange rates as of 1 June 2026. That figure comes directly from the original ruling and was applied to that specific AliExpress defendant. Fender’s lawyers are now using that same number to pressure legitimate businesses.

The Lawyer Who Already Beat Fender Once Is Back

Here’s the detail that should make Fender nervous. The attorney who beat Fender the last time was Ronald Bienstock, who represented Suhr, ESP, Schecter, and over a dozen other manufacturers in the class action that defeated Fender’s trademark attempt in 2009. He has now been engaged to respond to the current cease and desist campaign.

Bienstock’s central argument is that the Düsseldorf ruling is being misrepresented by Fender as binding legal precedent when in reality it holds no weight outside that specific case, and carries no authority whatsoever in the United States. A default judgement, he argues, is not settled law.

Should Fender Be Able to Own the Stratocaster Shape?

The Stratocaster shape is 72 years old. It has been played by Hendrix, Clapton, SRV, and Gilmour. It is the electric guitar to millions of people who have never bought one. At some point a design stops being a product and becomes part of culture.

Fender has every right to protect itself from counterfeits that confuse buyers or damage its brand. That’s legitimate, and honestly overdue. But there’s a real difference between stopping a factory flooding AliExpress with €62 (AUD $101) knockoffs and telling a boutique builder who employs former Fender master builders that he needs to destroy his guitars.

One of those is brand protection. The other is something else entirely.

The guitar community is watching closely. And it has a long memory.

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