Provisional Application for Patent
November 29, 2000
Background
Since June 8, 1995, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)
has offered inventors the option of filing a provisional application for
patent which was designed to provide a lower-cost first patent filing in
the United States and to give U.S. applicants parity with foreign applicants
under the GATT Uruguay Round Agreements.
A provisional application for patent is a U. S. national application
for patent filed in the USPTO under 35 U.S.C. §111(b). It allows filing
without a formal patent claim, oath or declaration, or any information
disclosure (prior art) statement. It provides the means to establish an
early effective filing date in a non-provisional patent application filed
under 35 U.S.C. §111(a). It also allows the term "Patent Pending"
to be applied.
A provisional application for patent (provisional application) has a
pendency lasting 12 months from the date the provisional application is
filed. The 12-month pendency period cannot be extended. Therefore,
an applicant who files a provisional application must file
a corresponding non-provisional application for patent (non-provisional
application) during the 12-month pendency period of the provisional application
in order to benefit from the earlier filing of the provisional application.
In accordance with 35 U.S.C. §119(e), the corresponding non-provisional
application must contain or be amended to contain a specific reference
to the provisional application.
Once a provisional application is filed, an alternative to filing a
corresponding non-provisional application is to convert the provisional
application to a non-provisional application by filing a grantable petition
under 37 CFR §1.53(c)(3) requesting such a conversion within 12 months
of the provisional application filing date.
However, converting a provisional application to a non-provisional application
(versus filing a non-provisional application claiming the benefit of the
provisional application) will have a negative impact on patent term. The
term of a patent issuing from a non-provisional application resulting from
the conversion of a provisional application will be measured from the original
filing date of the provisional application.
By filing a provisional application first, and then filing a corresponding
non-provisional application that references the provisional application
within the 12-month provisional application pendency period, a patent term
endpoint may be extended by as much as 12 months.
Provisional Application for Patent Filing Date Requirements
The provisional application must be made in the name(s) of all of the inventor(s).
It can be filed up to one year following the date of first sale, offer
for sale, public use, or publication of the invention. (These pre-filing
disclosures, although protected in the United States, may preclude patenting
in foreign countries.)
A filing date will be accorded to a provisional application only when
it contains:
-
a written description of the invention, complying with all requirements
of 35 U.S.C. §112 ¶ 1 and
-
any drawings necessary to understand the invention, complying with 35 U.S.C.
§113.
If either of these items are missing or incomplete, no filing date
will be accorded to the provisional application.
To be complete, a provisional application must also include the
filing fee as set forth in 37 C. F. R. 1.16(k) and a cover sheet
identifying:
-
the application as a provisional application for patent;
-
the name(s) of all inventors;
-
inventor residence(s);
-
title of the invention;
-
name and registration number of attorney or agent and docket number (if
applicable);
-
correspondence address; and
-
any US Government agency that has a property interest in the application.
Cover Sheet: Form PTO/SB/16, available
on the printable forms page of the USPTO website at http://www.uspto.gov/web/forms/sb0016.pdf,
may be used as the cover sheet for a provisional application.
This information is general in nature and is not meant to substitute
for advice provided by a patent practitioner. Applicants unfamiliar with
the requirements of U.S. patent law and procedures should consult an attorney
or agent registered to practice before the USPTO.
A list of attorneys and agents can be searched at the USPTO Web site
at http://www.uspto.gov and examined
without charge at Patent and Trademark
Depository Libraries (PTDLs). A printed list is available from the
US Government Printing Office at:
Superintendent of Documents (SuDocs)
P. O. Box 371954
Pittsburgh, PA 15250-7954
For information or to order by telephone call 202-512-1800. The SuDocs
Web site is at http://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/.
Cautions
-
Provisional applications are not examined on their merits.
-
The benefits of the provisional application cannot be claimed if the one-year
deadline for filing a non-provisional application has expired.
-
Provisional applications cannot claim the benefit of a previously-filed
application, either foreign or domestic.
-
It is recommended that the disclosure of the invention in the provisional
application be as complete as possible. In order to obtain the benefit
of the filing date of a provisional application the claimed subject matter
in the later filed non-provisional application must have support in the
provisional application.
-
If there are multiple inventors, each inventor must be named in the application.
-
The inventor(s) named in the provisional application must have made a contribution
to the invention as described. If multiple inventors are named, each inventor
named must have made a contribution individually or jointly to the subject
matter disclosed in the application.
-
The non-provisional application must have one inventor in common with the
inventor(s) named in the provisional application to claim benefit of the
provisional application filing date.
-
A provisional application must be entitled to a filing date and include
the basic filing fee in order for a non-provisional application to claim
benefit of that provisional application.
-
There is a surcharge for filing the basic filing fee or the cover sheet
on a date later than filing the provisional application.
-
Provisional applications for patent may not be filed for design inventions.
-
Amendments are not permitted in provisional applications after filing,
other than those to make the provisional application comply with applicable
regulations.
-
No information disclosure statement may be filed in a provisional application.
-
A provisional application cannot result in a U. S. patent unless one of
the following two events occur within 12 months of the provisional application
filing date:
-
a corresponding non-provisional application for patent entitled to a filing
date is filed that claims the benefit of the earlier filed provisional
application; or
-
a grantable petition under 37 CFR 1.53(c)(3) to convert the provisional
application into a non-provisional application is filed.
Fee
The current fee for a provisional application can be found on the fee
page. Payment by check or money order must be made payable to “Commissioner of
Patents.” Mail the provisional application and filing fee to:
Box Provisional Patent Application
Commissioner for Patents
Washington, DC 20231
Features
-
provides simplified filing with a lower initial investment with one full
year to assess the invention’s commercial potential before committing to
the higher cost of filing and prosecuting a non-provisional application
for patent;
-
establishes an official United States patent application filing date for
the invention;
-
permits one year’s authorization to use “Patent Pending” notice in connection
with the invention;
-
begins the Paris Convention priority year;
-
enables immediate commercial promotion of the invention with greater security
against having the invention stolen;
-
preserves application in confidence without publication in accordance with
35 U.S.C. 122(b), effective November 29, 2000;
-
permits applicant to obtain USPTO certified copies;
-
allows for the filing of multiple provisional applications for patent and
for consolidating them in a single §111(a) non-provisional application
for patent;
-
provides for submission of additional inventor names by petition if omission
occurred without deceptive intent (deletions are also possible by petition).
Warnings
A provisional application automatically becomes abandoned when its pendency
expires 12 months after the provisional application filing date by operation
of law. Applicants must file a non-provisional application claiming
benefit of the earlier provisional application filing date in the USPTO
before the provisional application pendency period expires in order to
preserve any benefit from the provisional-application filing.
Beware that an applicant whose invention is "in use" or "on sale"
(see 35 U.S.C. §102(b)) in the United States during the one-year provisional-application
pendency period may lose more than the benefit of the provisional application
filing date if the one-year provisional-application pendency period expires
before a corresponding non-provisional application is filed. Such an applicant
may also lose the right to ever patent the invention (see 35 U.S.C. §102(b)).
Effective November 29, 2000, a claim under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) for the
benefit of a prior provisional application must be filed during the pendency
of the non-provisional application, and within four months of the non-provisional
application filing date or within sixteen months of the provisional application
filing date (whichever is later). See 37 CFR 1.78 as amended effective
November 29, 2000.
Independent inventors should fully understand that a provisional
application will not mature into a granted patent without further submissions
by the inventor. Some invention promotion firms misuse the provisional
application process leaving the inventor with no patent.
Contacts
Direct questions regarding regulations or procedures to the Office of the
Deputy Commissioner for Patent Examination Policy.
Telephone: 703-305-9285
Fax: 703-308-6916
Direct questions regarding legislative changes to the Office of Legislative
and International Affairs.
Telephone: 703-305-9300
Fax: 703-305-8885
The Office
of Independent Inventor Programs provides a point of contact to the
independent inventor community.
Write:
Director - United States Patent and Trademark Office
Office of Independent Inventor Programs
Box 24
Washington, DC 20231
Telephone: 703-306-5568
Fax: 703-306-5570
E-mail: independentinventor@uspto.gov
For additional copies of this brochure, or for further information,
contact the USPTO General Information Services Division.
Telephone: 800-PTO-9199
Fax: 703-305-7786
TTY: 703-305-7785
or access USPTO's Internet site at http://www.uspto.gov/.
Source: http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/provapp.htm;
Tuesday, January 30, 2001
Hints for Filing a Provisional Patent
Application
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