Clarivate Analytics publishes Derwent Top 100 Global Innovators report

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

Clarivate Analytics publishes Derwent Top 100 Global Innovators report

The Derwent Top 100 Global Innovators report published by Clarivate Analytics details the top companies for innovation based on volume, success, globalisation and the influence of patents. It examines the jurisdictions and industry sectors with the highest levels of innovation

The Derwent Top 100 Global Innovators report published by Clarivate Analytics details the most innovative companies in the world according to their IP. A range of different businesses, including Hitachi, Honda, Panasonic, Toshiba and Sony provide a viewpoint on innovation and why being included in the list is important to them.

The survey looks at patents owned by companies, using four key methods for assessing the innovation of a business. The first is volume. Only organisations with 100 or more granted patents covering a new invention were analysed. The second criteria for inclusion in the list is success. This looks at the ratio in the last five years of inventions in published applications to inventions protected by granted patents. The list also considers globalisation. This is measured by looking at how many basic inventions have quadrilateral patents in their patent families. The four relevant patent authorities are the Chinese Patent Office, the European Patent Office, the Japanese Patent Office and the United States Patent and Trademark Office. The final factor used to establish innovation is influence. The report says: “The impact of an invention “downstream” is determined by looking at how often it is subsequently cited by other companies in the patenting of their inventions.”

The report reveals insights about the most innovative jurisdictions in the world, noting that “the epicentre of innovation continues shifting from west to east.” Indeed 48 organisations from Asia feature on the list of top 100 innovators. By comparison, 33 US companies appear and 19 from Europe. Japan and the US are home to 72% of the companies listed, while Russia makes an appearance on the list for the first time. The report also notes that “thirty-one of the companies identified…have significant numbers of AI inventions in their total portfolios” and that there continues to be a rise in the number of 5G patent families.

Seven companies are present for the first time in the list of top 100 innovators and the report includes statistics for why these organisations have been chosen. In terms of industries, hardware and electronics is responsible for the largest proportion of companies in the list, followed by the manufacturing and medical and chemicals and cosmetics sectors.

For the full report, please click here.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Data centres are being built across the US, prompting patent disputes, but Texas’s thriving tech industry and patent-ready courts make the state particularly ‘ripe’ for litigation
Carpmaels & Ransford is set to bolster its UK attorney team with the appointment of Simmons & Simmons’s head of IP in the UK
Updates on Nokia’s licensing strides and a surge in patent activity around battery recycling in Australia were also among the top talking points
To mark International Day Against Child Labour, Matteo Amerio at Corsearch says the people inside businesses who can identify counterfeiting risks must be given the tools and authority to act
With genuine equity at IP firms becoming rarer, securing partnership is harder than ever, but increased transparency is also making climbing the ladder more predictable
Yossi Sivan explains how Israeli judgment is a pro-brand owner departure from the norm and why it sends a strong message that corporate structures are not always a shield
Halim Shehadeh, group CEO of IP firm CWB, says that in the rush to discuss what AI can do, IP firms are overlooking the more important question of whether they are ready
Caitlin Heard, who formally joined the firm from CMS last month, says she is excited by the ‘energy’ of the London office
Ranjna Mehta-Dutt, who moved to Chadha & Chadha after 25 years at Remfry & Sagar, says the firm plans to expand its life sciences practice through targeted recruitment and dedicated teams for bigger clients
The initial contempt of court claim targeted Stobbs and the firm’s client for allegedly interfering with the administration of justice
Gift this article