Fender Sues Thomann: Massive Stratocaster Copyright Lawsuit Escalates in Germany

Fender Sues Thomann: Massive Stratocaster Copyright Lawsuit Escalates in Germany
Fender officially sues Thomann in Germany over Stratocaster copyright. Read how this high-stakes legal battle could change the guitar industry forever.

The legal battle over the world’s most iconic electric guitar design has reached a fever pitch. Fender Musical Instruments Corp. has officially filed a lawsuit against German retail giant Thomann in a Düsseldorf regional court, escalating a high-stakes copyright dispute that could fundamentally reshape the global guitar industry.

The lawsuit, filed this week, accuses Thomann of copyright infringement over its budget-friendly Harley Benton line of electric guitars, which feature the classic “S-style” double-cutaway body shape made famous by Fender’s Stratocaster.

This move comes after months of bubbling tension and represents a massive direct clash between the world’s leading guitar manufacturer and Europe’s largest musical instrument retailer.

The Spark: A Controversial Copyright Ruling

For decades, the distinct contoured body of the Stratocaster—played by legends like Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, and Stevie Ray Vaughan—has been replicated by nearly every guitar brand in existence. In fact, the shape is so ubiquitous it serves as the generic “guitar” emoji on most smartphones.

Fender previously failed to secure trademark protection for the body shape in the U.S. back in 2009, when regulators ruled the design was generic. However, Fender found a new legal avenue in Europe.

Fender Stratocaster
American Vintage II 1965 Stratocaster

European cease-and-desist

In December 2025, Fender won a landmark default judgment at the Regional Court of Düsseldorf against a Chinese manufacturer selling lookalikes on AliExpress. Because the defendant failed to show up, the court accepted Fender’s argument uncontested, ruling that the Stratocaster body shape is a protected “work of applied art” under European copyright law.

Armed with this ruling, Fender launched an aggressive European cease-and-desist campaign in early 2026, targeting retailers and rival manufacturers—including Japanese titan Yamaha and boutique builder PRS (Paul Reed Smith)—demanding they halt sales of Strat-style guitars heading into the EU market.

Hans Thomann
Hans Thomann

Thomann Counters, Fender Strikes Back

Thomann, which has partnered with Fender since both companies were expanding in 1954, refused to back down. In June 2026, Thomann went on the offensive, filing a “declaration of non-infringement” against Fender.

Thomann CEO Hans Thomann publicly criticized Fender’s campaign, framing his company’s legal pushback as a defense of industry diversity and innovation.

“Many of those affected do not have the financial and legal means to conduct such a legal dispute,” Hans Thomann stated. “We therefore see it as our responsibility to have this matter clarified in court not only for our own company, but for all parties involved.”

Thomann’s core legal defense rests on the principle of “form follows function.” They argue that the Stratocaster’s shape—the upper horn for strap balance, the deep cutaways for high-fret access, and the body contours for comfort—was engineered for ergonomic utility rather than purely artistic expression, meaning it should not qualify for strict artistic copyright.

Fender’s newly filed lawsuit effectively calls Thomann’s bluff, escalating the dispute from defensive declarations into a full-blown courtroom showdown.

What’s At Stake for the Guitar World?

If the German court sides with Fender, the ripple effects could be catastrophic for the budget and mid-tier guitar markets in Europe. A Fender victory could result in:

  • Mass Bans: A ban on the import and sale of non-Fender “S-Style” guitars across the European Union.

  • Severe Financial Penalties: Fines up to $250,000 per future violation, alongside demands for historical sales data and backdated damages.

  • Higher Prices: Reduced competition could drive up prices for consumers looking for affordable entry-level instruments.

The guitar community has already reacted with intense online backlash, with many independent builders, retail partners, and influencers siding with Thomann. The central question now rests in the hands of the Düsseldorf court: Is the Stratocaster an untouchable piece of proprietary art, or has it become a universal tool belonging to the entire music world?

Let us know your opinion in the comments section below.

#Thomann #Fender #Stratocaster

This article may contain affiliate links to Andertons, DeathCloud, Donner, Fender, Guitar Center, Positive Grid, Reverb, Sweetwater, and Thomann that help finance the running costs of GuitarBomb.  We will receive a small commission if you buy something through these links. Don’t worry; you pay the same price, and it costs you no extra to use these affiliate links for your purchases.

Picture of Jef Stone

Jef Stone

About Jef Stone Jef is the founder of Guitar Bomb and a certified gear fanatic. Growing up with a luthier father, Jef’s obsession with tone started early and led to a lifelong career as a sound engineer and pro-audio specialist in the UK. He has set up recording rigs for world-famous facilities like Air Studios and even ran his own London recording studio. A massive hoarder of pedals, valve amps, and guitars (some of which he builds himself), Jef has owned everything from Klon Centaurs to Parker Flys. He also runs the UK's Analogue To Digital music show and the Vintage Guitar Fair.
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