The Unitary Patent (UP) and Unified Patent Court (UPC)

The Unified Patent Court (UPC) and Unitary Patent have arrived!


We can assist with obtaining Unitary Patents at the EPO. We also offer a broad range of services before the UPC, including filing opt-outs for classical European patents from the jurisdiction of the UPC (as well as opt-ins), and UPC litigation services. When dealing with patent enforcement litigation, we already usually cooperate with litigators to build specialist litigation teams for the jurisdiction in question. We are proceeding on the same basis for UPC infringement matters also. However, for UPC revocation actions we intend to handle such matters ourselves in the same way as for EPO oppositions (unless the matter is sufficiently complex that a specialist team is required).

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We are here to help you navigate the upcoming changes to the European patent system, soon to be brought about by the introduction of the Unitary Patent (UP) and Unified Patent Court (UPC). It’s exciting to see the UP and UPC finally come into being, but we recognize that this presents patent holders and their advisors with new challenges.
 
We have put together this introductory resource to provide answers to basic questions, and are providing regular updates. However, there is no strategy that will suit every stakeholder. Your next steps need nuanced guidance and careful consideration. We encourage you to contact us so we can facilitate this.

Even if a European patent applicant or owner is not interested in patent litigation (or even in the introduction of the UPC), they must still prepare for the changes which will affect the management of all European patent portfolios.

Nick Bassil - Partner, LSC

Frequently asked questions:

The Unified Patent Court (UPC) and Unitary Patent system came into force on 1 June 2023. 

Initially, the UP will cover 17 EU states: Austria (AT), Belgium (BE), Bulgaria (BG), Denmark (DK), Estonia (EE), Finland (FI), France (FR), Germany (DE), Italy (IT), Latvia (LV), Lithuania (LT), Luxembourg (LU), Malta (MT), the Netherlands (NL), Portugal (PT), Slovenia (SI) and Sweden (SE). The system may be expanded to other participating EU states later.

No, the United Kingdom will not be covered by the Unitary Patent. It will continue instead to be covered as an individual “validation” country of a European patent, in common with many other countries that are members of the European Patent Convention but not the UPC Agreement, such as Norway (NO), Switzerland (CH), Spain (ES), Poland (PL) and Croatia (HR).

We will continue to represent clients before the European Patent Office on all matters, including the procedure for registering a European patent as a UP.  In terms of UPC proceedings, our patent attorneys are registered as Representatives before the UPC so we can assist with the filing of opt-out requests at the UPC, as well as UPC revocation proceedings.  For more complex matters, including patent infringement cases, at the UPC, we will continue to cooperate with individual specialist litigators (barristers) and other firms (e.g. solicitors in other European countries) to build specialist litigation teams, particularly in connection with patent enforcement litigation. 

The UPC is intended to have exclusive jurisdiction for patent litigation relating to countries covered by the UPC system, whether the patent is registered as a UP or not. However, for a transitional period of 7 years from the start of the system, and potentially extendable to 14 years, it will be possible for patent proprietors to opt their conventionally validated European patents out of the jurisdiction of the UPC and to continue to use the national courts. In addition, the courts of any country that is not part of the UPC system will continue to decide cases concerning European patents in that country.

An opt-out is the name given to the mechanism for actively withdrawing a European patent from the jurisdiction of the UPC. If no opt-out is submitted for a European patent, then the UPC will be able to hear cases concerning infringement and validity of the patent (even if the patent is not registered as a UP).  A UP cannot be the subject of an opt-out.

If an action is brought in relation to a patent before the UPC, this will prevent an opt-out being submitted and the UPC will have exclusive jurisdiction in all UP states covered by the patent. If an action is brought in a national court after an opt-out has been filed, the opt-out cannot be withdrawn, meaning that the national courts will have jurisdiction and the UPC cannot be used. In either case, this persists for the lifetime of the patent, and is known as “pinning” the patent to the respective court system.

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