On January 1, 2024, standard fees that are payable to the Canadian Intellectual Property Office (“CIPO”) for patent applications and patents will increase by at least 25 percent. [1] To save costs, applicants and patentees may consider taking certain steps and paying certain types of fees in the 2023 calendar year before the fee increases take effect.
Also on January 1, 2024, the definition of small entity status will expand to include entities that employ up to 99 employees (subject to certain conditions), which is an increase from the current limit of 50 employees. This revised definition may allow more applicants and patentees to pay fees at the small entity rate starting on January 1, 2024.
The below table summarizes the fee increases in 2024 for commonly paid fees at their standard rates. Most of these fee increases are about 32 percent of their current amounts.
2024For applications and patents for which a small entity declaration has been filed with CIPO (see discussion below for more information), most of the 2023 fees above are discounted by 50 percent or thereabouts. In 2024, these small entity fees will also increase, but only by about 10 percent or less from their current amounts. Accordingly, the discount of small entity fees relative to standard fees will become more significant in 2024.
As a cost-saving measure, applicants and patentees may consider taking certain steps and paying certain types of fees in 2023, before the fee increases take effect in 2024. The following are examples of situations where doing so may save costs.
The Patent Rules allow an applicant or patentee to pay fees at the discounted small entity rate if the applicant or patentee has filed a small entity declaration with CIPO stating that the applicant or patentee believes that the requirements for small entity status are met. The Patent Rules currently define a small entity as an applicant that has 50 employees or less, or is a university, other than:
Small entity status is determined with regard to the circumstances of the applicant on the filing date for a directly filed application, or the national phase entry date in Canada for a PCT application. Small entity status is determined in respect of the original application for a divisional application. The Canadian courts have clarified that entity status is determined once on the relevant date and is unaffected by subsequent changes to the circumstances of the applicant or the patentee. [2]
On January 1, 2024, the small entity status definition will change by increasing the maximum employee threshold from 50 employees to 99 employees. Applicants and patentees that do not fall within the current small entity status definition might fall within the revised small entity status definition and be able to pay small entity fees starting in 2024. For example, an applicant that directly filed an application before January 1, 2024, and had between 51 to 99 employees at the filing date may fall within the revised small entity status definition if it meets all other requirements of the definition. Such an applicant can file a small entity status declaration in 2024 and thereafter pay fees at the small entity rate. It will not be possible, however, to claim a partial refund of any fee paid at the standard rate before filing the small entity declaration.
Applicants and patentees may wish to assess their eligibility to declare small entity status under the revised small entity status definition. If appropriate, they may wish to wait until 2024 to declare small entity status and pay fees at the small entity rate to save costs.
Please contact a member of our Intellectual Property Group if you have any questions about how the fee increases may affect your patent matters.
[2] See: Dutch Industries Ltd. V. Canada (Commissioner of Patents) (C.A.), 2003 FCA 121; and CIPO’s Manual of Patent Office Practice (MOPOP), c. 10.02.01.
Bio Pia-Lauren’s forward-thinking approach and scientific credentials allow her to understand the technological underpinnings of an invention as wel.
Bio Peter is an intellectual property lawyer and a registered patent agent with the Canadian Intellectual Property Office and the United States Trademark .