UPS v PCT: the beginning of a new era for European patents
March 16, 2025
Are you aware of the new unified European patent system? In our latest post, you can learn more about this new system that will help you with your patent applications in European territory. Remember that at M&A, we have extensive experience with #patents and are here to help you.
There's an official date! The Unitary Patent System
(UPS) and the Unified Patent Court (UPC) will come into
force on June 1st. The system and its supranational court
promise to democratize access to the highly desirable
European patent.
As indicated by the European
Patent Office (EPO) —which will be the administration
responsible for managing the new European patent modality—
on its website,
the system will allow for protection in up to 25
countries; although, so far, only 17 have effectively
signed up for the new system under the rules of the
European Patent Convention.
The system can be used by countries that do
not sign the Unitary Patent Agreement, but only to obtain
a patent in countries that do sign it. The UPS, which only
works after a European patent is granted, allows for
simultaneous applications in all signatory countries
without the need for national validation in each,
resulting in significant cost and procedure savings.
In
addition, applying for a unitary patent will provide
access to the Unified Patent Court, which will have
central divisions in Paris and Munich, and an Appeals
Court in Luxembourg. Access to the UPC aims to prevent
parallel litigation by centralizing all conflicts that may
arise between the holder and third parties in a single
process (as long as procedural rules allow it).
The
new system and its court represent considerable savings in
the application, acquisition, and defense of European
patents, and with it, the democratization of the patent
system for players who normally find the possibility of a
European patent frustrated by costs and the complexity of
processes. Among these are micro, small, and medium-sized
enterprises, as well as individuals, non-profit
organizations, universities, and public research
organizations, which will see certain economic benefits if
they apply to this modality.
This system and
its court offer an additional option for patent access to
the European market and direct competition to the PCT
system for European territory, which would require
mandatory national validations in each national territory
where protection is sought.
This could mean the
need to modify the PCT Convention rules and the benefits
it offers to the countries that subscribe to it, and it
certainly poses a threat to the global usage rates of the
PCT in European territory.
However, not
everything is advantageous with the new system, as the
applicant obtains the benefits but also the risks of
unifying their application. This means that if the patent
is challenged before the UPC and such challenge succeeds,
the holder would lose their rights in all requested
territories simultaneously. Moreover, it is estimated that
the renewal fees for the unitary patent will be equivalent
to the renewal value in 4-5 countries, which implies the
need to assess the use of the system based on the number
of countries to be accessed. Added to this is the fact
that the PCT still holds preference in other important
markets excluded from the UPS, such as the United States,
United Kingdom, China, Japan, etc., which represent a
significant portion of the global market.
Picture by Alvaro Ibañez made available under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic 2.0 License
