Bifurcation and the UPC – comments welcome!

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

Bifurcation and the UPC – comments welcome!

The possibility for judges to separate infringement and validity is one of the most controversial aspects of the proposed Unified Patent Court. What are your views?

upc-blog-150.jpg

Last month we published an article by Gottfried Schüll and Arwed Burrichter of Cohausz & Florack in Düsseldorf, Germany in which they argued that bifurcation – the German-style practice of separating the infringement and validity hearings of a patent dispute – should be welcomed.

“The UPC will make use of the bifurcation system, which makes perfectly good sense and is something that should be embraced and not feared, as it will provide clearer and quicker results,” they write.

At my invitation, Adam Cooke of DLA Piper in the UK has written a response, which addresses why some people have concerns about bifurcation. UK practitioners are typically sceptical about bifurcation, but Cooke argues that the UPC Rules take a balanced approach.

However he adds that the Rules could be further refined “to ensure that the central division's decision on revocation is actually issued before the regional/local division's decision on infringement, and/or that an injunction should not be enforced until after the decision on validity or unless the patentee has provided suitable security”.

We’ve temporarily opened up both articles so that subscribers and non-subscribers can read them. We’d also welcome your comments, which you can post below.

The articles will be published in our March issue, along with a selection of any comments we receive on this blog, on LinkedIn or via Twitter by February 20.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Essenese Obhan shares his expansion plans and vision of creating a ‘one-stop shop’ for clients after Indian firms Obhan & Associates and Mason & Associates joined forces
From AI and the UPC to troublesome trademarks in China, experts name the IP trends likely to dominate 2026
Colm Murphy says he is keen to help clients navigate cross-border IP challenges in Europe
With 2025 behind us, US practitioners sit down with Managing IP to discuss the major IP moments from the year and what to expect in 2026
Large-scale transatlantic mergers will give US entities a strong foothold at the UPC, and could spark further fragmentation of European patent practices
This year’s most-read stories covered uncertainty at the USPTO, a potential boycott of a major international IP conference, rankings releases, and a contempt of court proceeding
The parties have agreed on a court-guided settlement covering Pantech’s entire SEP portfolio, marking a global first
The introduction of Canada’s patent term adjustment has left practitioners sceptical about its value, with high fees and limited eligibility meaning SMEs could lose out
With the US privacy landscape more fragmented and active than ever and federal legislation stalled, lawyers at Sheppard Mullin explain how states are taking bold steps to define their own regimes
Viji Krishnan of Corsearch unpicks the results of a survey that reveals almost 80% of trademark practitioners believe in a hybrid AI model for trademark clearance and searches
Gift this article