New Year’s Day marks end of copyright terms around the world

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

New Year’s Day marks end of copyright terms around the world

The work of creators including Peter Rabbit author Beatrix Potter and classical composer Sergei Rachmaninoff will enter the public domain on New Year’s Day in countries including Brazil, Russia and most of the EU

In countries with a life-plus-70-years copyright term, works by creators who died in 1943 will enter the public domain on January 1 2014.

Creators whose work will enter the public domain on New Year’s Day for those countries include jazz artist Fats Waller, French expressionist painter Chaïm Soutine and Kostis Palamas, a Greek poet who wrote the words to the Olympic Hymn.

For countries with a life-plus-50 copyright term, the work of creators including authors CS Lewis, Sylvia Plath and Aldous Huxley will enter the public domain in 2014.

New Year’s Day has been declared Public Domain Day by a group of organisations working to promote the public domain, including Communia and the European Thematic Network on the Digital Public Domain, with support from the Open Knowledge Foundation.

As a result of extensions to the copyright term, no material has entered the public domain in the US as the result of copyright term expirations since 1970. Some works, however, have entered the public domain in other ways, such as through Creative Commons licences.

The next mass migration of works into the public domain in the US will occur in 2019, if the country does not further extend the copyright term before then.

US Congress launched a review of the Copyright Act this year after being urged to do so by Maria Pallante, the register of copyrights at the US Copyright Office. Pallante called for review in a speech in March before the House Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property and the Internet Committee on the Judiciary.

One of the aims of the review is to consider ways to update US copyright law for the digital age. The last major revision of the 1976 Copyright Act was in 1998 with enactment of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which created notice-and-takedown rules for infringing material online, and a 20-year increase to the US copyright term in the Copyright Term Extension Act.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

While IP Australia’s updated manual could be favourable to computer-implemented inventions, stakeholders would like to see whether a consistent and reliable standard is followed during actual examination
UKIPO will remain a competitive option as long as efficient service continues
A future opt-out has not been ruled out, but practitioners warn that the UK could fall behind in the AI race
US patent lawyers say they are increasingly advising clients on China strategies as corporations seek to gain leverage in enforcement, licensing, and supply chain management
Mike Rueckheim reunites with 12 of his former Winston & Strawn colleagues as King & Spalding continues aggressive hiring streak
As global commerce continues to expand through e-commerce platforms and digital marketplaces, protecting brands has become a growing challenge for organisations worldwide. Counterfeiting, intellectual property infringement, and online brand abuse are increasing across industries, making brand protection strategies a critical priority for businesses.
Henrik Holzapfel and Chuck Larsen of McDermott Will & Schulte explain why a Court of Appeal ruling could promote access to justice and present a growth opportunity for litigation finance
A co-partner in charge says the UK prosecution teams are a ‘vital’ part of the firm’s offering, while praising a key injunction win
A team from White & Case has checked in on behalf of Premier Inn Hotels in a UK trademark and passing off case against a cookie brand
Litigation team says pre-trial work and a Section 101 defence helped significantly limit damages payable by ride-sharing firm Lyft in patent case
Gift this article