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I just wanted to drop you a note to thank you for doing such a wonderful job on the patent application - it looks great and fingers crossed it's plain sailing from here!G Puddepha


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Did you know...

I have a local or domestic patent application, eg. in the USA or UK. When should I be filing an equivalent European patent application?

Reveal answer

File your European patent application at any time within the first 12 months of your first filed patent application, and claim its priority thereby effectively back-dating your European patent application.

Helpful tip

If you have filed an initial patent application in your home country and are considering an international PCT patent application, analyse any available search results prior to filing and consider modifying the claims to make them as unique and inventive as possible.

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International ("PCT") Patent Application

Albright Patents is a firm of Patent Attorneys providing you with expert International patent advice and guidance.

Our qualified and experienced attorneys with engineering and science backgrounds are able to cost-effectively draft, file, and prosecute International patents under the Patent Cooperation Treaty, also known as the PCT.

For International patent applications, unlike many patent attorney firms, Albright Patents uses a secure and immediate online filing system. This online filing system also provides discounted official fees, and we are proud to pass on these cost-savings in full to our clients.

Following your International patent application, we can also provide very cost-effective national and regional phase conversion into all of the PCT contracting states and jurisdictions.

Contact us using the Enquiry Form on the left for further no obligation free advice.

International Patent Application vs. Direct Overseas Patent Filing

It is a question which is often asked : should I file an international patent application (“PCT” or Patent Cooperation Treaty), or should I file directly in a number of overseas jurisdictions?
 

The typical scenario is that you, as the inventor, will have filed a local or domestic patent application in your home territory, such as the USA or the United Kingdom, in order to provide some initial patent protection for your invention. This then enables the inventor to start disclosing the idea in order to try and establish whether there is any merit in investing further funds into the invention, such as for product design and prototyping.
 

Filing in your home country first is also important as it allows you to start looking at possible markets overseas, without initially having to undergo the expense associated with filing patent applications there. The Paris Convention, to which nearly all major countries of the world and most of the minor countries are signatories, allows a 12 months grace period in which one can file a patent application in one member country, such as the USA or the UK, and then file in other overseas jurisdictions before the first anniversary thereby allowing retrospective or back dating of that later patent filing.
 

This is of great benefit, since an inventor need not go to the significant expense of filing in many countries straightaway before he or she has had some commercial feedback regarding the idea.
 

However, once the 12 month grace period for filing overseas does come to an end, what are the options ?
 

Unless you know exactly where your overseas or foreign markets are going to be, and that you will never have any further markets abroad, then the international patent application (“PCT”) route will keep your options open for patent protection in more than one hundred and forty countries worldwide. In other words, the PCT route keeps a significant number of ‘doors’ open for you worldwide while you try and decide which markets might be of interest.

The PCT route therefore provides flexibility and keeps your options open.
 

Furthermore, although an international patent application is a reasonable expense, it is also the cheaper option in the short term thus reducing your costs early on.
 

Additionally, if a competitor is monitoring your patent activity, the PCT route will keep them guessing due to large number of jurisdictions that the international patent application extends.
 

So what are the downsides to an international (“PCT”) patent application ? Firstly, no international or worldwide patent is granted. The international patent application, if filed at or near to the first anniversary of your first domestic patent filing, will in essence ‘buy’ you an extra 18 months of time to explore market possibilities overseas. At the end of this further 18 months of time, you will have to choose which countries covered by the international patent application you actually want patent protection in, and then the international patent application has to undergo a conversion process to convert it into the chosen national patent application (i.e. a local patent application in the USA, UK, Australia, Japan, China, etc.), and/or the chosen regional patent application (i.e. a patent application covering Europe, Eurasia, etc.). And there are reasonably significant costs at this conversion stage similar to those if direct filing.
 

Once converted, the international patent application effectively dies, and you pursue the converted national and/or regional patent applications before the respective local or regional patent offices in the normal way.
 

The other option, mentioned above, is to consider filing direct patent applications in your selected jurisdictions overseas instead of opting for the PCT route. Generally, this will be more expensive in the shorter term, but slightly cheaper in the longer run because you will have cut out the middle portion of filing the international patent application.
 

The downside to filing directly in overseas jurisdictions at your first anniversary of your local or domestic patent application is that the door of opportunity then closes should you later on find a new market opportunity becomes available that requires patent protection. Remember, outside of the first 12 months after your initial patent filing, you can no longer backdate any new patent application and your original patent application may consequently knockout your later filing if it is for the same invention.
 

However, if you do know exactly where your markets are going to be, and for British inventors these are often Europe and the USA, and you are happy to effectively give up the chance of any further patent protection in any other jurisdiction, then this will ultimately be your more cost-effective option in the longer run.
 

Of course, advice must be provided on a case-by-case basis, but the general outline provided above regarding the pros and cons of international patent applications versus direct overseas patent filings is extremely typical and one that we encounter on a daily basis in our busy patent practice.
 

International (PCT) Patent Application Procedure

An international, or PCT ( Patent Cooperation Treaty ) patent application is a very cost-effective and flexible method for securing patent protection in more than 140 countries and jurisdictions worldwide.
 

An international PCT patent application defers the costs of multiple foreign filings. It provides a good quality novelty search, and allows the potential of amending the claimed subject matter in the light of the search prior to converting the international patent application into national and regional patent applications.

 

An international PCT application typically lasts a total of 30 or, in some cases, 31 months from the earliest filing date (also known as priority date). At the end of this period, it must undergo a conversion process to become a national or regional patent application. This conversion process is known as national phase entry and regional phase entry.

Patents are granted as territorial rights; it is not possible to obtain “worldwide” patent protection through a single patent application. However, a PCT application is a single patent application, which sets the ball rolling for patenting in most industrialised countries.
 

International PCT Search Report (ISR) and Written Opinion

Once filed, the application is searched (for example, by the European Patent Office)
and an International Search Report ( ISR ) and Written Opinion are issued. The Written Opinion sets out the Examiner's opinion on the novelty (uniqueness) and inventiveness of your invention, and thus the likelihood of being granted a patent.

The application is then published 18 months from the filing date, or from the priority
date, if priority is claimed.
 

International Preliminary Examination (IPE)

Optionally, International Preliminary Examination (IPE) can be requested and a fee paid, either 22 months from the priority date or 3 months after issuance of the ISR, which results in an Examination Report being issued.
 

This is useful if amendment of the application proves necessary. In any event, an International Preliminary Report on Patentability (IPRP) is always issued to the Patent Offices in the countries covered by the application.

We can advise you on a case by case basis and whether or not we believe requesting IPE and the costs assocaited therewith would be beneficial.
 

PCT National and Regional Phase Entry

At 30/31 months from the priority date, the application leaves the International Phase and enters the National Phase and Regional Phase.

We would contact you beforehand and guide you through this procedure with commercial and proactive advice.
 

National and regional applications are made in countries of interest based on the international application as it stands following any amendments in the International Phase.

For example, you may wish to convert your PCT application into a European patent application which is a regional application, and therefore this is termed European Regional Phase or European Regional Stage.

Conversion of your PCT application into national applications in the United States, Australia, Canada, China and Japan, for example, is termed National Stage or National Phase.

These converted applications are then prosecuted individually before the local national or regional Patent Offices.

Again, Albright Patents will guide you through this entire process.
 



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