17

How can I determine the lifetime of a patent?

For example, how can I tell when Patent US 7,055,282 B2 expires?

0

4 Answers 4

13

Patent term

-- skip to the end for a link to download a term calculator from the USPTO.--

At the Uruguay round of GATT in 1994 the U. S. agreed to change the term of utility and plant applications from 17 years from grant to 20 years from filing. This took effect for applications filed on or after June 8, 1995

However it is more complicated than that. Applications that were in-force on that date or filed before that date get the greater of 17 years from grant and 20 years from filing. Applications filed on or after it get 20 (nominally) years from filing. But what counts as "filing"?. To determine if an application is pre- or post Uruguay its actual filing date is used. So a continuation application filed June 8th 1995 that fully gets priority from a U.S. non provisonal application filed well before that date, is nonetheless a post-Uruguay application.

An application that is a continuation or divisional application and therefore refers back to claim priority of an earlier application will start its 20 years counting from the earliest application in that chain. A U.S. provisional application or a foreign application isn't included in that chain.

I said that the 20 years is the "nominal" term. The actual term can be affected by many things. One is terminal disclaimer. A terminal disclaimer is used by a patent owner to agree that a patent will automatically terminate when a related patent terminates. This is to prevent so-called "non-statutory double patenting". Also a court can declare a patent invalid or unenforceable and the USPTO can, in a reexamination or other post-grant proceeding, declare one or all claims as being rejected.

The change from 17 years after issue to 20 years from filing was intended to not make a significant change to the average patent term. If a patent took three years from filing to grant, the actual term would come out about the same under either system. However, it is possible that the patent office might take longer than three years. To compensate for this, utility and plant patents issued from applications filed after May 29, 2000 can have days added on to their term by "patent term adjustment". The number of days the USPTO calculated for this is on the face of the issued patent (note: the USPTO's initial method of calculating this has been challenged in the courts and the USPTO has lost, so the number on the face of the patent may or may not be correct.)

For patents resulting from applications filed between June 8th 1995 and May 29th 2000 there is a different system called "patent term extension" ( not to be confused with an entirely different scheme also called "patent term extention" related to delays through the FDA). Under the non-FDA related PTE, the term of a patent is extended to compensate for delays caused by a secrecy order, an appeal that the patentee won or an interference. This is limited to five years.

To compensate for delays through the FDA processes a patent owner can apply for patent term extension when it gets a go-ahead from the FDA to compensate for the product not being marketable until that process concludes.

The last factor is maintainer fees. All utility patents resulting from applications filed after December 12 1980 require payment of maintenance fees to stay in-force.

The USPTO has a page on term calculation where a term calculator can be found. Elsewhere patents that asked for and received PTE are listed.

6

You can find the patent status and validity on the USPTO Public Pair site. Enter the patent number (without the US, or B2). The "Patent Term Adjustments" tab shows the applicable dates, in this case:

Filing or 371(c) Date: 08-11-2004

Issue Date of Patent: 06-06-2006

and also

Total PTA Adjustments: 162

As this is an "old" application, it falls under the old rules which gave back days for USPTO caused delays (in some cases).

So 20 years +162 days from 08/11/2004 is my best guess. Basically a decade more to go, give or take some years, not in the immediate future.

3
  • Good except: There are many new and old rules for patent term but the adjustment for patent office delays is not "old".
    – George White
    May 14, 2013 at 20:36
  • The current PAIR doesn't have that tab. Is the PTA adjustment information still provided in some other place? Mar 31, 2016 at 18:45
  • If the patent at issue is a Non- U.S. patent, then how can we find out about the patent term adjustment? Please help. Thank you. Mar 14, 2017 at 6:03
1

If the patent application filing date was on or before June 8, 1995, the nominal expiration date is the longer of 17 years from the date of issue or 20 years from the earliest non-provisional priority claim. )

1

In a nutshell: patents filed after June 1995 have a lifetime of 20 years from filing date, plus any patent term extensions (PTE). Check for PTE on the front page.

US 7055282 has a PTE:

enter image description here

US 9591814 does not have a PTE:

enter image description here

In my experience, the expiration date listed on Google Patents has always been correct, EXCEPT for patents with terminal disclaimers, which Google didn't take into account.

enter image description here

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .