Our passion is helping manufacturers, researchers, corporations, and entrepreneurs prepare and secure patents. Discounts may be available for repeating or bulk work. We would be happy to discuss your patent application needs in whatever technical art you deal with. Examples of work patents and basic information about patent applications we handle follows. Please select from the menu below for more information about patent topics.
FEES: * Please contact us for quotes and information on continuation and divisional applications.
A utility patent is by far the most common type of patent applied for and issued. A utility patent application can be drafted to protect any human-made chemical, machine, device, system, computer program, or method of doing or making almost anything. A utility patent covers a new or improved product, process, machine, articles of manufacture, compositions (i.e. drugs or chemicals) or anything “made by man under the sun.” A utility patent gives its owner the right to prevent other individuals and entities from making, using or selling the invention without a license. Utility patents are good for 20 years; however, maintenance fees must be paid periodically to keep them active. A product protected by a utility patent may also obtain a design patent.
In the U.S., a provisional patent is a simplified patent application that reserves the right of its inventor to file a utility application for one year. In a sense, it protects an invention temporarily for one year, but is not itself a patent. A provisional patent is best viewed as a book mark or placeholder, usually filed only in emergencies or when an inventor is uncertain about investing in a full-blown utility patent. A provisional patent usually costs less than half of what a utility patent applications costs, and the filing fees are less than a fourth as much.
Under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), inventors can often obtain patent protection in foreign countries if a PCT application is filed with an international receiving office within one year of the first domestic patent filing.
The Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) is an international treaty between most of the countries in the world providing a unified procedure for filing patent applications to protect inventions in the signatory countries. A patent application filed under the PCT is called an international application or PCT patent application. A single filing of a PCT application is made with a Receiving Office (RO) in one language which progresses to a search by an International Searching Authority (ISA) and written opinion regarding the patentability of the invention, which is the subject of the application. A PCT application does not itself result in the grant of a patent, since there is no such thing as an “international patent”, and the grant of patent is a prerogative of each national or regional authority. A PCT application establishes a filing date and leads to a standard national or regional patent application, which may be granted or rejected according to applicable law, in each jurisdiction in which a patent is desired.
The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) is an agency of the United Nations, created in 1967, “to promote the protection of intellectual property throughout the world.” WIPO is headquartered in Geneva, and administers to the 184 countries who have joined the international Patent Cooperation Treaty, including the United States. The Patent Cooperation Treaty provides a uniform method of filing patent applications on international stages, and of receiving patent protection in most of the countries of the world. Applications filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) are called international applications or PCT applications. We can file international applications for you. USPatentLaw may be able to help you obtain patent protection on inventions conceived and reduced to practice in any country in the International Patent Cooperation Union. Particularly if you have already filed for patent protection in your native country, we would be pleased to help you obtain protection in the U.S. Because there are strict time limits within which you must file protection (usually twelve (12) months from your first filing), it is important you contact us promptly if you are considering filing an application under the PCT.
In some cases we may be able to write patentability opinions for inventions you have developed or are developing. Please call for rates. Patentability opinions do not come with patent searches and are separate opinions which are often more expensive because of liability considerations. The freedom to operate opinion is the legal opinion of a patent attorney that an individual or business is free to operate without infringing the patents of others.
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Nothing on this website is legal advice and nothing creates an attorney-client relationship. This website is no substitute for the legal counsel of a lawyer or registered patent attorney. Links to other websites are provided for your convenience and educational purposes. Material presented on this website is presented on an “as is” basis and may not be accurate. Any representation to the contrary is expressly disclaimed. Use this website at your own risk. We are not liable for any damages caused by the use of USPatentLaw.us. Any fees shown on this website are subject to change at any time without notice, and do not include filing fees, issue fees, or maintenance fees with the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office, federal courts, PTAB, the National Arbitration Forum, World Intellectual Property Organization, or any other tribunal or authority. The legal fees shown do not include subsequent prosecution fees. Many trademark applications require that one or more office action responses be filed within a few months of filing the application, for which practitioners charge extra as/if the responses become necessary.