Now is the time to prepare for the Unitary Patent and UPC

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Now is the time to prepare for the Unitary Patent and UPC

If patent owners make one New Year resolution for 2015, it should be this: try to understand how Europe’s Unitary Patent and Unified Patent Court will affect you, your portfolio and future applications

I have just written up some of the most important points that emerged from two events on European patent reform that we ran in the United States last month. But there is really just one overarching theme: US companies need to do much more to understand how the Unitary Patent and the Unified Patent Court will affect them.

Given the decades of debate and EU-style horse-trading that preceded the deal on patent reform, and the painstakingly detailed work on the small print following it (the preparatory committee, for example, is now on its 17th draft of the rules of procedures for the UPC), it’s unsurprising that many in-house counsel in the US seem to be waiting for “open for business” notices before deciding whether to apply for Unitary Patents or use the new court.

But in San Jose and New York last month, they were urged to start thinking about their strategies now. “It is going to happen”, emphasised Alexandra Brodie of Wragge Lawrence Graham & Co. (To underline her point, the UK IP Office is now consulting on possible options for the location of the UK’s part of the central division.)

While European lawyers and patent attorneys can advise companies about the rules, procedures and possible strategies, only those in the business itself will be in a position to choose which patents to opt in to the new litigation system, and which to opt out.

That is process that in-house counsel need to be thinking about now, said Rosie Hardy of Withers & Rogers. “Ideally we don’t want to be filing 20,000 opt-out requests in one day. Please start speaking to your European patent attorneys now.”

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

IP specialists Jonathan Moss and Jessie Bowhill, who worked on cases concerning bitcoin, Ed Sheeran, and the Getty v Stability AI dispute, received the KC nod
Hannah Brown, an active AIPPI member, argues that DEI commitments must be backed up with actions, not just words
A ruling in the Kodak v Fujifilm dispute and a win for Google were among the major recent developments
Nick Aries and Elizabeth Louca at Bird & Bird unpick the legal questions raised by a very public social media spat concerning the ‘Brooklyn Beckham’ trademark
Michael Conway, who joined Birketts after nearly two decades at an IP boutique, says he was intrigued by the challenge of joining a general practice firm
The private-equity-backed firm said hires from DLA Piper and Eversheds Sutherland will help it become the IP partner of choice for innovative businesses
The acquisition is expected to help Clorox bolster its position in the health and hygiene consumer products market
AIPPI, which has faced boycott threats over the 2027 World Congress, says it has a long-standing commitment to engagement and geographic rotation
The shortlist for our annual Americas Awards will be published next month, with potential winners in more than 90 categories set to be revealed
News of Nokia signing a licensing deal with a Chinese automaker and Linklaters appointing a new head of tech and IP were also among the top talking points
Gift this article