Utility Patent Applications (U.S.)

Kevin Prince
Registered Patent Agent

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Sample Utility Patent

 


Hard-Copy Order Form

Utility patents protect how your invention works--regardless of what it looks like. As a result, a utility patent (which is what most people mean when they say "patent") typically offers the strongest protection. If you're thinking about licensing your invention, a utility patent is generally "worth more" in your negotiations with a potential licensee. That notwithstanding, utility patents are only as strong as the "claims" at the back of the patent (see the example of a utility patent) and how those claims relate to the prior art. See the discussion below that further details our philosophy about utility patents and their relative strength when compared to design patents or prior art patents.

Benefits and Drawbacks of Utility Patents

Benefits
Drawbacks
Strongest protection Expensive (both preparation and filing fees are considerably more expensive than design patents)
20 year duration (from filing date)

Requires three maintenance fees at 3.5, 7.5, and 11.5 years after issuance.

Excellent for protecting how an invention works, regardless of what it looks like Does not protect the ornamental appearance of the invention
Less Expensive drawings ($100/sheet vs. $125 with design patents)  

All Utility Patent Applications include:

  1. Full Specification and Claims
  2. Preparation of any sketches or informal drawings
  3. Any application paperwork that is required
  4. Drawings (add'l $100 per sheet)

To get started, complete the form below. Alternately, you may fax or mail this hard-copy order form with sketches, patent search results or copies of prior art patents, payment, and any other necessary information. Please note that RUSH utility patents typically take one-weeks to file after payment has been received, but may take longer if there is a waiting list. We will advise you of an anticipated filing date upon receipt of your order.


Please tell us about yourself:

* First Name:  * Last Name:
Company or Firm:
* Residential Address:
 
* City:
* State: Zip:
Phone Numbers:
Daytime:
Extension:
Fax:
Cellular:
Home:
Other:
* Email:

US Citizen?:

Yes No... (if not, indicate citizenship: )
Number of Inventors:
(please email us with above info for each add'l inventor)

Please tell us a bit about this particular invention:
Note: Please email or fax us additional details, sketches, etc. as necessary. For a signed Non-disclosure agreement,visit our NDA page before completing this form.

* Invention Title:
* General Description of the Invention:

* What specifically is new about the invention, in comparison to the prior art?:

* Please list the most relevant prior art patents (if we did not conduct your patent search), and any relevant products in the marketplace:

Will be asked for on the full interview form,
which will be required before we can get started.

* What features do you consider to be the core features of the invention?:

Will be asked for on the full interview form,
which will be required before we can get started.

* What features do you consider to be optional or secondary to the invention?:

Will be asked for on the full interview form,
which will be required before we can get started.

Sketches, photos, prototypes will be:

emailed overnighted overnighted with prototype
will be faxed sent previously please return all items sent

Patent Drawings:

Up to three sheets of formal drawings are included in the prices below.

Special Circumstances:

I plan on filing foreign patents Prior related patents apply
Government assistance was used (grant money, etc.)
At least one inventor is over the age of 65
Need other Petition to Make Special
You are a "small entity" (any small business concern as defined under section 3 of the Small Business Act, and to any independent inventor or nonprofit organization as defined in regulations issued by the Director)

* Communication:

The secrecy of your invention and the details of your patent are important to us. While we prefer to communicate with you via email for ease and speed, we are also aware that many clients prefer to communicate by other, possibly more secure but more expensive means. As such, please let us know the way you would prefer that we communicate with you, send you drafts of your claims and specification, and so forth. (Note that if you check anything other than 'email' below, you really should print our hard-copy form and either fax or overnight it to us, instead of submitting an on-line form like this one!)

Email Fax FedEx or UPS Overnight

* Total Amount Due:
Service Speed

RUSH
1 Week

Standard
3+ weeks
US Regular Utility Patent Application $5,205 $4,025
ADD a RUSH Provisional to a Std. Utility Patent ($500 more + $125 PPA filing fee)
n/a
$4,650

Above Prices include 3 drawing sheets (at $100/sheet) and PTO filing fees ($530 for Utility Patents and $125 for Provisional Patents)

I will send a cashier's check or money order by mail or Overnight
I will use a credit card on-line (next page)

Misc. Info:

You have the obligation to the US Patent & Trademark Office to fully disclose any non-patented prior art. Also, if you sold or offered the invention for sale more than one year ago, your patent rights may be reduced. Please provide any information that may limit your patent rights or otherwise affect the strength of the application below, or any other pertinent information or concerns that we should know about.

Also, if you're asking for a RUSH patent, why do you need a patent application filed so quickly?

How did you find our website?:


Important Notice: In order to qualify for patent protection in the U.S., your invention must be new, useful, and non-obvious in light of all other prior art inventions. If it would be obvious to "one skilled in the art" or field of your invention, you may not ultimately receive a patent. Please be sure you understand the level of novelty of your device before assuming that merely by applying for a patent you will ultimately receive one. Patent Searches, if done through us or elsewhere, are never 100% complete, so there is always some risk that a patent search will have missed a relevant reference. Further, a patent application in the US must be filed no later than one year after the invention is first used in public, offered for sale, or described in a printed publication. "File as early as possible" is usually good advice. Unless a US patent is filed before public disclosure, you may be precluded from later filing a foreign patent. Each country has its own patent laws and filing requirements. You should make us aware of any potential public use or offer for sale of your invention beforehand so we can advise you as to the potential ramifications of public disclosure. Upon submission of your order we will begin preparation of the above identified patent application.

* Do you agree to these terms (type "yes"/"no"):


 

Further Discussion About Utility Patents

The claims are the legal portion of the patent, and define the scope of the patent protection. They are often difficult to read, and each claim appears to be a long run-on sentence. It is. Even though a patent may appear to protect a particular product based on the other parts, however, reviewing the claims will let you know what's actually protected. Not all patents are equally strong in their protection. Indeed, many patents are quite weak.

For example, if the closest prior art patent claims elements A, B, and C in a device that solves a certain problem, and your idea is comprised only of elements A and B, then you

Claims work similarly to how prospectors use to claim real estate for, say, a gold mine. They would "stake a claim" for a particular area of land. Similarly, the claims in a utility patent work the same way. As the inventor, you claim a particular area of technology. When the Patent Examiner reviews your claim, he basically does a title search (in the form of a patent search) to see where your nearest neighbors are if your claim crosses any of their property lines. If not, and the claim (in the form of the entire patent application) is otherwise proper, then you're the "first on the hill" and you'll get a strong patent. However, 99% of the time the Examiner finds neighbors that are closer to your claims than you thought. At this point the Examiner will issue an "Office Action" rejecting your claims, but telling you why so that you can modify your patent application to conform to the boundaries that the Examiner determined were set by your neighbors. Once these boundaries are agreed upon, a patent will issue. However, this process is how patents get "watered down" and weaker than they were as originally filed. The extent of how strong your patent is when it issues will depend on what the Examiner finds when he does his search. Examiners are not limited to just patents, but can take cite foreign patents as well as articles or just about any other published work... even items found on the public Internet.

Additional terms and conditions will need to be acknowledged and agreed to on the full interview form, due ASAP after placing your order.

 


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