Fender’s Strat Attack: 17 Major Guitar Brands Hit with C&Ds

Fender’s Strat Attack: 17 Major Guitar Brands Hit with C&Ds
Fender triggers an industry-wide legal war, hitting 17 major guitar brands with cease-and-desist letters over the iconic Stratocaster body shape.

If you have picked up an electric guitar in the last fifty years, chances are you’ve played an “S-style” double-cutaway. For decades, the silhouette has been the universal blueprint of rock, blues, and metal—copied, tweaked, and celebrated by hundreds of manufacturers.

But in the spring of 2026, Fender Musical Instruments Corporation (FMIC) launched a massive legal campaign to reclaim sole ownership of the shape, throwing the entire guitar community into chaos. Armed with a recent, highly controversial court ruling in Germany, Fender’s legal team has fired off cease-and-desist (C&D) letters to seventeen of the world’s most prominent guitar brands.

 

The Spark: How an Empty Courtroom in Düsseldorf Started a War

This escalating conflict traces back to December 22, 2025, in the Regional Court of Düsseldorf, Germany. Fender secured a copyright injunction against a Chinese manufacturer selling cheap Stratocaster replicas on AliExpress.

Fender Stratocaster
Fender Stratocaster

Work of Applied Art

The court ruled that the Stratocaster’s body shape—which Fender claimed copyright protection for—is a protected “work of applied art” under European Union and German copyright laws.

The court’s justification was highly poetic, describing the body’s curves as evoking a “female torso,” with asymmetrical S-curves resembling a “dancer,” and a beveled edge like a “tilted pelvis.”

A classic Fender Stratocaster electric guitar showcasing its iconic contoured body design, white pickguard, representing the legal protection of its artistic shape.
The Stratocaster Body is Now “Legally Protected” in the EU

Judgment by Default

However, there is a massive catch: it was a default judgment.

Because the Chinese defendant failed to show up, German procedural law required the court to accept Fender’s claims as entirely undisputed fact. The court did not have to weigh the artistic choices against the highly functional, ergonomic, and production-related realities of the Stratocaster design.

Despite the procedural limits of this ruling, Fender immediately began using it as a blank check, warning that the decision “creates enforceable rights against any guitars using the Stratocaster body shape” across the European Union.

Limited Edition American Ultra II Stratocaster
Limited Edition American Ultra II Stratocaster

 

The 17 Brands on Fender’s Target List

Rather than just policing cheap counterfeit clones, Fender’s legal team cast an incredibly wide net. Cease-and-desist letters landing on desks across the industry demanded an immediate halt to manufacturing and selling, the destruction of existing stock, a recall of distributed instruments, and compensation for legal fees.

Here are the seventeen prominent brands currently (we will update you if more are confirmed) targeted in this sweep:

Manufacturer Flagship “S-Style” Model Current Status / Reaction
Yamaha Pacifica Series Reviewing the notice; world’s largest instrument maker now involved
PRS (Paul Reed Smith) Silver Sky (John Mayer Signature) Publicly fighting back; disagrees with the complaint entirely
Harley Benton / Thomann ST-Series Suing Fender to clarify the dispute and protect industry diversity
Suhr Classic S Named as “at risk” by Thomann; boutique favorite
Ibanez RG / AZ Series Quietly reviewing; major implications for their superstrat lines
ESP Snapper / LTD ST Major presence in the metal and hard rock market
Ernie Ball Music Man Cutlass High-end modern S-styles
Schecter Nick Johnston / Traditional Popular S-type alternatives
Larry Carlton (Sire) S3 / S7 Series Popular budget-friendly S-styles
LSL Instruments Saticoy Boutique builder; launched a GoFundMe to fight legal costs
Cort G-Series Major manufacturer of mid-tier and OEM guitars
Friedman Metro-D / Cali High-end boutique S-styles
Mayones Hadley / Duvell Polish boutique brand
Pensa Custom S-styles Historic custom shop favorite
FGN (Fujigen) Odyssey Legendary Japanese manufacturer
Xotic XSC Series Premium boutique S-styles
Mooer GTRS Intelligent Guitars Tech-integrated S-style guitars
Fender Stratocaster
American Vintage II 1965 Stratocaster

Inside the Backlash: The Industry Fights Back

Fender’s aggressive sweep immediately sparked immense backlash from musicians, retailers, and legal experts, with prominent commentators calling the move “brand suicide.”

The most dramatic pushback is coming from Thomann, the world’s largest music retailer and owner of the Harley Benton brand. On June 23, 2026, Thomann announced it was taking legal action to sue Fender in a German court.

“We have decided to take legal action because we are convinced that the questions raised here go far beyond a mere legal dispute and affect the future of diversity, innovation, and competition in our industry,” Thomann said in a statement.

Meanwhile, PRS Guitars has publicly confirmed receipt of the C&D and rejected the premise, noting that its John Mayer-endorsed Silver Sky features distinct design elements that set it apart. Yamaha, the world’s largest musical instrument manufacturer, is currently evaluating its legal response regarding its legendary Pacifica line, which has been a staple of the industry since 1991.

Small boutique builders like LsL Instruments have resorted to crowdfunding to pay for international legal defense, warning that Fender’s actions could kill off small, independent luthiers.

Fender CEO Edward "Bud" Cole talks about cease & desist letters, Fender’ majority owners and more

The Legal Reality: Can Fender Actually Win?

Intellectual property experts are highly skeptical of Fender’s long-term prospects. Under EU law, copyright cannot protect purely functional or ergonomic designs.

The Stratocaster’s cutaways, body contours, and pickguard placement were famously engineered by Leo Fender in 1954 for player comfort and ease of manufacturing—not purely for aesthetics.

Furthermore, because Fender has tolerated these competitors for more than seventy years, other manufacturers can argue “acquiescence”—that Fender slept on its rights for too long to suddenly enforce them now.

While Fender’s CEO, Bud Cole, has tried to downplay the severity of the letters, saying Fender wants to find “practical paths forward” rather than destroy competitors, the industry is preparing for a massive, multi-year courtroom battle.

Let us know your opinions on this Fender legal move in the comments section below.

#Fender #Strat #Stratocaster

This article may contain affiliate links to AndertonsDeathCloud, Donner, Fender, Guitar CenterPositive GridReverb,Sweetwater, andThomann 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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