
The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is an agency in the U.S. Department of Commerce that serves as the national patent office and trademark registration authority for the United States. The USPTO's headquarters are in Alexandria, Virginia, after a 2005 move from the Crystal City area of neighboring Arlington, Virginia.
![]() Seal of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office | |
![]() The James Madison building on the campus of the United States Patent and Trademark Office headquarters in Alexandria. This is the largest building on the campus. | |
Agency overview | |
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Formed | July 4, 1836 Washington, D.C., U.S. |
Headquarters | Alexandria, Virginia, U.S. 38°48′05″N 77°03′50″W / 38.801499°N 77.063835°W |
Employees | 14,082 (2024): 21 |
Agency executive |
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Parent agency | United States Department of Commerce |
Website | www |
The USPTO is "unique among federal agencies because it operates solely on fees collected by its users, and not on taxpayer dollars". Its "operating structure is like a business in that it receives requests for services—applications for patents and trademark registrations—and charges fees projected to cover the cost of performing the services [it] provide[s]".
The office is headed by the under secretary of commerce for intellectual property and director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office. As of January 2025[update], Coke Morgan Stewart is acting undersecretary and director, having been appointed to the position by President Trump on January 20.
The USPTO cooperates with the European Patent Office (EPO) and the Japan Patent Office (JPO) as one of the Trilateral Patent Offices. The USPTO is also a Receiving Office, an International Searching Authority and an International Preliminary Examination Authority for international patent applications filed in accordance with the Patent Cooperation Treaty.
Mission
The legal basis for the United States patent system is the Copyright Clause in Section 8 of Article I of the U.S. Constitution, which gives Congress the power to grant patents and copyrights on a national basis. Trademark law, on the other hand, is considered to be authorized by the Commerce Clause.
The Congress shall have Power ... To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.
The USPTO maintains a permanent, interdisciplinary historical record of all U.S. patent applications in order to fulfill objectives outlined in the United States Constitution. The PTO's mission is to promote "industrial and technological progress in the United States and strengthen the national economy" by:
- Administering the laws relating to patents and trademarks;
- Advising the secretary of commerce, the president of the United States, and the administration on patent, trademark, and copyright protection; and
- Providing advice on the trade-related aspects of intellectual property.
- Relief representing the Patent Office at the Herbert C. Hoover Building
- Signboard of US Patent Office Alexandria
Structure
The USPTO is headquartered at the Alexandria Campus, consisting of 11 buildings in a city-like development surrounded by ground floor retail and high rise residential buildings between the Metro stations of King Street station (the main search building is two blocks due south of the King Street station) and Eisenhower Avenue station where the actual Alexandria Campus is located between Duke Street (on the North) to Eisenhower Avenue (on the South), and between John Carlyle Street (on the East) to Elizabeth Lane (on the West) in Alexandria, Virginia. An additional building in Arlington, Virginia, was opened in 2009.
The USPTO was expected by 2014 to open its first ever satellite offices in Detroit, Dallas, Denver, and Silicon Valley to reduce backlog and reflect regional industrial strengths. The first satellite office opened in Detroit on July 13, 2012. In 2013, due to the budget sequestration, the satellite office for Silicon Valley, which is home to one of the nation's top patent-producing cities, was put on hold. However, renovation and infrastructure updates continued after the sequestration, and the Silicon Valley location opened in the San Jose City Hall in 2015.
As of September 30, 2009[update], the end of the U.S. government's fiscal year, the PTO had 9,716 employees, nearly all of whom are based at its five-building headquarters complex in Alexandria. Of those, 6,242 were patent examiners (almost all of whom were assigned to examine utility patents; only 99 were assigned to examine design patents) and 388 were trademark examining attorneys; the rest are support staff. While the agency has noticeably grown in recent years, the rate of growth was far slower in fiscal 2009 than in the recent past; this is borne out by data from fiscal 2005 to the present: As of the end of FY 2018, the USPTO was composed of 12,579 federal employees, including 8,185 patent examiners, 579 trademark examiners, and 3,815 other staff.
- USPTO Madison Building Exterior
- Interior atrium of the USPTO Madison Building
- USPTO satellite office in San Jose, California
At end of FY | Employees | Patent examiners | Trademark examining attorneys | Patent Filings (Utility) | Trademark Filings | Patent Application Backlog |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | 14,082: 21 | 8,944: 21 | 765: 21 | 466,079: 2 | 767,138: 2 | |
2023 | 13,452: 2,22 | 8,568: 22 | 756: 22 | 594,143: 6 | 737,018: 7 | |
2022 | 13,103: 20 | 8,509: 20 | 718: 20 | 457,510: 22 | 787,798: 24 | |
2021 | 12,963: 2,19,243 | 8,073: 19,243 | 662: 19,243 | 650,703: 38 | 943,928: 38,223 | |
2020 | 12,928 | 8,434 | 622 | 653,311: 38,201 | 738,112: 38,223 | |
2019 | 12,652 | 9,614 | 701 | 666,843: 38,201 | 673,233: 38,223 | |
2018 | 12,579 | 8,185 | 579 | 647,572: 38,201 | 594,107: 38 | |
2017 | 12,588 | 8,147 | 549 | 650,350: 38,201 | 530,270: 38 | 526,579 |
2016 | 12,725 | 8,351 | 570 | 650,411 | 530,270 | 537,655 |
2015 | 12,667 | 9,161 | 456 | 618,062 | 503,889 | 553,221 |
2014 | 12,450 | 9,302 | 429 | 618,457 | 455,017 | |
2013 | 11,773 | 8,051 | 409 | 601,464 | 433,654 | |
2012 | 11,531 | 7,935 | 386 | 565,406 | 415,026 | 608,283 |
2011 | 10,210 | 6,780 | 378 | 536,604 | 398,667 | |
2010 | 9,507 | 6,225 | 378 | 509,367 | 368,939 | 726,331 |
2009 | 9,716 | 6,243 | 388 | 485,500 | 352,051 | 750,596 |
2008 | 9,518 | 6,055 | 398 | 495,095 | 401,392 | 750,596 |
2007 | 8,913 | 5,477 | 404 | 467,243 | 394,368 | |
2006 | 4,779 | 413 | ||||
2005 | 4,177 | 357 | ||||
2004 | 3,681 | 286 | ||||
2003 | 3,579 | 256 | ||||
1998 | 5,300 | |||||
1996 | 189,979 | 200,640 | ||||
1995 | 221,304 | 175,307 | ||||
1994 | 186,126 | 155,376 | ||||
1993 | 174,553 | 139,735 | ||||
1992 | 172,539 | 125,237 | ||||
1986 | 120,988 | 69,253 | ||||
1976 | 101,807 | 37,074 |
Patent examiners make up the bulk of the employees at USPTO. They hold degrees in various scientific disciplines, but do not necessarily hold law degrees. Unlike patent examiners, trademark examiners must be licensed attorneys.[citation needed]
All examiners work under a strict, "count"-based production system. For every application, "counts" are earned by composing, filing, and mailing a first office action on the merits, and upon disposal of an application.
Prior to 2012, decisions of patent examiners could be appealed to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, an administrative law body of the USPTO. Decisions of the BPAI could further be appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, or a civil suit could be brought against the Commissioner of Patents in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. The United States Supreme Court may ultimately decide on a patent case. Under the America Invents Act, the BPAI was converted to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board or "PTAB". Similarly, decisions of trademark examiners could be appealed to the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, with subsequent appeals directed to the Federal Circuit, or a civil action may also be brought.
Management
In October 2021, President Joe Biden nominated attorney Kathi Vidal to serve as the USPTO director. She was sworn in on April 13, 2022. On December 16, 2022, Kathi Vidal announced that Vaishali Udupa, an intellectual property attorney, engineer, and currently a top executive from Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), will join the 13,000-person Department of Commerce agency as the new commissioner for patents effective January 17, 2023.
Fee diversion
For many years, Congress has "diverted" about 10% of the fees that the USPTO collected into the general treasury of the United States. In effect, this took money collected from the patent system to use for the general budget. This fee diversion has been generally opposed by patent practitioners (e.g., patent attorneys and patent agents), inventors, the USPTO, as well as former federal judge Paul R. Michel. These stakeholders would rather use the funds to improve the patent office and patent system, such as by implementing the USPTO's 21st Century Strategic Plan. The last six annual budgets of the George W. Bush administration did not propose to divert any USPTO fees, and the first budget of the Barack Obama administration continued this practice, as well as the second budget of the Trump administration; however, stakeholders continue to press for a permanent end to fee diversion.
The discussion of which party can appropriate the fees is more than a financial question. Patent fees represent a policy lever that influences both the number of applications submitted to the office as well as their quality.
Patents
- On July 31, 1790, the first U.S. patent was issued to Samuel Hopkins for an improvement "in the making of Pot ash and Pearl ash by a new Apparatus and Process". This patent was signed by then-President George Washington.
- The X-Patents (the first 9,957 (approximately), issued between 1790 and 1836) were destroyed by a fire; fewer than 3,000 of those have been recovered and re-issued with numbers that include an "X". The X generally appears at the end of the numbers hand-written on full-page patent images; however, in patent collections and for search purposes, the X is considered to be the patent type – analogous to the "D" of design patents – and appears at the beginning of the number. The X distinguishes the patents from those issued after the fire, which began again with patent number 1.
- Each year, the PTO issues over 150,000 patents to companies and individuals worldwide. As of December 2011[update], the PTO had granted 8,743,423 patents and received 16,020,302 applications.
- On June 19, 2018, the 10 millionth U.S. patent was issued to Joseph Marron for invention of a "Coherent LADAR [System] Using Intra-Pixel Quadrature Detection" to improve laser detection and ranging (LADAR). The patent was the first to receive the newly redesigned patent cover. It was signed by then-President Donald Trump during a special ceremony at the Oval Office.
- In February 2024, the USPTO issued a new guideline relating to obtaining a patent as per earlier recommendation by Biden's administration. The guideline states that; to obtain a patent, a real person, not AI, must have made a “significant contribution” to the invention and that only a human being can be named as an inventor on a patent.
List of millionth US patents
Patent Number | Patent Title | Issue Date | Days Since Last Millionth Issue |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Traction Wheels | July 13, 1836 | |
1,000,000 | Vehicle Tire | August 8, 1911 | 27,419 |
2,000,000 | Vehicle Wheel Construction | May 12, 1932 | 7,583 |
3,000,000 | Automatic Reading System | May 6, 1955 | 8,394 |
4,000,000 | Process for Recycling Asphalt-Aggregate Compositions | December 28, 1976 | 7,907 |
5,000,000 | Ethanol Production by Escherichia Coli Strains | March 19, 1991 | 5,194 |
6,000,000 | Extendible Method and Apparatus for Synchronizing Multiple Files on Two Different Computer Systems | December 7, 1999 | 3,185 |
7,000,000 | Polysaccharide Fibers | February 14, 2006 | 2,261 |
8,000,000 | Visual Prosthesis | August 16, 2011 | 2,009 |
9,000,000 | Windshield Washer Conditioner | April 7, 2015 | 1,330 |
10,000,000 | Coherent Ladar Using Intra-Pixel Quadrature Detection | June 19, 2018 | 1,169 |
11,000,000 | Repositioning Wires and Methods for Repositioning Prosthetic Heart Valve Devices within a Heart Chamber | May 11, 2021 | 1,057 |
12,000,000 | Labeled Nucleotide Analogs, Reaction Mixtures, and Methods and System for Sequencing | June 4, 2024 | 1,120 |
Bar chart
Days since last millionth patent filed at the USPTO |
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Trademarks
The USPTO examines applications for trademark registration, which can be filed under five different filing bases: use in commerce, intent to use, foreign application, foreign registration, or international registration. If approved, the trademarks are registered on either the Principal Register or the Supplemental Register, depending upon whether the mark meets the appropriate distinctiveness criteria. This federal system governs goods and services distributed via interstate commerce, and operates alongside state level trademark registration systems.
Trademark applications have grown substantially in recent years, jumping from 296,490 new applications in 2000, to 345,000 new applications in 2014, to 458,103 new applications in 2018. Recent growth has been driven partially by growing numbers of trademark applications originating in China; trademark applications from China have grown more than 12-fold since 2013, and in 2017, one in every nine trademark applications reviewed by the U.S. Trademark Office originated in China.
Since 2008, the Trademark Office has hosted a National Trademark Expo every two years, billing it as "a free, family-friendly event designed to educate the public about trademarks and their importance in the global marketplace." The Expo features celebrity speakers such as Anson Williams (of the television show Happy Days) and basketball player Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and has numerous trademark-holding companies as exhibitors. Before the 2009 National Trademark Expo, the Trademark Office designed and launched a kid-friendly trademark mascot known as T. Markey, who appears as an anthropomorphized registered trademark symbol. T. Markey is featured prominently on the Kids section of the USPTO website, alongside fellow IP mascots Ms. Pat Pending (with her robot cat GeaRS) and Mark Trademan.
In 2020, trademark applications marked the sharpest declines and inclines in American history. During the spring, COVID-19 lockdowns led to reduced filings, which then increased in July 2020 to exceed the previous year. August 2020 was subsequently the highest month of trademark filings in the history of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Representation
The USPTO only allows certain qualified persons to practice before the USPTO. Practice includes filing of patent and trademark applications on behalf of individuals and companies, prosecuting the patent and trademark applications, and participating in administrative appeals and other proceedings before the PTO examiners, examining attorneys and boards. The USPTO sets its own standards for who may practice. Any person who practices patent law before the USPTO must become a registered patent attorney or agent. A patent agent is a person who has passed the USPTO registration examination (the "patent bar") but has not passed any state bar exam to become a licensed attorney; a patent attorney is a person who has passed both a state bar and the patent bar and is in good standing as an attorney. A patent agent can only act in a representative capacity in patent matters presented to the USPTO, and may not represent a patent holder or applicant in a court of law. To be eligible for taking the patent bar exam, a candidate must possess a degree in "engineering or physical science or the equivalent of such a degree". Any person who practices trademark law before the USPTO must be an active member in good standing of the highest court of any state.
The United States allows any citizen from any country to sit for the patent bar (if he/she has the requisite technical background). Only Canada has a reciprocity agreement with the United States that confers upon a patent agent similar rights.
An unrepresented inventor may file a patent application and prosecute it on his or her own behalf (pro se). If it appears to a patent examiner that an inventor filing a pro se application is not familiar with the proper procedures of the Patent Office, the examiner may suggest that the filing party obtain representation by a registered patent attorney or patent agent. The patent examiner cannot recommend a specific attorney or agent, but the Patent Office does post a list of those who are registered.
While the inventor of a relatively simple-to-describe invention may well be able to produce an adequate specification and detailed drawings, there remains language complexity in what is claimed, either in the particular claim language of a utility application, or in the manner in which drawings are presented in a design application. There is also skill required when searching for prior art that is used to support the application and to prevent applying for a patent for something that may be unpatentable. A patent examiner will make special efforts to help pro se inventors understand the process but the failure to adequately understand or respond to an office action from the USPTO can endanger the inventor's rights, and may lead to abandonment of the application.
Electronic filing system
The USPTO accepts patent applications filed in electronic form. Inventors or their patent agents/attorneys can file applications as Adobe PDF documents. Filing fees can be paid by credit card or by a USPTO "deposit account".
Patent search tools
The USPTO web site provides free electronic copies of issued patents and patent applications as multiple-page TIFF (graphic) documents. The site also provides Boolean search and analysis tools.
The USPTO's free distribution service only distributes the patent documents as a set of TIFF files. Numerous free and commercial services provide patent documents in other formats, such as Adobe PDF and CPC.
Criticisms
The USPTO has been criticized for granting patents for impossible or absurd, already known, or arguably obvious inventions. Economists have documented that, although the USPTO makes mistakes when granting patents, these mistakes might be less prominent than some might believe.
Controversial patents
- U.S. patent 5,443,036, "Method of exercising a cat", covers having a cat chase the beam from a laser pointer. The patent has been criticized as being obvious.
- U.S. patent 6,004,596, "Sealed crustless sandwich", issued in 1999, covers the design of a sandwich with crimped edges. All claims of the patent were canceled by the PTO upon reexamination.
- U.S. patent 6,025,810, "Hyper-light-speed antenna", an antenna that sends signals faster than the speed of light. According to the description in the patent, "The present invention takes a transmission of energy, and instead of sending it through normal time and space, it pokes a small hole into another dimension, thus, sending the energy through a place which allows transmission of energy to exceed the speed of light."
- U.S. patent 6,368,227, "Method of swinging on a swing", issued April 9, 2002, was granted to a seven-year-old boy, whose father, a patent attorney, wanted to demonstrate how the patent system worked to his son who was five years old at the time of the application. The PTO initially rejected it due to prior art, but eventually issued the patent. Upon reexamination all claims of the patent were canceled by the PTO.
- U.S. patent 6,960,975, "Space vehicle propelled by the pressure of inflationary vacuum state", describes an anti-gravity device. In November 2005, the USPTO was criticized by physicists for granting it. The journal Nature first highlighted this patent issued for a device that presumably amounts to a perpetual motion machine, defying the laws of physics. The device comprises a particular electrically superconducting shield and electromagnetic generating device. The examiner allowed the claims because the design of the shield and device was novel and not obvious. In situations such as this where a substantial question of patentability is raised after a patent is issued, the Commissioner of the Patent Office can order a reexamination of the patent.
Controversial trademarks
- U.S. Trademark 77,139,082, "Cloud Computing" for Dell, covering "custom manufacture of computer hardware for use in data centers and mega-scale computing environments for others", was allowed by a trademark attorney on July 8, 2008. Cloud computing is a generic term that could define technology infrastructure for years to come, which had been in general use at the time of the application. The application was rejected on August 12, 2008, as descriptive and generic.
- U.S. Trademark 75,215,401, "Netbook" for Psion, covering "laptop computers" was registered on November 21, 2000. Although the company discontinued the netBook line in November 2003 and allowed the trademark to become genericized through use by journalists and vendors (products marketed as 'netbooks' include the Dell Inspiron Mini Series, Asus eeePC, HP Mini 1000, MSI Wind Netbook and others), USPTO subsequently rejected a number of trademarks citing a "likelihood of confusion" under section 2(d), including 'G NETBOOK' (U.S. Trademark 77,527,311 rejected October 31, 2008), MSI's 'WIND NETBOOK' (U.S. Trademark ) and Coby Electronics' 'COBY NETBOOK' (U.S. Trademark 77,590,174) rejected January 13, 2009. Psion also delivered a batch of cease-and-desist letters on December 23, 2008, relating to the genericized trademark.
Slow patent examination and backlog
The USPTO has been criticized for taking an inordinate amount of time in examining patent applications. This is particularly true in the fast-growing area[needs update] of business method patents. As of 2005, patent examiners in the business method area were still examining patent applications filed in 2001.[citation needed]
The delay was attributed by spokesmen for the Patent Office to a combination of a sudden increase in business method patent filings after the 1998 State Street Bank decision, the unfamiliarity of patent examiners with the business and financial arts (e.g., banking, insurance, stock trading etc.), and the issuance of a number of controversial patents (e.g., U.S. patent 5,960,411 "Amazon one click patent") in the business method area.
Effective August 2006, the USPTO introduced an accelerated patent examination procedure in an effort to allow inventors a speedy evaluation of an application with a final disposition within twelve months. The procedure requires additional information to be submitted with the application and also includes an interview with the examiner. The first accelerated patent was granted on March 15, 2007, with a six-month issuance time.
As of the end of 2008, there were 1,208,076 patent applications pending at the Patent Office. At the end of 1997, the number of applications pending was 275,295. Therefore, over those eleven years there was a 439% increase in the number of pending applications.
December 2012 data showed that there was 597,579 unexamined patent applications in the backlog. During the four years since 2009, more than a 50% reduction was achieved. First action pendency was reported as 19.2 months.
Fraud by remote working employees
In 2012, the USPTO initiated an internal investigation into allegations of fraud by employees taking advantage of its remote work policies. Investigators discovered that some patent examiners had lied about the hours they had worked, but high level officials prevented access to computer records, thus limiting the number of employees who could be punished.
See also
Directors of the USPTO |
1. List of people who have headed the United States Patent Office |
... |
r. Bruce Lehman (1993–1998) |
s. Q. Todd Dickinson (1998–2001) |
t. James E. Rogan (December 2001 – 2004) |
u. Jon Dudas (2004 – January 2009) |
v. John J. Doll (January 2009 – August 2009) (acting) |
w. David J. Kappos (August 2009 – February 2013) |
x. Teresa Stanek Rea (February 2013 – November 21, 2013) (acting) |
y. Margaret A. (Peggy) Focarino (November 21, 2013 – January 12, 2014) (by delegation) |
z. Michelle K. Lee (January 13, 2014 – June 6, 2017) |
aa. (June 7, 2017 – February 8, 2018) (acting) |
bb. Andrei Iancu (February 8, 2018 – January 20, 2021) |
cc. Kathi Vidal (2022–present) |
- Confederate Patent Office
- Criticism of the United States government § Criticism of agencies
- Electronic Filing System (USPTO)
- Ex Parte Quayle
- Google Patents
- John Ruggles
- Invention Secrecy Act
- NASA spinoff
- National Inventors Hall of Fame
- Office of Independent Inventor Programs (1999)
- Old Patent Office Building
- Patent Application Information Retrieval (PAIR)
- Patent model
- Patent Office Professional Association (POPA)
- Science and technology in the United States
- Technological history of the United States
- Timeline of United States discoveries
- Timeline of United States inventions
- Yankee ingenuity
- 1836 U.S. Patent Office fire
- 1877 U.S. Patent Office fire
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Further reading
- Dobyns, Kenneth W. (November 1994). The Patent Office Pony: A History of the Early Patent Office (1st ed.). Fredericksburg, Virginia: Sergeant Kirkland's Museum and Historical Society. p. 249. ISBN 0-9632137-4-1. ISBN 978-0-9632137-4-7.
- Schacht, Wendy H. (January 6, 2011). "U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Appropriations Process: A Brief Explanation" (PDF). Congressional Research Service. Retrieved April 22, 2011.
External links
- Official website
- USPTO in the Federal Register
- Searches (USPTO)
- Trademark Applications and Registrations Retrieval (TARR) search by trademark serial number or registration number (USPTO)
- Office of Enrollment & Discipline (OED)
- Patent and Trademark Depository Library Program
- Stopfakes.gov Small Business Resources
- Patent Full-Text and Full-Page Image Databases (USPTO)
- Works by United States Patent Office at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about United States Patent and Trademark Office at the Internet Archive
The United States Patent and Trademark Office USPTO is an agency in the U S Department of Commerce that serves as the national patent office and trademark registration authority for the United States The USPTO s headquarters are in Alexandria Virginia after a 2005 move from the Crystal City area of neighboring Arlington Virginia United States Patent and Trademark OfficeSeal of the U S Patent and Trademark OfficeThe James Madison building on the campus of the United States Patent and Trademark Office headquarters in Alexandria This is the largest building on the campus Agency overviewFormedJuly 4 1836 188 years ago 1836 07 04 Washington D C U S HeadquartersAlexandria Virginia U S 38 48 05 N 77 03 50 W 38 801499 N 77 063835 W 38 801499 77 063835Employees14 082 2024 21 Agency executiveCoke Morgan Stewart Director acting Valencia Martin Wallace Commissioner for Patents Acting David S Gooder Commissioner for TrademarksParent agencyUnited States Department of CommerceWebsitewww wbr uspto wbr gov The USPTO is unique among federal agencies because it operates solely on fees collected by its users and not on taxpayer dollars Its operating structure is like a business in that it receives requests for services applications for patents and trademark registrations and charges fees projected to cover the cost of performing the services it provide s The office is headed by the under secretary of commerce for intellectual property and director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office As of January 2025 update Coke Morgan Stewart is acting undersecretary and director having been appointed to the position by President Trump on January 20 The USPTO cooperates with the European Patent Office EPO and the Japan Patent Office JPO as one of the Trilateral Patent Offices The USPTO is also a Receiving Office an International Searching Authority and an International Preliminary Examination Authority for international patent applications filed in accordance with the Patent Cooperation Treaty MissionThe legal basis for the United States patent system is the Copyright Clause in Section 8 of Article I of the U S Constitution which gives Congress the power to grant patents and copyrights on a national basis Trademark law on the other hand is considered to be authorized by the Commerce Clause The Congress shall have Power To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries The USPTO maintains a permanent interdisciplinary historical record of all U S patent applications in order to fulfill objectives outlined in the United States Constitution The PTO s mission is to promote industrial and technological progress in the United States and strengthen the national economy by Administering the laws relating to patents and trademarks Advising the secretary of commerce the president of the United States and the administration on patent trademark and copyright protection and Providing advice on the trade related aspects of intellectual property Relief representing the Patent Office at the Herbert C Hoover Building Signboard of US Patent Office AlexandriaStructureThe USPTO is headquartered at the Alexandria Campus consisting of 11 buildings in a city like development surrounded by ground floor retail and high rise residential buildings between the Metro stations of King Street station the main search building is two blocks due south of the King Street station and Eisenhower Avenue station where the actual Alexandria Campus is located between Duke Street on the North to Eisenhower Avenue on the South and between John Carlyle Street on the East to Elizabeth Lane on the West in Alexandria Virginia An additional building in Arlington Virginia was opened in 2009 The USPTO was expected by 2014 to open its first ever satellite offices in Detroit Dallas Denver and Silicon Valley to reduce backlog and reflect regional industrial strengths The first satellite office opened in Detroit on July 13 2012 In 2013 due to the budget sequestration the satellite office for Silicon Valley which is home to one of the nation s top patent producing cities was put on hold However renovation and infrastructure updates continued after the sequestration and the Silicon Valley location opened in the San Jose City Hall in 2015 As of September 30 2009 update the end of the U S government s fiscal year the PTO had 9 716 employees nearly all of whom are based at its five building headquarters complex in Alexandria Of those 6 242 were patent examiners almost all of whom were assigned to examine utility patents only 99 were assigned to examine design patents and 388 were trademark examining attorneys the rest are support staff While the agency has noticeably grown in recent years the rate of growth was far slower in fiscal 2009 than in the recent past this is borne out by data from fiscal 2005 to the present As of the end of FY 2018 the USPTO was composed of 12 579 federal employees including 8 185 patent examiners 579 trademark examiners and 3 815 other staff USPTO Madison Building Exterior Interior atrium of the USPTO Madison Building USPTO satellite office in San Jose CaliforniaAt end of FY Employees Patent examiners Trademark examining attorneys Patent Filings Utility Trademark Filings Patent Application Backlog2024 14 082 21 8 944 21 765 21 466 079 2 767 138 2 2023 13 452 2 22 8 568 22 756 22 594 143 6 737 018 7 2022 13 103 20 8 509 20 718 20 457 510 22 787 798 24 2021 12 963 2 19 243 8 073 19 243 662 19 243 650 703 38 943 928 38 223 2020 12 928 8 434 622 653 311 38 201 738 112 38 223 2019 12 652 9 614 701 666 843 38 201 673 233 38 223 2018 12 579 8 185 579 647 572 38 201 594 107 38 2017 12 588 8 147 549 650 350 38 201 530 270 38 526 5792016 12 725 8 351 570 650 411 530 270 537 6552015 12 667 9 161 456 618 062 503 889 553 2212014 12 450 9 302 429 618 457 455 0172013 11 773 8 051 409 601 464 433 6542012 11 531 7 935 386 565 406 415 026 608 2832011 10 210 6 780 378 536 604 398 6672010 9 507 6 225 378 509 367 368 939 726 3312009 9 716 6 243 388 485 500 352 051 750 5962008 9 518 6 055 398 495 095 401 392 750 5962007 8 913 5 477 404 467 243 394 3682006 4 779 4132005 4 177 3572004 3 681 2862003 3 579 2561998 5 3001996 189 979 200 6401995 221 304 175 3071994 186 126 155 3761993 174 553 139 7351992 172 539 125 2371986 120 988 69 2531976 101 807 37 074 Patent examiners make up the bulk of the employees at USPTO They hold degrees in various scientific disciplines but do not necessarily hold law degrees Unlike patent examiners trademark examiners must be licensed attorneys citation needed All examiners work under a strict count based production system For every application counts are earned by composing filing and mailing a first office action on the merits and upon disposal of an application Prior to 2012 decisions of patent examiners could be appealed to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences an administrative law body of the USPTO Decisions of the BPAI could further be appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit or a civil suit could be brought against the Commissioner of Patents in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia The United States Supreme Court may ultimately decide on a patent case Under the America Invents Act the BPAI was converted to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board or PTAB Similarly decisions of trademark examiners could be appealed to the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board with subsequent appeals directed to the Federal Circuit or a civil action may also be brought Management In October 2021 President Joe Biden nominated attorney Kathi Vidal to serve as the USPTO director She was sworn in on April 13 2022 On December 16 2022 Kathi Vidal announced that Vaishali Udupa an intellectual property attorney engineer and currently a top executive from Hewlett Packard Enterprise HPE will join the 13 000 person Department of Commerce agency as the new commissioner for patents effective January 17 2023 Fee diversionFor many years Congress has diverted about 10 of the fees that the USPTO collected into the general treasury of the United States In effect this took money collected from the patent system to use for the general budget This fee diversion has been generally opposed by patent practitioners e g patent attorneys and patent agents inventors the USPTO as well as former federal judge Paul R Michel These stakeholders would rather use the funds to improve the patent office and patent system such as by implementing the USPTO s 21st Century Strategic Plan The last six annual budgets of the George W Bush administration did not propose to divert any USPTO fees and the first budget of the Barack Obama administration continued this practice as well as the second budget of the Trump administration however stakeholders continue to press for a permanent end to fee diversion The discussion of which party can appropriate the fees is more than a financial question Patent fees represent a policy lever that influences both the number of applications submitted to the office as well as their quality PatentsFirst United States patentThe National Inventors Hall of Fame is housed in the Madison Building of the USPTO On July 31 1790 the first U S patent was issued to Samuel Hopkins for an improvement in the making of Pot ash and Pearl ash by a new Apparatus and Process This patent was signed by then President George Washington The X Patents the first 9 957 approximately issued between 1790 and 1836 were destroyed by a fire fewer than 3 000 of those have been recovered and re issued with numbers that include an X The X generally appears at the end of the numbers hand written on full page patent images however in patent collections and for search purposes the X is considered to be the patent type analogous to the D of design patents and appears at the beginning of the number The X distinguishes the patents from those issued after the fire which began again with patent number 1 Each year the PTO issues over 150 000 patents to companies and individuals worldwide As of December 2011 update the PTO had granted 8 743 423 patents and received 16 020 302 applications On June 19 2018 the 10 millionth U S patent was issued to Joseph Marron for invention of a Coherent LADAR System Using Intra Pixel Quadrature Detection to improve laser detection and ranging LADAR The patent was the first to receive the newly redesigned patent cover It was signed by then President Donald Trump during a special ceremony at the Oval Office In February 2024 the USPTO issued a new guideline relating to obtaining a patent as per earlier recommendation by Biden s administration The guideline states that to obtain a patent a real person not AI must have made a significant contribution to the invention and that only a human being can be named as an inventor on a patent List of millionth US patents Patents issued under revised numbering scheme of the Patent Act of 1836 Patent Number Patent Title Issue Date Days Since Last Millionth Issue1 Traction Wheels July 13 18361 000 000 Vehicle Tire August 8 1911 27 4192 000 000 Vehicle Wheel Construction May 12 1932 7 5833 000 000 Automatic Reading System May 6 1955 8 3944 000 000 Process for Recycling Asphalt Aggregate Compositions December 28 1976 7 9075 000 000 Ethanol Production by Escherichia Coli Strains March 19 1991 5 1946 000 000 Extendible Method and Apparatus for Synchronizing Multiple Files on Two Different Computer Systems December 7 1999 3 1857 000 000 Polysaccharide Fibers February 14 2006 2 2618 000 000 Visual Prosthesis August 16 2011 2 0099 000 000 Windshield Washer Conditioner April 7 2015 1 33010 000 000 Coherent Ladar Using Intra Pixel Quadrature Detection June 19 2018 1 16911 000 000 Repositioning Wires and Methods for Repositioning Prosthetic Heart Valve Devices within a Heart Chamber May 11 2021 1 05712 000 000 Labeled Nucleotide Analogs Reaction Mixtures and Methods and System for Sequencing June 4 2024 1 120Bar chart Days since last millionth patent filed at the USPTOTrademarksThe USPTO examines applications for trademark registration which can be filed under five different filing bases use in commerce intent to use foreign application foreign registration or international registration If approved the trademarks are registered on either the Principal Register or the Supplemental Register depending upon whether the mark meets the appropriate distinctiveness criteria This federal system governs goods and services distributed via interstate commerce and operates alongside state level trademark registration systems Trademark applications have grown substantially in recent years jumping from 296 490 new applications in 2000 to 345 000 new applications in 2014 to 458 103 new applications in 2018 Recent growth has been driven partially by growing numbers of trademark applications originating in China trademark applications from China have grown more than 12 fold since 2013 and in 2017 one in every nine trademark applications reviewed by the U S Trademark Office originated in China Since 2008 the Trademark Office has hosted a National Trademark Expo every two years billing it as a free family friendly event designed to educate the public about trademarks and their importance in the global marketplace The Expo features celebrity speakers such as Anson Williams of the television show Happy Days and basketball player Kareem Abdul Jabbar and has numerous trademark holding companies as exhibitors Before the 2009 National Trademark Expo the Trademark Office designed and launched a kid friendly trademark mascot known as T Markey who appears as an anthropomorphized registered trademark symbol T Markey is featured prominently on the Kids section of the USPTO website alongside fellow IP mascots Ms Pat Pending with her robot cat GeaRS and Mark Trademan In 2020 trademark applications marked the sharpest declines and inclines in American history During the spring COVID 19 lockdowns led to reduced filings which then increased in July 2020 to exceed the previous year August 2020 was subsequently the highest month of trademark filings in the history of the U S Patent and Trademark Office RepresentationThe USPTO only allows certain qualified persons to practice before the USPTO Practice includes filing of patent and trademark applications on behalf of individuals and companies prosecuting the patent and trademark applications and participating in administrative appeals and other proceedings before the PTO examiners examining attorneys and boards The USPTO sets its own standards for who may practice Any person who practices patent law before the USPTO must become a registered patent attorney or agent A patent agent is a person who has passed the USPTO registration examination the patent bar but has not passed any state bar exam to become a licensed attorney a patent attorney is a person who has passed both a state bar and the patent bar and is in good standing as an attorney A patent agent can only act in a representative capacity in patent matters presented to the USPTO and may not represent a patent holder or applicant in a court of law To be eligible for taking the patent bar exam a candidate must possess a degree in engineering or physical science or the equivalent of such a degree Any person who practices trademark law before the USPTO must be an active member in good standing of the highest court of any state The United States allows any citizen from any country to sit for the patent bar if he she has the requisite technical background Only Canada has a reciprocity agreement with the United States that confers upon a patent agent similar rights An unrepresented inventor may file a patent application and prosecute it on his or her own behalf pro se If it appears to a patent examiner that an inventor filing a pro se application is not familiar with the proper procedures of the Patent Office the examiner may suggest that the filing party obtain representation by a registered patent attorney or patent agent The patent examiner cannot recommend a specific attorney or agent but the Patent Office does post a list of those who are registered While the inventor of a relatively simple to describe invention may well be able to produce an adequate specification and detailed drawings there remains language complexity in what is claimed either in the particular claim language of a utility application or in the manner in which drawings are presented in a design application There is also skill required when searching for prior art that is used to support the application and to prevent applying for a patent for something that may be unpatentable A patent examiner will make special efforts to help pro se inventors understand the process but the failure to adequately understand or respond to an office action from the USPTO can endanger the inventor s rights and may lead to abandonment of the application Electronic filing systemThe USPTO accepts patent applications filed in electronic form Inventors or their patent agents attorneys can file applications as Adobe PDF documents Filing fees can be paid by credit card or by a USPTO deposit account Patent search toolsThe lobby of the Public Search Facility looking out toward the atrium inside the Madison Building of the USPTO The bronze bust of Thomas Jefferson is at the far right Researchers can access patent search databases within the facility The USPTO web site provides free electronic copies of issued patents and patent applications as multiple page TIFF graphic documents The site also provides Boolean search and analysis tools The USPTO s free distribution service only distributes the patent documents as a set of TIFF files Numerous free and commercial services provide patent documents in other formats such as Adobe PDF and CPC CriticismsThe USPTO has been criticized for granting patents for impossible or absurd already known or arguably obvious inventions Economists have documented that although the USPTO makes mistakes when granting patents these mistakes might be less prominent than some might believe Controversial patents U S patent 5 443 036 Method of exercising a cat covers having a cat chase the beam from a laser pointer The patent has been criticized as being obvious U S patent 6 004 596 Sealed crustless sandwich issued in 1999 covers the design of a sandwich with crimped edges All claims of the patent were canceled by the PTO upon reexamination U S patent 6 025 810 Hyper light speed antenna an antenna that sends signals faster than the speed of light According to the description in the patent The present invention takes a transmission of energy and instead of sending it through normal time and space it pokes a small hole into another dimension thus sending the energy through a place which allows transmission of energy to exceed the speed of light U S patent 6 368 227 Method of swinging on a swing issued April 9 2002 was granted to a seven year old boy whose father a patent attorney wanted to demonstrate how the patent system worked to his son who was five years old at the time of the application The PTO initially rejected it due to prior art but eventually issued the patent Upon reexamination all claims of the patent were canceled by the PTO U S patent 6 960 975 Space vehicle propelled by the pressure of inflationary vacuum state describes an anti gravity device In November 2005 the USPTO was criticized by physicists for granting it The journal Nature first highlighted this patent issued for a device that presumably amounts to a perpetual motion machine defying the laws of physics The device comprises a particular electrically superconducting shield and electromagnetic generating device The examiner allowed the claims because the design of the shield and device was novel and not obvious In situations such as this where a substantial question of patentability is raised after a patent is issued the Commissioner of the Patent Office can order a reexamination of the patent Controversial trademarks U S Trademark 77 139 082 Cloud Computing for Dell covering custom manufacture of computer hardware for use in data centers and mega scale computing environments for others was allowed by a trademark attorney on July 8 2008 Cloud computing is a generic term that could define technology infrastructure for years to come which had been in general use at the time of the application The application was rejected on August 12 2008 as descriptive and generic U S Trademark 75 215 401 Netbook for Psion covering laptop computers was registered on November 21 2000 Although the company discontinued the netBook line in November 2003 and allowed the trademark to become genericized through use by journalists and vendors products marketed as netbooks include the Dell Inspiron Mini Series Asus eeePC HP Mini 1000 MSI Wind Netbook and others USPTO subsequently rejected a number of trademarks citing a likelihood of confusion under section 2 d including G NETBOOK U S Trademark 77 527 311 rejected October 31 2008 MSI s WIND NETBOOK U S Trademark and Coby Electronics COBY NETBOOK U S Trademark 77 590 174 rejected January 13 2009 Psion also delivered a batch of cease and desist letters on December 23 2008 relating to the genericized trademark Slow patent examination and backlog U S patents granted 1790 2010More U S utility patents have been issued in the most recent thirty years than in the first 200 years in which they were issued 1790 1990 The USPTO has been criticized for taking an inordinate amount of time in examining patent applications This is particularly true in the fast growing area needs update of business method patents As of 2005 patent examiners in the business method area were still examining patent applications filed in 2001 citation needed The delay was attributed by spokesmen for the Patent Office to a combination of a sudden increase in business method patent filings after the 1998 State Street Bank decision the unfamiliarity of patent examiners with the business and financial arts e g banking insurance stock trading etc and the issuance of a number of controversial patents e g U S patent 5 960 411 Amazon one click patent in the business method area Effective August 2006 the USPTO introduced an accelerated patent examination procedure in an effort to allow inventors a speedy evaluation of an application with a final disposition within twelve months The procedure requires additional information to be submitted with the application and also includes an interview with the examiner The first accelerated patent was granted on March 15 2007 with a six month issuance time As of the end of 2008 there were 1 208 076 patent applications pending at the Patent Office At the end of 1997 the number of applications pending was 275 295 Therefore over those eleven years there was a 439 increase in the number of pending applications December 2012 data showed that there was 597 579 unexamined patent applications in the backlog During the four years since 2009 more than a 50 reduction was achieved First action pendency was reported as 19 2 months Fraud by remote working employees In 2012 the USPTO initiated an internal investigation into allegations of fraud by employees taking advantage of its remote work policies Investigators discovered that some patent examiners had lied about the hours they had worked but high level officials prevented access to computer records thus limiting the number of employees who could be punished See alsoDirectors of the USPTO1 List of people who have headed the United States Patent Office r Bruce Lehman 1993 1998 s Q Todd Dickinson 1998 2001 t James E Rogan December 2001 2004 u Jon Dudas 2004 January 2009 v John J Doll January 2009 August 2009 acting w David J Kappos August 2009 February 2013 x Teresa Stanek Rea February 2013 November 21 2013 acting y Margaret A Peggy Focarino November 21 2013 January 12 2014 by delegation z Michelle K Lee January 13 2014 June 6 2017 aa June 7 2017 February 8 2018 acting bb Andrei Iancu February 8 2018 January 20 2021 cc Kathi Vidal 2022 present Confederate Patent Office Criticism of the United States government Criticism of agencies Electronic Filing System USPTO Ex Parte Quayle Google Patents John Ruggles Invention Secrecy Act NASA spinoff National Inventors Hall of Fame Office of Independent Inventor Programs 1999 Old Patent Office Building Patent Application Information Retrieval PAIR Patent model Patent Office Professional Association POPA Science and technology in the United States Technological history of the United States Timeline of United States discoveries Timeline of United States inventions Yankee ingenuity 1836 U S Patent Office fire 1877 U S Patent Office fireReferences Records of the Patent and Trademark office National Archives and Records Administration August 15 2016 An act to promote the 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Pixel Quadrature Detection ppubs uspto gov 11 Millionth U S Patent Repositioning Wires and Methods for Repositioning Prosthetic Heart Valve Devices within a Heart Chamber ppubs uspto gov 12 Millionth U S Patent Labeled Nucleotide Analogs Reaction Mixtures and Methods and System for Sequencing ppubs uspto gov Trademarks Basis for Filing USPTO Archived from the original on January 15 2019 Retrieved January 14 2019 State Trademark Information FindLaw For Small Business February 11 2008 Archived from the original on March 2 2008 Retrieved February 11 2008 Trademark Electronic Search System TESS United States Patent and Trademark Office February 11 2008 Archived from the original on September 3 2010 Retrieved February 11 2008 Note click on Trademarks then click on TESS tab Trademark FAQs United States Patent and Trademark Office Archived from the original on September 12 2015 Retrieved September 14 2015 USPTO Annual Report FY2000 PDF USPTO gov Archived PDF from the original on April 24 2018 Retrieved January 14 2019 Erik January 6 2019 USPTO received more than 458 000 trademark applications in 2018 a new record but slower growth Erik M Pelton amp Associates PLLC Retrieved January 14 2019 Gershman Jacob May 5 2018 Flood of Trademark Applications From China Alarms U S Officials Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved January 14 2019 Trademarks About the USPTO s National Trademark Exposition USPTO Archived from the original on January 15 2019 Retrieved January 14 2019 Trademarks 2014 National Trademark Expo USPTO Archived from the original on January 15 2019 Retrieved January 14 2019 2018 National Trademark Exposition USPTO Archived from the original on January 15 2019 Retrieved January 14 2019 Cushing Tim December 4 2014 USPTO Acts Like A Three Letter Agency Redacts A Bunch Of Stuff About Its Kid Friendly T Markey Character Techdirt Archived from the original on January 15 2019 Retrieved January 14 2019 USPTO Kids USPTO Archived from the original on December 3 2018 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Patent issued for anti gravity device Phyorg com Archived from the original on December 10 2006 Retrieved November 24 2006 Brian Handwerk November 11 2005 Antigravity Machine Patent Draws Physicists Ire National Geographic News Archived from the original on November 14 2006 Retrieved November 24 2006 An untraceable link was also included here as an additional reference full citation needed Archived December 4 2005 at the Wayback Machine Ramon M Barrera examiner June 7 2005 Notice of Allowance and Fees Due PTOL 85 PDF 11 079 670 Space Vehicle Propelled by the Pressure of Inflationary Vacuum State United States Patent and Trademark Office p 2 Archived PDF from the original on February 1 2016 Retrieved September 5 2014 Note Navigate to the Image File Wrapper to find the file download and open with a PDF reader The specific passage from the document follows The following is an examiner s statement of reasons for allowance None of the prior art of record taught or disclosed the claimed superconducting shield and electromagnetic field generating means structure Shah Agam Dell Tries to Trademark cloud Computing cio com Archived from the original on April 16 2014 Retrieved May 6 2018 Dell Cloud Computing Trademark Rejected eweek com August 19 2008 Retrieved May 6 2018 A netbook by any other name or how Psion is going discover you have to use it or lose it Archived from the original on February 5 2009 U S Patent Activity 1790 to the Present USPTO archived from the original on December 2 2012 Accelerated Examination USPTO Archived from the original on September 16 2009 Retrieved May 6 2018 USPTO grants first patent under accelerated review option Archived April 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine Press Release Gene Quinn How to Fix the USPTO Archived March 27 2009 at the Wayback Machine IPWatchdog November 21 2008 Consulted on December 6 2008 United States Patent and Trademark Office Archived from the original on February 20 2013 Retrieved February 23 2013 December 2012 Patents Data Rein Lisa August 10 2014 Patent office filters out worst telework abuses in report to its watchdog The Washington Post Archived from the original on August 12 2014 Joseph Matal Archived from the original on June 26 2017 Retrieved June 15 2017 Fucito Paul February 8 2018 Andrei Iancu Begins Role as New Director of United States Patent and Trademark Office U S Patent and Trademark Office Archived from the original on February 10 2018 Retrieved February 16 2018 Further readingDobyns Kenneth W November 1994 The Patent Office Pony A History of the Early Patent Office 1st ed Fredericksburg Virginia Sergeant Kirkland s Museum and Historical Society p 249 ISBN 0 9632137 4 1 ISBN 978 0 9632137 4 7 Schacht Wendy H January 6 2011 U S Patent and Trademark Office Appropriations Process A Brief Explanation PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved April 22 2011 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to United States Patent and Trademark Office Official website USPTO in the Federal Register Searches USPTO Trademark Applications and Registrations Retrieval TARR search by trademark serial number or registration number USPTO Office of Enrollment amp Discipline OED Patent and Trademark Depository Library Program Stopfakes gov Small Business Resources Patent Full Text and Full Page Image Databases USPTO Works by United States Patent Office at Project Gutenberg Works by or about United States Patent and Trademark Office at the Internet Archive