Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees During Fiscal Year 2025

Published date03 April 2024
Record Number2024-06250
Citation89 FR 23226
CourtPatent And Trademark Office
SectionProposed rules
Federal Register, Volume 89 Issue 65 (Wednesday, April 3, 2024)
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 65 (Wednesday, April 3, 2024)]
                [Proposed Rules]
                [Pages 23226-23291]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2024-06250]
                [[Page 23225]]
                Vol. 89
                Wednesday,
                No. 65
                April 3, 2024
                Part IVDepartment of Commerce-----------------------------------------------------------------------Patent and Trademark Office-----------------------------------------------------------------------37 CFR Parts 1, 41, and 42Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees During Fiscal Year 2025; Proposed
                Rule
                Federal Register / Vol. 89 , No. 65 / Wednesday, April 3, 2024 /
                Proposed Rules
                [[Page 23226]]
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                DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
                Patent and Trademark Office
                37 CFR Parts 1, 41, and 42
                [Docket No. PTO-P-2022-0033]
                RIN 0651-AD64
                Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees During Fiscal Year 2025
                AGENCY: United States Patent and Trademark Office, Department of
                Commerce.
                ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                SUMMARY: The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) proposes
                to set or adjust patent fees as authorized by the Leahy-Smith America
                Invents Act (AIA), as amended by the Study of Underrepresented Classes
                Chasing Engineering and Science Success Act of 2018 (SUCCESS Act). The
                proposed fee adjustments are needed to provide the USPTO with
                sufficient aggregate revenue to recover the aggregate costs of patent
                operations in future years (based on assumptions and estimates found in
                the agency's Fiscal Year 2025 Congressional Justification (FY 2025
                Budget)), including implementing the USPTO 2022-2026 Strategic Plan
                (Strategic Plan).
                DATES: The USPTO solicits comments from the public on this proposed
                rule. Written comments must be received on or before June 3, 2024 to
                ensure consideration.
                ADDRESSES: Written comments on proposed patent fees must be submitted
                through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov.
                To submit comments via the portal, commenters should go to https://www.regulations.gov/docket/PTO-P-2022-0033 or enter docket number PTO-
                P-2022-0033 on the https://www.regulations.gov homepage and select the
                ``Search'' button. The site will provide search results listing all
                documents associated with this docket. Commenters can find a reference
                to this document and select the ``Comment'' button, complete the
                required fields, and enter or attach their comments. Attachments to
                electronic comments will be accepted in Adobe portable document format
                (PDF) or Microsoft Word format. Because comments will be made available
                for public inspection, information that the submitter does not desire
                to make public, such as an address or phone number, should not be
                included in the comments.
                 Visit the Federal eRulemaking Portal for additional instructions on
                providing comments via the portal. If electronic submission of comments
                is not possible, please contact the USPTO using the contact information
                below in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this document
                for special instructions.
                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brendan Hourigan, Director, Office of
                Planning and Budget, at 571-272-8966, or [email protected]; or
                C. Brett Lockard, Director, Forecasting and Analysis Division, at 571-
                272-0928, or [email protected].
                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                I. Executive Summary
                A. Introduction
                 The USPTO publishes this notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM or
                proposed rule) under section 10 of the AIA (section 10), Public Law
                112-29, 125 Stat. 284, as amended by the SUCCESS Act, Public Law 115-
                273, 132 Stat. 4158, which authorizes the Under Secretary of Commerce
                for Intellectual Property and Director of the USPTO to set or adjust by
                rule any patent fee established, authorized, or charged under title 35
                of the United States Code (U.S.C.) for any services performed, or
                materials furnished, by the agency. Section 10 prescribes that fees may
                be set or adjusted only to recover the aggregate estimated costs to the
                USPTO for processing, activities, services, and materials relating to
                patents, including administrative costs with respect to such patent
                fees. Section 10 authority includes flexibility to set individual fees
                in a way that furthers key policy factors, while considering the cost
                of the respective services. Section 10 also establishes certain
                procedural requirements for setting or adjusting fee regulations, such
                as public hearings and input from the Patent Public Advisory Committee
                (PPAC) and congressional oversight. PPAC held a public hearing on the
                USPTO's preliminary patent fee proposals on May 18, 2023, and released
                a report (PPAC Report) on August 14, 2023, containing its comments,
                advice, and recommendations on the preliminary fee proposals. The USPTO
                considered and analyzed the PPAC Report before publishing the fee
                proposals in this NPRM.
                B. Purpose of This Action
                 Based on a biennial review of fees, costs, and revenues that began
                in fiscal year (FY) 2021, the USPTO concluded that fee adjustments are
                necessary to provide the agency with sufficient financial resources to
                facilitate the effective administration of the U.S. patent system,
                including implementing the USPTO 2022-2026 Strategic Plan, available on
                the agency website at https://www.uspto.gov/StrategicPlan. The USPTO
                reviewed and analyzed the overall balance between the agency's
                estimated revenue and costs over the next five years (based on current
                projections) under this proposed rule. The proposed fees will help
                stabilize the USPTO's finances by offsetting the forecasted increase in
                aggregate costs and maintaining the patent operating reserve in the
                desired operating range. The patent operating reserve mitigates
                financing risk and enables the agency to deliver reliable and
                predictable service levels, while positioning it to undertake
                initiatives that encourage participation in the innovation ecosystem.
                 The individual fee proposals align with the USPTO's strategic goals
                and its fee structure philosophy, including the agency's four key fee
                setting policy factors: (1) promote innovation strategies; (2) align
                fees with the full costs of products and services; (3) facilitate
                effective administration of the U.S. patent system; and (4) offer
                application processing options as discussed in detail in Part IV:
                Rulemaking Goals and Strategies. The proposed fee adjustments will
                enable the USPTO to accomplish its mission to drive U.S. innovation,
                inclusive capitalism, and global competitiveness. The USPTO's goal is
                to drive innovation, entrepreneurship, and creativity for the benefit
                of all Americans and people around the world.
                C. Summary of Provisions Impacted by This Action
                 The USPTO proposes to set or adjust 455 patent fees for
                undiscounted, small, and micro entities (any reference herein to
                ``undiscounted entity'' includes all entities other than those with
                established entitlement to either a small or micro entity fee discount,
                see Part II: Legal Framework for more information), including the
                introduction of 73 new fees.
                 Overall, the routine fees to obtain a patent (i.e., filing, search,
                examination, and issue fees) will increase under this NPRM relative to
                the current fee schedule to ensure financial sustainability and
                accommodate increases needed to improve the predictability and
                reliability of patent intellectual property (IP) protection (discussed
                in detail below). Applicants who meet the eligibility criteria for
                small or micro entity discounts will continue to pay a reduced fee for
                the fees eligible for discount under AIA section 10(b). Additional
                information describing the proposed fee adjustments is included in Part
                V: Individual Fee Rationale in this rulemaking and in the
                [[Page 23227]]
                ``Table of Patent Fees--Current, Proposed, and Unit Cost'' (Table of
                Patent Fees) available on the fee setting section of the USPTO website
                at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting.
                D. Summary of Costs and Benefits of This Action
                 This proposed rule is economically significant and requires a
                Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) under Executive Order 12866 Regulatory
                Planning and Review, (Sept. 30, 1993). The USPTO prepared an RIA to
                analyze the costs and benefits of the NPRM over a five-year period, FY
                2025-2029. The RIA includes an analysis of how well the four
                alternatives align with the rulemaking strategies and goals, which are
                comprised of strategic priorities (goals, objectives, and key
                performance strategies) from the Strategic Plan; and fee setting policy
                factors. From this conceptual framework, the USPTO assessed the
                absolute and relative qualitative costs and benefits of each
                alternative. Consistent with OMB Circular A-4, ``Regulatory Analysis,''
                this proposed rule involves a transfer payment from one group to
                another. The USPTO recognizes that it is very difficult to precisely
                monetize and quantify social costs and benefits resulting from
                deadweight loss of a transfer rule such as this proposed rule. The
                costs and benefits identified and analyzed in the RIA are strictly
                qualitative. Qualitative costs and benefits have effects that are
                difficult to express in either dollar or numerical values. Monetized
                costs and benefits, on the other hand, have effects that can be
                expressed in dollar values. The USPTO did not identify any monetized
                costs and benefits of this proposed rule, but found this proposed rule
                has significant qualitative benefits and only minimal costs.
                 The qualitative costs and benefits that the RIA assesses are: (1)
                fee schedule design--a measure of how well the fee schedule aligns to
                the key fee setting policy factors; and (2) securing aggregate revenue
                to recover aggregate cost--a measure of whether the alternative
                provides adequate revenue to support the core mission and strategic
                priorities described in the NPRM, Strategic Plan, and FY 2025 Budget.
                Based on the costs and benefits identified and analyzed in the RIA, the
                fee schedule proposed in this NPRM offers the highest net benefits. As
                described throughout this document, the proposed fee schedule maintains
                the existing balance of below cost entry fees (e.g., filing, search,
                and examination) and above cost maintenance fees as one approach to
                foster innovation. Further, as detailed in Part V: Individual Fee
                Rationale, the proposed fee changes are targeted in support of one or
                more fee setting policy factors. Lastly, this proposed rule secures the
                aggregate revenue needed to maintain patent operations and achieve the
                strategic priorities encompassed in the rulemaking goals and strategies
                (see Part IV: Rulemaking Goals and Strategies). The proposed fee
                schedule produces sufficient aggregate revenue to fund the strategic
                objectives to issue and maintain robust and reliable patents; improve
                patent application pendency; optimize the patent application process to
                enable efficiencies for applicants and other stakeholders; and enhance
                internal processes to prevent fraudulent and abusive behaviors that do
                not embody the USPTO's mission. Table 1 summarizes the RIA results.
                Additional details describing the costs and benefits can be found in
                the RIA, available on the fee setting section of the USPTO website at
                https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting.
                 Table 1--Proposed Patent Fee Schedule Costs and Benefits, Cumulative FY
                 2025-2029
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Qualitative costs and benefits
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Costs: ............................
                 Fee Schedule Design..................... Minimal.
                Benefits: ............................
                 Secure Aggregate Revenue to Recover Significant.
                 Aggregate Costs.
                 Fee Schedule Design..................... Significant.
                Net Benefit............................... Significant benefit.
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                II. Legal Framework
                A. Leahy-Smith America Invents Act--Section 10
                 The AIA was enacted into law on September 16, 2011. Public Law 112-
                29, 125 Stat. 284. Section 10(a) of the AIA authorizes the Director of
                the USPTO to set or adjust by rule any patent fee established,
                authorized, or charged under 35 U.S.C. for any services performed or
                materials furnished by the agency. Fees under 35 U.S.C. may be set or
                adjusted only to recover the aggregate estimated costs to the USPTO for
                processing, activities, services, and materials related to patents,
                including administrative costs to the agency with respect to such
                patent operations. See 125 Stat. at 316. Provided that fees in the
                aggregate achieve overall aggregate cost recovery, the Director may set
                individual fees under section 10 at, below, or above their respective
                cost. Section 10(e) requires the Director to publish the final fee rule
                in the Federal Register and the USPTO's Official Gazette at least 45
                days before the final fees become effective.
                 Section 10 authorized the USPTO to set or adjust patent fees within
                the regulatory process. The USPTO has used the AIA's fee setting
                authority to achieve its key fee setting policy factors and to generate
                the aggregate revenue needed to recover the aggregate costs of
                operations and strategic patent priorities in final rules published in
                FY 2013 (Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees, 78 FR 4212 (Jan. 18,
                2013)), FY 2018 (Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees During Fiscal Year
                2017, 82 FR 52780 (Nov. 14, 2017)), and FY 2020 (Setting and Adjusting
                Patent Fees During Fiscal Year 2020, 85 FR 46932 (Aug. 3, 2020) (FY
                2020 Final Rule)).
                B. The Study of Underrepresented Classes Chasing Engineering and
                Science Success Act of 2018
                 The SUCCESS Act was enacted into law on October 31, 2018. See
                Public Law 115-273, 132 Stat. 4158. Section 4 of the SUCCESS Act
                amended section 10(i)(2) of the AIA by striking ``7-year'' and
                inserting ``15-year'' in reference to the expiration of fee setting
                authority. Therefore, updated section 10(i) terminates the Director's
                authority to set or adjust any fee under section 10(a) upon expiration
                of the 15-year period that began on September 16, 2011, and ends on
                September 16, 2026.
                C. Unleashing American Innovators Act of 2022
                 On December 29, 2022, the President signed into law the
                Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, which included the Unleashing
                American Innovators Act (UAIA). The UAIA increased fee discounts for
                small entities from 50% to 60% and fee discounts for micro entities
                from 75% to 80% for fees for filing, searching, examining, issuing,
                appealing, and maintaining patent applications and patents. The UAIA
                also increased fee discounts for small entities from 75% to 80% for
                filing a basic, nonprovisional utility application electronically. See
                Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, Public Law 117-328; Reducing
                Patent Fees for Small Entities and Micro Entities Under the Unleashing
                American Innovators Act of 2022, 88 FR 17147 (Mar. 22, 2023).
                D. Small Entity Fee Reduction
                 Section 10(b) of the AIA, as amended by the UAIA, requires the
                USPTO to reduce by 60% the fees for small entities that are set or
                adjusted under section 10(a) for filing, searching, examining, issuing,
                appealing, and maintaining patent applications and patents.
                [[Page 23228]]
                E. Micro Entity Fee Reduction
                 Section 10(g) of the AIA amended 35 U.S.C. chapter 11, by adding
                section 123 concerning micro entities. The AIA, as amended by the UAIA,
                provides that the USPTO must reduce by 80% the fees for micro entities
                for filing, searching, examining, issuing, appealing, and maintaining
                patent applications and patents.
                F. Patent Public Advisory Committee Role
                 The Secretary of Commerce established PPAC under the American
                Inventors Protection Act of 1999. See 35 U.S.C. 5. PPAC advises the
                Director of the USPTO on the management, policies, goals, performance,
                budget, and user fees of patent operations.
                 When adopting fees under section 10, the Director must provide PPAC
                the proposed fees at least 45 days prior to publishing in the Federal
                Register. PPAC then has 30 days to deliberate, consider, and comment on
                the proposal, as well as hold public hearing(s) on the proposed fees.
                Then, before the USPTO issues any final fees, PPAC must make a written
                report available to the public of the comments, advice, and
                recommendations of the committee regarding the proposed fees. The USPTO
                must consider and analyze any comments, advice, or recommendations
                received from PPAC before finally setting or adjusting fees.
                 Consistent with this framework, on April 20, 2023, the Director
                notified PPAC of the USPTO's intent to set or adjust patent fees and
                submitted a preliminary patent fee proposal with supporting materials.
                The preliminary patent fee proposal and associated materials are
                available on the fee setting section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting. PPAC held a public hearing at the
                USPTO's headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia, on May 18, 2023, where
                members of the public were given an opportunity to provide oral
                testimony. Transcripts of the hearing are available for review on the
                USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/documents/PPAC_Hearing_Transcript-20230518.pdf. Members of the public were also
                given an opportunity to submit written comments for PPAC to consider,
                and these comments are available on Regulations.gov at https://www.regulations.gov/document/PTO-P-2023-0017-0001. On August 14, 2023,
                PPAC issued a written report setting forth in detail their comments,
                advice, and recommendations regarding the preliminary proposed fees.
                The report is available on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/documents/PPAC-Report-on-2023-Fee-Proposal.docx.
                The USPTO considered and analyzed all comments, advice, and
                recommendations received from PPAC before publishing this NPRM. Further
                discussion of the PPAC Report can be found in Part IV: Rulemaking Goals
                and Strategies and Part V: Individual Fee Rationale.
                III. Estimating Aggregate Costs and Revenues
                 Section 10 prescribes that patent fees may be set or adjusted only
                to recover the aggregate estimated costs to the USPTO for processing,
                activities, services, and materials relating to patents, including
                administrative costs with respect to such patent fees. The following is
                a description of how the USPTO calculates aggregate costs and revenue.
                Step 1: Estimating Prospective Aggregate Costs
                 Estimating prospective aggregate costs is accomplished primarily
                through the annual USPTO budget formulation process. The annual budget
                is a five-year plan for carrying out base programs and new initiatives
                to deliver on the USPTO's statutory mission and implement strategic
                goals and objectives. First, the USPTO projects the level of demand for
                patent products and services. Demand for products and services depends
                on many factors that are subject to change, including domestic and
                global economic activity. The USPTO also considers overseas patenting
                activities, policies and legislation, and known process efficiencies.
                Because filing, search, and examination costs are the largest share of
                the total patent operating costs, a primary production workload driver
                is the number of patent application filings (i.e., incoming work to the
                USPTO). The USPTO looks at indicators such as the expected growth in
                Real Gross Domestic Product (RGDP), a leading indicator of incoming
                patent applications, to estimate prospective workload. RGDP is reported
                by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (www.bea.gov) and is forecasted each
                February by the OMB (www.omb.gov) in the Economic and Budget Analyses
                section of the Analytical Perspectives and twice annually by the
                Congressional Budget Office (CBO) (www.cbo.gov) in the Budget and
                Economic Outlook.
                 The expected production workload must then be compared to the
                current examination production capacity to determine any required
                staffing and operating cost (e.g., salaries, workload processing
                contracts, and publication) adjustments. The USPTO uses a patent
                pendency model to estimate patent production output based on actual
                historical data and input assumptions, such as incoming patent
                applications and overtime hours. An overview of the model, including a
                description of inputs, outputs, key data relationships, and a
                simulation tool is available at https://www.uspto.gov/learning-and-resources/statistics/patent-pendency-model.
                 Next, the USPTO calculates budgetary spending requirements based on
                the prospective aggregate costs of patent operations. First, the USPTO
                estimates the prospective costs of status quo operations (base
                requirements). Then, the base requirements are adjusted for anticipated
                pay increases and inflationary increases for the budget year and four
                outyears. The USPTO then estimates the prospective costs for expected
                changes in production workload and new initiatives over the same
                period. The USPTO reduces cost estimates for completed initiatives and
                known cost savings expected over the same five-year horizon. A detailed
                description of the budgetary requirements, aggregate costs, and related
                assumptions for the Patents program is available in the FY 2025 Budget.
                 The USPTO estimates that the Patents program will cost $3.973
                billion in FY 2025, including $2.835 billion for patent examining; $90
                million for patent trial and appeals; $159 million for patent
                information resources; $24 million for activities related to IP
                protection, policy, and enforcement; and $866 million for general
                support costs necessary for patent operations (e.g., the patent share
                of rent, utilities, legal, financial, human resources, other
                administrative services, and Office-wide information technology (IT)
                infrastructure and IT support costs). See Appendix II of the FY 2025
                Budget. In addition, the USPTO will transfer $2 million to the
                Department of Commerce Inspector General for audit support.
                 Table 2 below provides key underlying production workload
                projections and assumptions from the FY 2025 Budget used to calculate
                aggregate costs. Table 3 (see Step 2) presents the total budgetary
                requirements (prospective aggregate costs) for FY 2025 through FY 2029
                and the estimated collections and operating reserve balances that would
                result from the proposed adjustments contained in this NPRM. These
                projections are based on point-in-time estimates and assumptions that
                are subject to change. There is considerable uncertainty in
                [[Page 23229]]
                out-year budgetary requirements. There are risks that could materialize
                over the next several years (e.g., adjustments to examination capacity,
                recompetition of contracts, changes in workload, inflationary
                increases, etc.) that could increase the USPTO's budgetary requirements
                in the short- to medium-term. These estimates are refreshed annually in
                the production of the USPTO's budget.
                 Table 2--Patent Production Workload Projections, FY 2025-2029
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Utility, plant, and reissue (UPR) FY 2025 FY 2026 FY 2027 FY 2028 FY 2029
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Applications *................................. 609,400 615,400 623,600 629,600 642,200
                Application growth rate........................ 2.1% 1.0% 1.3% 1.0% 2.0%
                Production units **............................ 557,000 577,300 602,300 621,100 639,000
                Unexamined patent application backlog.......... 817,900 820,200 811,600 789,400 780,000
                Examination capacity ***....................... 8,833 9,276 9,589 9,867 10,135
                Performance measures (UPR):
                 Average first action pendency (Months)..... 20.7 20.7 21.0 20.6 21.3
                 Average total pendency (months)............ 26.1 27.2 26.6 26.4 25.7
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * In this table, the patent application filing data includes requests for continued examination.
                ** Each serial new (i.e., non-request for continued examination) application carries 1 production unit or 2.0
                 counts, a fraction of which is awarded for each major Office action type. In most but not all cases, requests
                 for continued examination carry a fraction of a production unit (e.g., 1.75 counts) and the credit for a first
                 action is reduced by a corresponding amount.
                *** In this table, Examination Capacity is the UPR examiners onboard at end-of-year, as described in the FY 2025
                 Budget.
                Step 2: Estimating Prospective Aggregate Revenue
                 As described above in Step 1, the USPTO's prospective aggregate
                costs (as presented in the FY 2025 Budget) include budgetary
                requirements related to planned production, anticipated new
                initiatives, and a contribution to the patent operating reserve
                required for the USPTO to maintain patent operations and realize its
                strategic goals and objectives for the next five years. The prospective
                aggregate costs become the target aggregate revenue level that the new
                fee schedule must generate in a given year over the five-year planning
                horizon. To estimate aggregate revenue, the USPTO references the
                production models used to estimate aggregate costs and analyzes
                relevant factors and indicators to calculate or determine prospective
                fee workloads (e.g., number of applications and requests for services
                and products).
                 Economic activity is an important consideration when developing
                workload and revenue forecasts for patent products and services because
                economic conditions affect patenting activity. Major economic
                indicators include the overall condition of the U.S. and global
                economies, spending on research and development activities, and
                investments that lead to the commercialization of new products and
                services. These indicators correlate with patent application filings,
                which are a key driver of patent fees. Economic indicators also provide
                insight into market conditions and the management of IP portfolios,
                which influence application processing requests and post-issuance
                decisions to maintain patent protection. When developing fee workload
                forecasts, the USPTO considers other influential factors including
                overseas activity, policies and legislation, court decisions, process
                efficiencies, and anticipated applicant behavior.
                 Anticipated applicant behavior in response to fee changes is
                measured using an economic principle known as elasticity, which for the
                purpose of this proposal measures how sensitive applicants and
                patentees are to changes in fee amounts. The higher the elasticity
                measure (in absolute value), the greater the applicant response to the
                relevant fee change. If elasticity is low enough (i.e., demand is
                inelastic or the elasticity measure is less than one in absolute
                value), a fee increase will lead to only a relatively small decrease in
                patent activities, and overall revenues will still increase.
                Conversely, if elasticity is high enough (i.e., demand is elastic or
                the elasticity measure is greater than one in absolute value), a fee
                increase will lead to a relatively large decrease in patenting
                activities such that overall revenues will decrease. When developing
                fee forecasts, the USPTO accounts for how applicant behavior will
                change at different fee amounts projected for the various patent
                services. The USPTO previously analyzed elasticity for nine broad
                patent fee categories: filing/search/examination fees, excess
                independent claims fees, excess total claims fees, application size
                (excess page) fees, issue fees, request for continued examination (RCE)
                fees, appeal fees, AIA trial fees, and maintenance fees, including
                distinctions by entity size where applicable. Additional information
                about how the USPTO estimates elasticity is provided in ``Setting and
                Adjusting Patent Fees during Fiscal Year 2020--Description of
                Elasticity Estimates,'' available on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/documents/Elasticity_Appendix.docx.
                 Patent fees are collected for patent-related services and products
                at different points in time within the patent application examination
                process and over the life of the pending patent application and granted
                patent. Maintenance fee payments account for about half of all patent
                fee collections and subsidize the cost of filing, search, and
                examination activities. Changes in application filing levels
                immediately impact current year fee collections, because fewer patent
                application filings mean the USPTO collects fewer fees. The resulting
                reduction in production activities also creates an out-year revenue
                impact because less production output in one year results in fewer
                issue and maintenance fee payments in future years.
                 The USPTO's five-year estimated aggregate patent fee revenue (see
                table 3) is based on the number of patent applications it expects to
                receive for a given fiscal year, work it expects to process in a given
                fiscal year (an indicator of patent issue fee workloads), expected
                examination and process requests for the fiscal year, and the expected
                number of post-issuance decisions to maintain patent protection over
                that same fiscal year. Within the iterative process for estimating
                aggregate revenue, the USPTO adjusts individual fee rates up or down
                based on cost and policy decisions, estimates the effective dates of
                new fee rates, and then multiplies the resulting fee rates by workload
                volumes (including elasticity adjustments) to calculate a revenue
                estimate for each fee. For the aggregate
                [[Page 23230]]
                revenue estimates shown below, the USPTO assumes that all proposed fee
                rates will become effective on January 18, 2025. Using these figures,
                the USPTO sums the individual fee revenue estimates, and the result is
                a total aggregate revenue estimate for a given year (see table 3). The
                aggregate revenue estimate also includes collecting $50 million
                annually in other income associated with recoveries and reimbursable
                agreements (offsets to spending).
                 Table 3--Patent Financial Outlook, FY 2025-2029
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Dollars in millions
                 ----------------------------------------------------------------
                 FY 2025 FY 2026 FY 2027 FY 2028 FY 2029
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Projected fee collections...................... 3,972 4,238 4,338 4,305 4,314
                Other income................................... 50 50 50 50 50
                Total projected fee collections and other 4,022 4,288 4,388 4,355 4,364
                 income........................................
                Budgetary requirements......................... 3,975 4,102 4,268 4,431 4,600
                Funding to (+) and from (-) operating reserve.. 47 186 120 (76) (236)
                End-of-year operating reserve balance.......... 840 1,028 1,148 1,074 837
                Over/(under) minimum level..................... 522 700 807 720 469
                Over/(under) optimal level..................... (35) 126 209 99 (175)
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                IV. Rulemaking Goals and Strategies
                A. Fee Setting Strategy
                 The strategy of this proposed rule is to establish a fee schedule
                that generates sufficient multi-year revenue to recover the aggregate
                costs of maintaining USPTO patent operations. The overriding principles
                behind this strategy are to operate within a sustainable funding model
                that supports the USPTO's strategic goals and objectives, such as
                optimizing patent application pendency through the promotion of
                efficient operations and filing behaviors, issuing robust and reliable
                patents, and encouraging access to the patent system for all
                stakeholders.
                 The USPTO assessed this proposed rule for alignment with four key
                fee setting policy factors that promote a particular aspect of the U.S.
                patent system: (1) Promoting innovation strategies seeks to ensure
                barriers to entry into the U.S. patent system remain low, and
                innovation is incentivized by granting inventors certain short-term
                exclusive rights to stimulate additional inventive activity; (2)
                Aligning fees with the full costs of products and services recognizes
                that some applicants may use particular services in a more costly
                manner than other applicants (e.g., patent applications cost more to
                process when more claims are filed); (3) Facilitating the effective
                administration of the U.S. patent system seeks to encourage patent
                prosecution strategies that promote efficient patent prosecution,
                resulting in compact prosecution and reduction in the time it takes to
                obtain a patent; and (4) Recognizing that patent prosecution is not a
                one-size-fits-all process and, where feasible, offering application
                processing options. Part V: Individual Fee Rationale describes the
                reasoning for setting and adjusting individual fees, including the
                design benefits of the proposed fee schedule. The RIA, available on the
                fee setting section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting, also discusses fee schedule design benefits.
                B. Fee Setting Considerations
                 The balance of this sub-section presents the specific fee setting
                considerations the USPTO reviewed in developing the proposed patent fee
                schedule: (1) historical cost of providing individual services; (2) the
                balance between projected costs and revenue to meet the USPTO's
                operational needs and strategic goals; (3) ensuring sustainable
                funding; and (4) PPAC's comments, advice, and recommendations on the
                USPTO's initial fee setting proposal. Collectively, these
                considerations inform USPTO's chosen rulemaking strategy.
                1. Historical Cost of Providing Individual Services
                 The USPTO sets individual fee rates to further key policy
                considerations while considering the cost of a particular service. For
                instance, the USPTO has a longstanding practice of setting basic
                filing, search, and examination (``front-end'') fees below the actual
                cost of processing and examining applications to encourage innovators
                to take advantage of patent rights and protections.
                 The USPTO considers unit cost data provided by its Activity Based
                Information (ABI) program to decide how to best align fees with the
                full cost of products and services. Using historical cost data and
                forecasted application demands, the USPTO can align fees to the costs
                of specific patent products and services. Additional information on the
                USPTO's costing methodology in addition to the last three years of
                historical cost data is provided in the document titled ``Setting and
                Adjusting Patent Fees during Fiscal Year 2025--Activity Based
                Information and Patent Fee Unit Expense Methodology,'' available on the
                fee setting section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting. Part V: Individual Fee Rationale describes the
                reasoning and anticipated benefits for setting some individual fees at
                cost, below cost, or above cost such that the USPTO recovers the
                aggregate costs of providing services through aggregate fee
                collections.
                2. Balancing Projected Costs and Revenue
                 In developing this proposed patent fee schedule, the USPTO
                considered its current estimates of future year workload demands, fee
                collections, and costs to maintain core USPTO operations and meet its
                strategic goals, as found in the FY 2025 Budget and the Strategic Plan.
                The USPTO's strategic goals include: (1) driving inclusive U.S.
                innovation and global competitiveness, (2) promoting the efficient
                delivery of reliable IP rights, (3) promoting the protection of IP
                against new and persistent threats, (4) bringing innovation to impact,
                and (5) generating impactful employee and customer experiences by
                maximizing agency operations. The following subsections provide details
                regarding updated revenue and cost estimates, cost-saving efforts taken
                by the USPTO, and planned strategic improvements.
                a. Updated Revenue and Cost Estimates
                 Projected revenue from the current fee schedule is insufficient to
                meet future budgetary requirements (costs) due largely to unforeseen
                economic and
                [[Page 23231]]
                policy factors since the USPTO last exercised its rulemaking authority
                to set patent fees in the FY 2020 Final Rule. As further discussed
                below, increased fee discounts for small and micro entities under the
                UAIA have reduced revenue estimates. Higher-than-expected inflation in
                the broader U.S. economy and government-wide pay raises have increased
                the USPTO's forecasted operating costs. Also, the USPTO has undertaken
                efforts to increase special pay rates and offer other incentives to
                recruit and retain examiners and other employees in patent specific job
                series in order to remain competitive in the job market for science,
                technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) workers. Absent the
                proposed increase in fees, the USPTO will be unable to collect
                sufficient fees at current fee rates to recover aggregate operating
                costs necessary to finance ongoing operations.
                 On December 29, 2022, the President signed into law the
                Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, which included the UAIA. The law
                reduced barriers to entry into the patent system by increasing small
                entity discounts from 50% to 60% and micro entity discounts from 75% to
                80%. The USPTO estimated as part of its Fiscal Year 2024 Congressional
                Justification (FY 2024 Budget) that these discounts would reduce
                projected fee collections by $74 million in FY 2023 (partial year
                impact) and at least $100 million per year beginning in FY 2024 (full
                year impact). In addition to increased entity discounts, the UAIA
                increases costs through its provision that requires that the USPTO
                establish a new Southeast Regional Office and four new community
                outreach offices--including one in northern New England. The USPTO must
                also conduct a study to determine whether additional offices are
                required to achieve AIA mandates and to increase participation of
                underrepresented inventors in the patent system.
                 Higher-than-expected inflation in 2021 and 2022 in the broader U.S.
                economy increased the USPTO's operating costs above previous estimates
                for labor and nonlabor activities such as benefits, service contracts,
                and equipment. Salaries and benefits comprise 70% of all patent-related
                costs, and employee pay raises enacted across all U.S. government
                agencies--including the USPTO--in 2023 and 2024 were much larger than
                previously budgeted. Federal General Schedule (GS) pay was raised by
                4.6% in 2023 and 5.2% in 2024; before 2023 the last time GS pay was
                raised by at least 4% was in 2004. The FY 2025 Budget includes an
                estimated 2.0% civilian pay raise planned in calendar year (CY) 2025
                and assumed 3.0% civilian pay raises in CY 2026-29, as well as
                inflationary increases for other labor and nonlabor activities.
                 Similarly, the USPTO seeks to adjust the patent special rate table
                (pay) for the first time since 2007. In 2007 the special rate table was
                set 11.4% to 31.4% above the GS pay table for the Washington, DC area
                because patent-related job fields require a highly educated and
                technical STEM workforce. This specialization has historically posed
                recruitment challenges for the agency, and the increased pay rates kept
                the USPTO competitive with private sector compensation opportunities.
                The differential above the general schedule has diminished over the
                years--to 0.0% to 20.5% in 2023 because of cost-of-living-adjustments
                to the GS pay scale that were not similarly applied to the special rate
                table--reducing the USPTO's competitive edge amongst both private and
                other Federal agencies. The objective of the special rate table change
                is to provide competitive compensation to patent employees, thereby
                reducing attrition and enhancing recruitment of qualified talent.
                 The USPTO's recruitment and retention efforts go beyond adjustments
                to examiner pay. In support of its strategic goal of generating
                impactful employee and customer experiences by maximizing agency
                operations, the USPTO strives to be a model employer through its
                diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA) practices. The
                agency will build upon its existing diversity and foster greater
                inclusion to empower the USPTO workforce to serve the IP community
                successfully. The USPTO will research and implement leading-edge
                practices related to hiring, development, advancement, accessibility,
                and retention, based on behavioral science research and data, to better
                integrate DEIA practices throughout the agency.
                b. Cost-Saving Measures
                 The USPTO recognizes that fees cannot simply increase for every
                improvement deemed desirable. The USPTO has a responsibility to
                stakeholders to pursue strategic opportunities for improvement in an
                efficient, cost-conscious manner. Likewise, the USPTO recognizes its
                obligation to gain operational efficiency and reduce spending when
                appropriate.
                 The USPTO's FY 2025 Budget submission includes cost reducing
                measures such as releasing leased space in Northern Virginia and a
                moderate reduction in overall IT spending. In FY 2025, the USPTO
                estimates $4,569 million in total spending for patent and trademark
                operations. This is a $122 million net increase from the agency's FY
                2024 estimated spending level of $4,447 million. The net increase
                includes a $224 million upward adjustment for prescribed inflation and
                other adjustments, and a $102 million downward adjustment in program
                spending and other realized efficiencies. This estimate builds on the
                $40 million in annual real estate savings assumed in the FY 2024 Budget
                submission to include additional annual cost savings of $12 million
                through releasing more leased space in Northern Virginia. The combined
                reduction in real estate space amounts to almost 1 million square feet
                and an estimated annual cost savings of approximately $52 million.
                Also, the USPTO is actively pursuing IT cost containment. The FY 2025
                budget includes a relatively flat IT spending profile despite upward
                pressure from inflation, supply chain disruptions, and government-wide
                pay raises; ongoing IT improvements that offer business value to fee-
                paying customers; and data storage costs increasing proportionally with
                the USPTO's forecasted growth in patent and trademark applications. The
                USPTO will achieve this cost containment goal via modern equipment in a
                new data center that will cost less to maintain and by retiring legacy
                IT systems. Both of these cost containment measures will further
                improve the USPTO's cybersecurity posture and increase system
                resiliency.
                c. Efficient Delivery of Reliable IP Rights: Quality, Backlog, and
                Pendency
                 The USPTO continuously works to improve patent quality,
                particularly the predictability, reliability, and robustness of issued
                patents. See the USPTO's Quality Metrics web page, https://www.uspto.gov/patents/quality-metrics, for more information on patent
                quality including (1) statutory compliance measures, (2) process
                measures, and (3) perception measures. The USPTO's strategic goal to
                ``promote the efficient delivery of reliable IP rights'' recognizes the
                importance of innovation as the foundation of American economic growth
                and global competitiveness as well as the role the USPTO plays in
                encouraging these principles. The USPTO is committed to improving
                pendency to deliver timely, efficient services that help innovators
                bring their ideas and products to impact more quickly and efficiently.
                The USPTO diligently works to balance timely examination with
                improvements in patent quality; particularly, the
                [[Page 23232]]
                robustness and reliability of issued patents while remaining mindful
                that patent applications are becoming increasingly more complex and
                that technologies are converging. To address these challenges, the
                USPTO must continue to develop and equip examiners with additional
                guidance, training, tools, advanced technology, and procedural
                resources.
                 The USPTO is pursuing initiatives to enhance patent quality and the
                clarity and completeness of the official record during prosecution of
                an application, including encouraging applicants to begin filing patent
                applications in DOCX format, automating pre-examination procedures,
                expanding examiner training, and working on additional guidance for
                examiners and the PTAB. Current guidance initiatives include refresher
                guidance on obviousness under 35 U.S.C. 103 and enablement under 35
                U.S.C. 112, and new guidance on how examiners should analyze
                inventorship issues for artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted
                inventions. See Updated Guidance for Making a Proper Determination of
                Obviousness, 89 FR 14449 (February 27, 2024); Guidelines for Assessing
                Enablement in Utility Applications and Patents in View of the Supreme
                Court Decision in Amgen Inc. et al. v. Sanofi et al., 89 FR 1563
                (December 21, 2023); Inventorship Guidance for AI-Assisted Inventions,
                89 FR 10043 (February 13, 2024). The USPTO is also increasing patent
                examination quality and efficiency via initiatives such as the Global
                Dossier Initiative (see https://www.uspto.gov/patents/basics/international-protection/global-dossier-initiative), and by providing
                examiners with advanced technologies and tools for identifying prior
                art, such as the artificial intelligence (AI)-based ``More Like This''
                and ``Similarity Search'' features in the Patents End-to-End (PE2E)
                search suite (see 1494 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 251 (January 11, 2022) and
                1504 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 359 (November 15, 2022)). More information
                on the USPTO's AI initiatives, including the Artificial Intelligence
                (AI) and Emerging Technologies Partnership, is available at https://www.uspto.gov/initiatives/artificial-intelligence.
                 The USPTO recognizes that optimal pendency helps inventors and
                investors bring innovation to impact. The growing demand for patent
                services requires that the USPTO embrace new ways of delivering these
                critical IP services. Therefore, the USPTO is also working to identify
                policies, process changes, and technologies to improve patent pendency.
                Some of these efforts will focus on operational improvements to the
                patent examination process, including aligning the patent workforce
                with the incoming workload in the most efficient manner. Other efforts
                will target improvements to how applicants and other customers engage
                with the USPTO and navigate the prosecution process. For example, the
                USPTO has enhanced its website to increase access to our resources and
                enhance customer service for inventors and practitioners, including
                modernizing and updating the Patent Basics and Patents Petitions pages,
                adding a Virtual Assistant on select pages, and providing an updated
                and modern general website search tool. The USPTO has also upgraded its
                computer systems, including transitioning from legacy systems to Patent
                Center for the electronic filing and management of patent applications
                in November 2023. Patent Center, a web-based platform that allows users
                to file and manage patent applications and requests, provides improved
                system performance and a more intuitive user interface for an enhanced
                user experience. The USPTO is committed to continuously improving the
                customer experience on our websites to enhance and modernize
                accessibility, design, and overall satisfaction in our digital space.
                For information on additional enhancements to our online services,
                visit our web improvements page at https://www.uspto.gov/about-us/website-improvements. Effecting the changes in the examination process
                needed to ensure the issuance of reliable patents, while also issuing
                those patents in a timely manner, means recognizing a potential
                increase in the core operating costs for future years.
                 Another major component of the overall patent process that has seen
                an increase in operating costs is the work carried out by the Patent
                Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) and the Central Reexamination Unit (CRU).
                These units play a key role in providing an efficient system for
                amending or voiding any patent claims that overreach and stunt
                innovation, inclusive capitalism, and global competitiveness. To ensure
                that post-issuance challenges to patent rights through the PTAB and the
                CRU help protect innovation and investments to commercialize
                innovation, the USPTO will invest in new tools and resources that
                increase communication, knowledge sharing, and collective problem
                solving. These strategic investments will enable the USPTO to identify
                and continue to implement guidelines and best practices to serve the
                patent system.
                3. Sustainable Funding
                 All aspects of estimating the five-year forecast for aggregate
                cost, aggregate revenue, and the patent operating reserve are
                inherently uncertain because they are based on numerous, multifaceted
                planning assumptions predicated on external indicators of economic IP
                activity to forecast demand, as well as internal workload drivers
                derived from production models. Maintaining a viable operating reserve
                is a key consideration as the USPTO sets patent fees. To mitigate the
                risk of uncertain demand, the USPTO maintains a patent operating
                reserve. The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) considers
                operating reserves a best practice for user fee-funded government
                agencies like the USPTO. The patent operating reserve enables the USPTO
                to align fees and costs over a longer horizon and to improve its
                preparation for, and adjustment to, fluctuations in actual fee
                collections and spending.
                 The USPTO manages the operating reserve within a range of
                acceptable balances and assesses its options when projected balances
                fall either below or above that range. Minimum planning targets are
                intended to address immediate, unplanned changes in the economic or
                operating environments as the reserve builds to the optimal level. The
                minimum and optimal planning targets are reviewed every three years to
                ensure the reserve operating range (between minimum and optimal
                targets) mitigates the severity of an array of financial risks. Based
                on the current risk environment, including various risk factors such as
                economic and funding uncertainty and the high percentage of fixed costs
                in the Patents program, the USPTO established a minimum planning level
                of 8% of total spending--about one month's operating expenses
                (estimated at $318 million and $368 million between FY 2025 through FY
                2029)--and an optimal long-range target of 22% of total spending--about
                three months' operating expenses (estimated at $875 million and $1,012
                million between FY 2025 through FY 2029).
                 Based on current cost and revenue assumptions in the FY 2025
                Budget, the USPTO forecast that in FY 2024 estimated aggregate costs
                will exceed aggregate revenue and the operating reserve will be used to
                maintain operations. The fee proposals contained in this NPRM are
                projected to increase patent fee collections to the point that they
                exceed spending requirements, and forecasted excess fee collections
                will replenish the patent operating reserve each year from FY 2025
                through FY
                [[Page 23233]]
                2027. Based on this forecast, the USPTO will achieve its optimal level
                of three months operating requirements for the patent operating reserve
                in FY 2026. The USPTO then expects to use the patent operating reserve
                to fund operating expenses in FY 2028 and FY 2029 as the current
                projection for fee collection growth slows but projected patent
                spending requirements continue to increase.
                 These projections are based on point-in-time estimates and
                assumptions that are subject to change. For instance, the budget
                includes assumptions about filing levels, renewal rates, whether the
                President will authorize or Congress will mandate employee pay raises,
                the productivity of the workforce, and many other factors. A change in
                any of these factors could have a significant cumulative impact on
                reserve balances. As seen in table 3, set forth in Part III: Estimating
                Aggregate Costs and Revenue, the operating reserve balance can change
                significantly over a five-year planning horizon, underscoring the
                USPTO's financial vulnerability to varying risk factors and the
                importance of fee setting authority.
                 The USPTO will continue to evaluate long-term planning assumptions
                to determine the appropriate course of action beyond FY 2027 to ensure
                the Patents program is not vulnerable to changes in the economy that
                reduce annual revenue, unexpected cost increases, and other financial
                risks. The USPTO will also continue to assess the patent operating
                reserve balance against its target balance annually, and at least every
                three years, the USPTO will evaluate whether the minimum and optimal
                target balance remain sufficient to provide the stable funding the
                USPTO needs. Per the USPTO's operating reserve policy, if the operating
                reserve balance is projected to exceed the optimal level by 10% for two
                consecutive years, the USPTO will consider fee reductions. The USPTO
                will continue to regularly review its operating budgets and long-range
                plans to ensure the prudent use of patent fees.
                4. Comments, Advice, and Recommendations From PPAC
                 In the report prepared in accordance with the AIA fee setting
                authority (available on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/documents/PPAC-Report-on-2023-Fee-Proposal.docx)
                PPAC supports the USPTO in seeking adequate revenue to recover the
                costs for the USPTO fulfill its role in supporting the country's
                innovation ecosystem. In addition, PPAC recognizes that ``the USPTO is
                in the best position to assess its own needs and balance the tradeoffs
                in setting individual fees.'' PPAC Report at 6. PPAC expressed general
                support for the increase in patent fees, noting that timely, high-
                quality search and examination requires an appropriately compensated
                work force with adequate time to complete the search and examination
                process, as well as reliable, state of the art IT infrastructure.
                However, PPAC expressed concerns over some of the individual proposed
                fee adjustments and their potential impacts on patent applicants and
                holders. In general, PPAC urged the USPTO to provide more detail and
                justification on how additional revenue will be used to increase patent
                quality and reliability. The USPTO has included additional information
                in this NPRM to further address some of the concerns of PPAC and the
                public. See Part V: Individual Fee Rationale.
                 Regarding the proposed changes to fees for excess claims, PPAC
                expressed support for the proposed fee increases. However, they also
                emphasized their belief that the public wants more certainty that the
                revenue generated from an increased fee will go toward examination and
                giving examiners additional time to evaluate such cases. The USPTO
                appreciates this concern and the current patent examination production
                time approach provides examiners with additional time to review excess
                claims. The proposed fees would contribute to recovering the costs to
                the USPTO for this additional examination time.
                 PPAC expressed support for the proposed decreases to fees for
                extensions of time for provisional applications. PPAC also expressed
                support for the proposals to increase suspension of action fees and
                fees for unintentional delay petitions. Part V: Individual Fee
                Rationale provides more details on these proposals.
                 In general, PPAC expressed support for the USPTO's proposal to
                implement a tiered fee structure for information disclosure statements
                (IDSs). PPAC recommended a legislative proposal to clarify inequitable
                conduct rules, which may have a significant impact on applicant
                behavior. They noted that under the current inequitable conduct case
                law, there is increased pressure on practitioners to cite every
                possible reference if they do not want to risk the practitioner's right
                to practice or the enforceability of the patent. The USPTO appreciates
                this suggestion and will give it further consideration. PPAC also
                recommended that if any additional fees are paid, the additional money
                should go to allowing examiners more time to consider the additional
                references. The USPTO notes that it is current USPTO policy to provide
                examiners with additional time to review large IDSs and the proposed
                fees would pay for this additional time. Only 13% of applications
                contain 50 or more applicant-provided citations, and thus would incur
                one of these proposed fees. The proposal would place the service costs
                of large IDSs on those applicants who file them.
                 PPAC supports the proposal to create a third tier for requests for
                continued examination (RCEs). PPAC notes that the proposed increases
                would ``allow the costs of continued examinations to be recovered
                directly from those applicants requesting multiple RCEs, instead of
                relying on other fees to subsidize the costs.'' PPAC Report at 4.
                 The report noted opposition to the proposed fee for electronically
                submitted assignments. PPAC argues that transparency of patent
                ownership is key to patent data integrity and a fee for assignment
                recordation would be an impediment to keeping assignment data up to
                date. The USPTO's initial fee proposal was designed to reduce the
                number of frivolous assignment submissions. However, the USPTO agrees
                with PPAC's assessment that keeping up-to-date assignment data
                outweighs the processing efficiency gains the USPTO expects from the
                proposal. Therefore, the USPTO is dropping its proposal to raise the
                recordation fee for an electronically submitted assignment. PPAC
                expressed conditional support for the continuing applications proposal
                if the USPTO drops the year three provision and only requires the
                proposed fee for year seven or after. PPAC's rationale for this
                modification is that three years is too short of a period, as there may
                not be an Office action at this point in prosecution, particularly if
                the application is in the national stage of an international
                application filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) or is
                classified in an art area with significant backlog. In response to
                these concerns the USPTO notes that as of April 2023, traditional total
                pendency is 2.1 years, which is below the three-year threshold for the
                first tier of the proposal. However, in view of PPAC's concerns about
                pendency, and the admittedly longer pendency for PCT applications, the
                USPTO proposes to modify the tiers to slide the threshold dates later
                in time. This NPRM therefore proposes the first tier at five years and
                the second tier at eight years. See Parts V: Individual Fee Rationale
                and VI: Discussion of Specific Rules for further details regarding the
                modification of this proposal.
                [[Page 23234]]
                 Regarding the proposed fee for the After Final Consideration Pilot
                Program (AFCP 2.0), PPAC expressed the view that this proposal is
                problematic as it requires paying a fee with no guarantee of an
                interview. PPAC offered support for an AFCP 2.0 fee if: (1) the program
                is changed such that the applicant is guaranteed an interview; or (2)
                under the current program, a fee is assessed only if the interview is
                granted. The USPTO recognizes PPAC's concern but notes that the AFCP
                2.0 program is costly to the agency and is heavily used by applicants;
                more than half of after-final responses come via this program. The
                costs of this program are currently subsidized by other fees. While the
                USPTO appreciates that some applicants may be unwilling to pay for a
                program that may not result in a favorable outcome or an interview with
                the examiner, the USPTO must make its patentability decisions in
                accordance with the appropriate legal standards that govern the USPTO
                and incurs costs to provide the service regardless of the outcome. The
                USPTO notes that a significant portion of the cost for AFCP 2.0 comes
                from the initial consideration of the request by the patent examiner.
                If the USPTO is unable to recover the cost of the AFCP 2.0 program from
                participants, it will need to consider terminating the program due to
                its cost. See Part V: Individual Fee Rationale for additional details
                regarding this proposal.
                 PPAC expressed a lack of support for the proposal to increase fees
                for design applications, recommending the USPTO prioritize addressing
                pendency issues before applying increased fees, as many design
                applicants are already paying expedited fees beyond the basic filing,
                search, and examination fees, given the current pendency. PPAC also
                suggests that the USPTO's concerns about recovering its costs in the
                design area could be addressed by a change in the law that allows for
                the implementation of maintenance fees for design patents. The USPTO
                acknowledges PPAC's concern regarding design application pendency and
                recognizes that some design applicants are paying expedited fees.
                Recovering more of the design costs from design applicants better
                aligns fees to the cost of services performed by the USPTO, and it also
                incents design applicants to make more appropriate economic decisions.
                With respect to PPAC's concern about expedited fees, in FY 2022 about
                19% of design applicants requested expedited handling. See Part V:
                Individual Fee Rationale for additional details regarding the rationale
                for increasing design patent fees.
                 Regarding the patent term adjustment (PTA) proposal, PPAC offered
                support for increasing the fee if the proposal is modified such that no
                fee is assessed by the USPTO if a PTA adjustment is made due to a USPTO
                calculation error. The USPTO notes that a fee for this applicant-
                requested service has been in place since calendar year 2000 and has
                only increased $10 since enacted. Moreover, this fee helps recover a
                portion of the costs for applicant-requested manual redeterminations of
                PTA under 35 U.S.C. 154(b). While there are about 500 service requests
                each year, many concern the IDS safe harbor under 37 Code of Federal
                Regulations (CFR) 1.704(d)(1) and thus could have been avoided if the
                applicant had used the USPTO-provided form (PTO/SB/133) to invoke the
                safe harbor. With respect to PPAC's suggestion of adding a refund
                component to the proposal, the USPTO's rationale for this fee increase
                is to recover a greater percentage of the costs associated with the
                service that are incurred regardless of the outcome.
                 PPAC expressed general support for the patent term extension (PTE)
                proposal but suggested the USPTO consider if such a large increase in
                the fees is optimal, particularly the initial fee given start-up
                companies may be resource constrained. By law, this service is only
                available to owners of patents on certain human drugs, food or color
                additives, medical devices, animal drugs, and veterinary biological
                products, and is designed to restore some patent term that was lost
                while awaiting premarket government approval from a regulatory agency.
                Because such development and premarketing activities are extremely
                expensive, it is unlikely that any resource-constrained companies would
                qualify for PTE services.
                 PPAC expressed a lack of support for the terminal disclaimer
                proposal, noting disagreement with the USPTO's justification and
                suggesting that the fee will place an unfair burden on filers with
                limited resources who may be tempted to give up patent term in exchange
                for a less expensive and more compact prosecution. While the USPTO
                appreciates PPAC's concerns, the agency believes that under-resourced
                applicants are unlikely to be affected by these fees, as a double
                patenting rejection necessitating a terminal disclaimer would not be
                made unless they had sufficient resources to file multiple applications
                with closely-related subject matter. This presumption is supported by
                data collected by the USPTO that shows only about 1% of terminal
                disclaimers are filed by micro entities.
                 PPAC expressed a lack of support for the proposed fee for
                requesting additional words in an inter partes or post-grant petition,
                noting that it may favor well-resourced petitioners given the added
                expense to prepare longer papers. After careful consideration of the
                comments and recommendations provided in the PPAC Report and in
                testimony at the public hearing, the USPTO has decided to withdraw this
                proposal.
                 PPAC expressed a lack of support for the proposal to establish a
                new fee for parties requesting a review of a PTAB decision by the
                Director. PPAC felt a fee was not warranted because a review by the
                Director ensures the PTAB decisions are consistent. PPAC also expressed
                concern that adding a fee for this previously free service may
                adversely affect individual inventors and small company applicants. In
                response to these concerns, the USPTO has provided additional
                justification and data. Part V: Individual Fee Rationale offers this
                additional information.
                 In summary, the USPTO appreciates the general support by PPAC and
                its stakeholders for an increase in patent fees sufficient for
                aggregate fees to recover aggregate costs. After careful consideration
                of the comments, concerns, and suggestions provided in the report, and
                keeping in mind the goals of this proposed rule, the USPTO elected to
                make changes to three of the fee proposals initially presented to PPAC.
                The fee structure proposed herein will ultimately allow the USPTO to
                maintain patent operations and continue its path towards achieving the
                goals and objectives laid out in the Strategic Plan. The USPTO looks
                forward to receiving additional comments on this revised proposal
                during the public comment period.
                C. Summary of Rationale and Purpose of the Proposed Rule
                 The USPTO estimates that the proposed patent fee schedule will
                produce sufficient aggregate revenues to recover the aggregate costs of
                patent operations and ensure financial sustainability for effective
                administration of the patent system. This proposed rule aligns with the
                USPTO's four key fee setting policy factors and supports the USPTO's
                mission-focused strategic goals.
                V. Individual Fee Rationale
                 The USPTO projects that aggregate revenue generated from the
                proposed patent fees will recover the prospective
                [[Page 23235]]
                aggregate costs of patent operations as laid out in the FY 2025 Budget.
                As detailed previously, PPAC recognizes the importance of ensuring the
                USPTO's financial sustainability, stating that, ``[t]o support its role
                in the country's innovation system, the USPTO requires adequate
                funding.'' PPAC Report at 5. PPAC also acknowledges the need to fund
                additional strategic investments, commenting that ``[t]imely, high-
                quality search and examination require an appropriately compensated
                work force with adequate time to complete the same, supported by state
                of the art and reliable IT infrastructure.'' PPAC Report at 5-6.
                 The USPTO did not set each individual proposed fee necessarily
                equal to the estimated costs of performing activities related to the
                fee. Instead, as described in Part IV: Rulemaking Goals and Strategies,
                some proposed fees are set at, above, or below their unit costs to
                balance four key fee setting policy factors: (1) promoting innovation
                strategies; (2) aligning fees with the full costs of products and
                services; (3) facilitating effective administration of the U.S. patent
                system; and (4) offering application processing options. For example,
                the agency sets many initial filing fees below unit cost to promote
                innovation strategies by removing barriers to entry to the patent
                system. To balance the aggregate revenue loss of fees set below cost,
                the USPTO must set other fees above cost in areas less likely to reduce
                inventorship (e.g., maintenance).
                 For some fees proposed in this NPRM, such as extension of time
                fees, the USPTO does not maintain individual historical cost data for
                services provided; instead, the agency considers the policy factors
                described in Part IV: Rulemaking Goals and Strategies to inform fee
                setting. For example, facilitating effective administration of the U.S.
                patent system enables the USPTO to: (1) foster an environment where
                USPTO personnel can provide and applicants can receive prompt, quality
                interim and final decisions; (2) encourage the prompt conclusion of
                prosecuting an application, resulting in pendency reduction and faster
                dissemination of patented information; and (3) help recover costs for
                activities that strain the patent system.
                 The proposed fee changes are grouped into three categories: (A) an
                across-the board-adjustment to patent fees; (B) an adjustment to front-
                end fees; and (C) targeted fees. Part VI: Discussion of Specific Rules
                contains a complete listing of fees set or adjusted in the proposed
                patent fee schedule, including small and micro entity fees. This
                information is also listed in the Table of Patent Fees available on the
                fee setting section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting.
                 This proposed rule includes one procedural amendment (D) expanding
                the applicability of the rule allowing applicants to obtain a refund of
                search and excess claims fees paid in an application through express
                abandonment.
                A. Across-the-Board Adjustment to Patent Fees
                 The broader U.S. economy has experienced higher-than-expected
                inflation the last two years and, in turn, increased USPTO operating
                costs relative to baseline estimates for labor and nonlabor activities
                such as benefits, service contracts, and equipment. Also, the agency's
                estimates of future costs in the FY 2025 Budget include a 2.0% civilian
                pay raise planned in CY 2025 and an assumption of 3.0% civilian pay
                raises in CY 2026-29, as well as inflationary increases for other labor
                and nonlabor activities. To keep the USPTO on a stable financial track
                sufficient to recover the aggregate costs of patent operations and to
                support the agency's strategic objectives, the USPTO proposes
                adjusting, by approximately 5%, all patent fees not covered by the
                targeted adjustments discussed in section C. The USPTO estimates that
                new fees would not be implemented until FY 2025, more than four years
                after the agency's last fee adjustment in October 2020. A 5% across-
                the-board increase in 2025 would be equivalent to just a 1.2% annual
                increase, well below the prevailing inflation rate the last few years.
                The agency is not proposing a larger across-the-board increase in line
                with inflation because the across-the-board adjustment is intended to
                supplement the additional revenue collected from the targeted
                adjustments. Also, the USPTO will continue its ongoing efforts to
                improve operational efficiency and reduce spending when appropriate.
                 The 5% across-the-board adjustment strikes an appropriate balance
                between projected aggregate revenue and aggregate costs based on the
                assumptions used to develop the point-in-time estimates that support
                this NPRM. If changes to the assumptions underlying the USPTO's cost
                and revenue estimates result in significant changes to the financial
                outlook, the agency will refine the size of the across-the-board
                adjustment, either upward or downward, such that fees are set at a
                level that secures aggregate cost recovery and ensures a reasonable
                pace for operating reserve growth to the optimal level.
                 For patent fees with small and micro entity fee reductions, the
                proposed undiscounted fee is rounded up or down to the nearest $5 by
                applying standard arithmetic rules. The resulting proposed fee amounts
                are more convenient to patent users and permit the USPTO to set small
                and micro entity fees at whole dollar amounts when applying applicable
                fee reductions. Therefore, some smaller fees will not change since a 5%
                increase would round down to the current fee, while other fees would
                change by slightly more or less than 5%, depending on rounding. For
                patent fees that do not have small and micro entity fee reductions, the
                proposed fees are rounded to the nearest dollar by applying standard
                arithmetic rules. The proposed fee adjustments in this category are
                listed in the Table of Patent Fees available on the fee setting section
                of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting.
                B. Adjustment to Front-End Patent Fees
                 The USPTO proposes to adjust all filing, search, and examination
                fees not covered by the targeted adjustments as discussed in section C
                by an additional 5% on top of the 5% across-the-board adjustment, for a
                total front-end increase of 10%. The current fee schedule, implemented
                by the FY 2020 Final Rule, set filing, search, and examination fees
                below the costs of performing these services to achieve low barriers to
                entry into the innovation ecosystem. These front-end fees are
                subsidized by other fee collections, primarily maintenance fees. This
                proposal will marginally recover some, but not all, additional filing,
                search, and examination costs earlier in the patent life cycle, thus
                mitigating the risk of potentially lower maintenance fee payments in
                the future while remaining consistent with a low barrier to entry
                policy.
                 Similar to the across-the-board adjustment, for fees that have
                small and micro entity fee reductions, the undiscounted fee is rounded
                up or down to the nearest $5 by applying standard arithmetic rules.
                Therefore, the proposed fee rates may not be precisely 10% higher than
                the current fee rates. The proposed fee adjustments in this category
                are listed in the Table of Patent Fees available on the fee setting
                section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting.
                [[Page 23236]]
                C. Targeted Adjustments to Patent Fees
                 The USPTO proposes the following fee adjustments for the reasons
                stated below. The proposed fees are based on changes in undiscounted
                fee amounts; the percentage changes for small and micro entity fees
                would be the same as the percentage change for the undiscounted fee
                rate, and the dollar change would be 40% or 20% of the undiscounted
                change. A discussion of the rationale for each fee is divided into 14
                categories according to function, as follows:
                1. After Final Consideration Pilot Program 2.0
                 Table 4--After Final Consideration Pilot Program 2.0 Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Consideration of AFCP 2.0 request....... Undiscounted.................... New..................... $500 n/a n/a n/a
                Consideration of AFCP 2.0 request....... Small........................... New..................... 200 n/a n/a n/a
                Consideration of AFCP 2.0 request....... Micro........................... New..................... 100 n/a n/a n/a
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO proposes a new fee for participation in the AFCP 2.0. The
                agency created this program in May 2013 and has renewed it repeatedly.
                There is currently no fee for participation in this program. See After
                Final Consideration Pilot Program 2.0, 78 FR 29117 (May 17, 2013), and
                the program's section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/patents/initiatives/after-final-consideration-pilot-20.
                 Under customary examination practice, after the close of
                prosecution, amendments that will place the application either in
                condition for allowance or in better form for appeal may be entered,
                and the applicant may also hold an interview with the examiner. See 37
                CFR 1.116(b) and section 714.12 of Manual of Patent Examining Procedure
                (MPEP) (9th ed., Rev. 07.2022, February 2023), which may be viewed on
                or downloaded from the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/MPEP or
                https://mpep.uspto.gov. The AFCP 2.0 was designed to encourage
                continued collaboration between examiners and applicants after close of
                prosecution and reduce pendency by avoiding RCEs and continued
                prosecution applications (CPA). The program requires that applicants
                submit a response with a nonbroadening amendment to at least one
                independent claim, and in return, affords the examiner additional time
                to consider the response. See Guidelines for Consideration of Responses
                After Final Rejection under 37 CFR 1.116(b) under the AFCP 2.0,
                available on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/patents/init_events/afcp_guidelines.pdf. If the response will
                require further search and/or consideration that would take longer than
                the allotted time, the examiner will not admit the request under the
                program. Otherwise, if the response meets the program requirements, the
                examiner will consider the response, and will either: (1) mail a notice
                of allowance if the application is in condition for allowance or (2)
                contact the applicant to schedule an interview to discuss the amendment
                if the application is not in condition for allowance.
                 The AFCP 2.0 program offers several benefits to participating
                applicants. Under customary practice, after a final rejection,
                applicants have no right to unrestricted further prosecution. The AFCP
                2.0 provides a participating applicant an opportunity to potentially
                have the examiner consider an amendment that would otherwise not be
                considered at this stage, possibly precluding the need to file an RCE
                or a CPA. This consideration saves applicants the higher fees
                associated with those filings and, in the case of the RCEs, saves
                applicants from patent term adjustment consequences. See MPEP section
                2731 for more information on patent term adjustment. Moreover,
                participation in the program is not necessary to hold an interview
                after final rejection, or to have an amendment filed and entered after
                close of prosecution, see MPEP sections 713.09 and 714.13. An AFCP 2.0
                request should be filed only when an applicant would like to file a
                substantive amendment after close of prosecution that may require
                additional time for an examiner to consider and/or search.
                 The AFCP 2.0 is a popular program; since 2016, applicants have
                filed more than 60,000 requests annually. These requests make up over
                half of the USPTO's after-final responses during this time. Due to its
                popularity, costs to administer the AFCP 2.0 are significant. In FY
                2022, the USPTO estimates more than $15 million in incurred costs
                associated with examiners considering the AFCP 2.0 submissions. This
                cost is in addition to the cost for examiners to initially consider the
                AFCP 2.0 request and any consultation costs with supervisors and
                primary examiners. These examination costs represent time that could
                otherwise be used to examine new applications.
                 The USPTO is reconsidering the policy choice of continuing to offer
                the AFCP 2.0 program for free without recouping costs from applicants
                utilizing it. As noted by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in
                Federal User Fees: A Design Guide, Report No. GAO-08-386SP (May 2008),
                available at https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-08-386sp:
                 If those benefiting from a service do not bear the full social
                cost of the service, they may seek to have the government provide
                more of the service than is economically efficient. User fees may
                also foster production efficiency by increasing awareness of the
                costs of publicly provided services and therefore increasing
                incentives to reduce costs where possible.
                 Thus, without a fee to recover the cost of the program, the agency
                is considering not renewing (i.e., terminating) the program. A large
                part of the AFCP 2.0's popularity is due to economic inefficiencies
                where participants receive program benefits for only a fraction of the
                program's costs (because applicants pay only indirectly via future
                maintenance fees). That said, the USPTO also recognizes that the
                program has some indirect benefits to the patent system by reducing
                overall pendency. If there is sufficient public support for the
                proposed fees, the improved economic efficiencies of aligning fees with
                direct beneficiaries (program participants), together with indirect
                benefits, would favor continuing the program. Accordingly, the USPTO is
                proposing to charge fees for filing a request for consideration under
                the AFCP 2.0: $500 for undiscounted applications, $200 for applications
                receiving a small entity discount, and $100 for applications receiving
                a micro entity discount.
                 At this time, the USPTO is not proposing any further changes to the
                AFCP 2.0. For example, the agency will not change the program to
                guarantee an
                [[Page 23237]]
                examiner interview if an AFCP 2.0 request is admitted under the
                program. The USPTO appreciates that some applicants may be unwilling to
                pay for a program that might not result in a favorable outcome or
                guarantee an examiner interview. Regardless of the outcome, the agency
                incurs costs to provide the service and must make its patentability
                decisions in accordance with appropriate legal standards. A significant
                portion of the AFCP 2.0's cost is initial consideration of the request
                by the patent examiner. Moreover, as noted previously, applicants may
                file amendments and participate in interviews after a final rejection
                without filing an AFCP 2.0 request. Further, a majority of the AFCP 2.0
                requests (60% for utility and 80% for design) meet program
                requirements, meaning that either the application is allowed or an
                interview is granted.
                 The USPTO expects the percentage of compliant AFCP 2.0 requests to
                increase as applicants become more selective with the amendments filed,
                due to the fee. Accordingly, the agency does not expect a significant
                percentage of applicants to pay the fee without an opportunity for
                either allowance of the application or an interview with an examiner.
                Also, since undiscounted entities have historically filed 83% of all
                AFCP 2.0 requests, the USPTO does not anticipate the proposed fees
                having a disproportionate impact on small or micro entities.
                2. Continuing Application Fees
                 Table 5--Continuing Application Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Filing an application or presentation of Undiscounted.................... New..................... $2,200 n/a n/a n/a
                 benefit claim more than five years
                 after earliest benefit date.
                Filing an application or presentation of Small........................... New..................... 880 n/a n/a n/a
                 benefit claim more than five years
                 after earliest benefit date.
                Filing an application or presentation of Micro........................... New..................... 440 n/a n/a n/a
                 benefit claim more than five years
                 after earliest benefit date.
                Filing an application or presentation of Undiscounted.................... New..................... 3,500 n/a n/a n/a
                 benefit claim more than eight years
                 after earliest benefit date.
                Filing an application or presentation of Small........................... New..................... 1,400 n/a n/a n/a
                 benefit claim more than eight years
                 after earliest benefit date.
                Filing an application or presentation of Micro........................... New..................... 700 n/a n/a n/a
                 benefit claim more than eight years
                 after earliest benefit date.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO is proposing new fees in Sec. 1.17(w) for presenting
                certain benefit claims in nonprovisional applications. These new fees
                would apply to nonprovisional applications (``later-filed''
                applications) that have an actual filing date more than five years, or
                more than eight years, later than the earliest filing date for which
                benefit is claimed under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, 365(c), or 386(c), and
                Sec. 1.78(d) (the ``Earliest Benefit Date'' (EBD)). When the later-
                filed application is a utility or plant patent application, the EBD is
                also the date from which the 20-year patent term is calculated under 35
                U.S.C. 154(a)(2). The EBD is also known as the ``patent term filing
                date.'' For more information about benefit claims, see MPEP 210 and 211
                et seq., for more information about the patent term filing date see
                MPEP 804 subsection I.B.1(a), and for more information about patent
                term, see MPEP 2701.
                 The proposed fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(w)(1) would be due when
                the later-filed application's EBD is more than five years, and no more
                than eight years, earlier than its actual filing date, and would be
                $2,200 for undiscounted applications, $880 for applications receiving a
                small entity discount, and $440 for applications receiving a micro
                entity discount. The proposed fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(w)(2) would
                be due when the later-filed application's EBD is more than eight years
                earlier than its actual filing date, and would be $3,500 for
                undiscounted applications, $1,400 for applications receiving a small
                entity discount, and $700 for applications receiving a micro entity
                discount.
                 Payment of these fees would be required at the time a prompting
                benefit claim (i.e., a benefit claim that causes the EBD of the later-
                filed application to be more than five or eight years earlier than its
                actual filing date) is presented in the later-filed application. If the
                prompting benefit claim is presented at the time of filing the later-
                filed application, the applicable Sec. 1.17(w) fee would be due at
                filing. If the prompting benefit claim is presented at a later time,
                the applicable Sec. 1.17(w) fee would be due concurrently with the
                presentation of the prompting benefit claim. If the later presentation
                of the prompting benefit claim is by way of a petition for acceptance
                of an unintentionally delayed benefit claim under Sec. 1.78(e), the
                applicable Sec. 1.17(w) fee would be due in addition to the petition
                fee under Sec. 1.17(m).
                 Because the proposed fees in Sec. 1.17(w) are based on the
                application's EBD, presenting multiple benefit claims at the same time
                will not incur multiple fees. However, if benefit claims are presented
                at multiple times during an application's pendency, a second fee may be
                due if the later-presented benefit claim changes the application's EBD
                to be more than eight years earlier than the actual filing date. In
                this situation, the amount due under Sec. 1.17(w)(2) for the later
                presentation will reflect any prior payment under Sec. 1.17(w)(1) for
                the earlier presentation. For instance, if the fee under Sec.
                1.17(w)(1) was paid at the time of filing, and a prompting benefit
                claim requiring payment of the Sec. 1.17(w)(2) fee is presented at a
                later time, the additional amount owed is the difference between the
                current fee amount stated in Sec. 1.17(w)(2) and the amount of the
                previous payment under Sec. 1.17(w)(1).
                 The following examples illustrate the most common situations
                anticipated to require payment of the proposed fees under Sec.
                1.17(w). For purposes of these examples, the agency assumes that all
                requirements for claiming benefit under 35 U.S.C. 119, 120, 121,
                365(c), or 386(c), and Sec. 1.78 are satisfied, and that all fees are
                paid at the undiscounted rates listed in table 5, supra.
                 Example 1: Application A is a nonprovisional application filed on
                July 7, 2025. The Application Data Sheet (ADS) present upon A's filing
                contains a benefit claim under 35 U.S.C. 120 to nonprovisional
                application N filed on February 3, 2020, which is the only benefit
                claim in the application. A's EBD is February 3, 2020, which is more
                than five years, and no more than eight
                [[Page 23238]]
                years, earlier than A's actual filing date of July 7, 2025. In this
                example, the Sec. 1.17(w)(1) fee of $2,200 is due upon A's filing.
                 Example 2: Application B is a nonprovisional application filed on
                July 8, 2025. The ADS present upon B's filing contains a benefit claim
                under 35 U.S.C. 120 to nonprovisional application O filed on February
                4, 2021, and a benefit claim under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) to provisional
                application P filed on March 11, 2020. The USPTO's records indicate
                that O also contains a benefit claim under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) to
                provisional application P. In this situation, P's filing date is not
                the EBD, because Sec. 1.17(w) does not encompass benefit claims under
                35 U.S.C. 119(e). Instead, B's EBD is February 4, 2021, which is less
                than five years earlier than B's actual filing date of July 8, 2025. In
                this example, no fee would be due under Sec. 1.17(w).
                 Example 3: Application C is a nonprovisional application filed on
                July 9, 2025. The ADS present upon C's filing contains benefit claims
                under 35 U.S.C. 120 to nonprovisional application Q filed on February
                5, 2020, and to nonprovisional application R filed on March 12, 2019.
                C's EBD is March 12, 2019, which is more than five years, and no more
                than eight years, earlier than C's actual filing date of July 9, 2025.
                In this example, the Sec. 1.17(w)(1) fee of $2,200 is due upon C's
                filing.
                 Example 4: Application D is a nonprovisional application filed on
                August 10, 2028. The ADS present upon D's filing does not contain any
                benefit claims. Two months after D's filing, the applicant files a
                second ADS containing a benefit claim under 35 U.S.C. 120 to
                nonprovisional application S filed on February 6, 2020, which is the
                only benefit claim in the application. Because this newly added benefit
                claim causes D's EBD to become February 6, 2020, which is more than
                eight years earlier than D's actual filing date of August 10, 2028, the
                Sec. 1.17(w)(2) fee of $3,500 is due upon filing of the second ADS.
                 Example 5: Application E is a nonprovisional application filed on
                August 11, 2028. The ADS present upon E's filing does not contain any
                benefit claims. Eighteen months after E's filing, the applicant files a
                second ADS containing a benefit claim under 35 U.S.C. 120 to
                nonprovisional application T filed on February 7, 2020, which is the
                only benefit claim in the application. Because this newly added benefit
                claim causes E's EBD to become February 7, 2020, which is more than
                eight years earlier than E's actual filing date of August 11, 2028, the
                Sec. 1.17(w)(2) fee of $3,500 is due upon filing of the second ADS. In
                addition, because this benefit claim is delayed (not submitted within
                the required time period in Sec. 1.78(d)), a petition for acceptance
                of an unintentionally delayed benefit claim under Sec. 1.78(e) and the
                petition fee under Sec. 1.17(m) are also required.
                 Example 6: Application F is a nonprovisional application filed on
                August 14, 2028. The ADS present upon F's filing contains a benefit
                claim under 35 U.S.C. 120 to nonprovisional application U filed on
                April 18, 2023, which is the only benefit claim in the application. F's
                EBD is April 18, 2023, which is more than five years, and no more than
                eight years, earlier than F's actual filing date of August 14, 2028.
                Accordingly, the Sec. 1.17(w)(1) fee of $2,200 is due upon F's filing.
                Two months after F's filing, the applicant files a second ADS
                containing a benefit claim under 35 U.S.C. 120 nonprovisional
                application V filed on February 10, 2020. This newly added benefit
                claim causes F's EBD to become February 10, 2020, which is more than
                eight years earlier than F's actual filing date of August 14, 2028, and
                thus prompts the fee in Sec. 1.17(w)(2). Because the fee in Sec.
                1.17(w)(1) was previously paid, the previous payment is subtracted from
                the amount now due under Sec. 1.17(w)(2). Accordingly, the amount due
                upon filing of the second ADS is $1,300 (the current fee amount of
                $3,500 set forth in Sec. 1.17(w)(2) less the $2,200 previously paid
                under Sec. 1.17(w)(1)).
                 The proposed fees will recover more costs related to continuing
                applications from filers of such applications, encourage more efficient
                filing and prosecution behaviors, and partially offset foregone
                maintenance fee revenue resulting from later-filed continuing
                applications.
                 Continuing applications, which include continuation, divisional,
                and continuation-in-part applications filed under the conditions
                specified in 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, 365(c), or 386(c) and Sec. 1.78,
                represent a large and increasing share of patent applications. From FY
                2010 to FY 2022, total serialized filings rose about 44%, including a
                moderate increase in noncontinuing applications (about 25%) and a large
                increase in continuing applications (about 100%), due almost entirely
                to increased continuation filings. Since FY 2010, divisional and
                continuation-in-part applications remained flat at annual levels of
                about 22,000 and 19,000, respectively. However, continuation
                applications have tripled, from about 40,000 in FY 2010 to about
                122,800 in FY 2022, and now represent about 34% of serialized filings.
                 The volume and rapid increase of continuing applications negatively
                impacts the USPTO's workload and docketing practices. For example, it
                is difficult for the agency to balance patent resources between the
                examination of ``new'' (i.e., noncontinuing) applications disclosing
                new technology and innovations, and continuing applications, which, in
                some cases, are a repetition of previously examined applications either
                issued as patents or that have become abandoned. See e.g., FY 2021
                pendency statistics review presented at the PPAC quarterly meeting on
                Nov. 18, 2021, available on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/documents/20211115-PPAC-FY21-pendency-stats-review.pdf (note that about 80% of continuations have a patented
                parent).
                 Continuing applications filed long after their EBD are less likely
                to have a patent term long enough for the USPTO to recover the costs of
                its search and examination. The patent fee structure is designed to
                encourage innovation by maintaining low barriers to entry, which the
                agency accomplishes by keeping initial filing fees for utility, plant,
                and design applications below the costs for preexamination, search, and
                examination. The USPTO recovers the remaining cost of performing the
                work from maintenance fee payments made after issuance of a utility
                patent. See e.g., the FY 2022 Agency Financial Report at 45-46,
                available on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/AnnualReport.
                Maintenance fees are due 3.5 years, 7.5 years, and 11.5 years from the
                issue date of a utility patent. See 35 U.S.C. 41(b)(1). During FY 2022,
                maintenance fees collected from utility patentees represented 53.8% of
                patent revenue, about one-third of which derived from payment of the
                11.5-year fee. This revenue is vital to providing the necessary
                aggregate financing to fund patent operations. Thus, the fees proposed
                in this NPRM help compensate the USPTO for foregone maintenance fee
                revenue from continuing applications filed long enough after their EBD
                for their term to be less than 11.5 years.
                 If future workloads for continuing applications were to remain
                steady at FY 2022 levels, about 16% of continuing applications
                (approximately 22,000) would pay the proposed Sec. 1.17(w)(1) fee, and
                an additional 11% of continuing applications (approximately 15,000)
                would pay the proposed Sec. 1.17(w)(2) fee. Based on FY
                [[Page 23239]]
                2022 data, of the applications that would be affected by this proposal,
                about 69% are undiscounted, about 30% receive a small entity discount,
                and about 1% receive a micro entity discount. The USPTO also
                anticipates that the proposed fees will be relatively technology-
                neutral, with the most affected area being Technology Center 3700
                (which examines technologies including mechanical engineering,
                manufacturing, gaming, and medical devices/processes) because it
                receives a much higher proportion of late-filed continuing applications
                than other areas.
                3. Design Application Fees
                 Table 6--Design Application Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Basic filing fee--Design....................... Undiscounted.......................... $220 $300 $80 36 $250
                Basic filing fee--Design....................... Small................................. 88 120 32 36 250
                Basic filing fee--Design....................... Micro................................. 44 60 16 36 250
                Basic filing fee--Design CPA................... Undiscounted.......................... 220 300 80 36 930
                Basic filing fee--Design CPA................... Small................................. 88 120 32 36 930
                Basic filing fee--Design CPA................... Micro................................. 44 60 16 36 930
                Design search fee or Design CPA search fee..... Undiscounted.......................... 160 300 140 88 574
                Design search fee or Design CPA search fee..... Small................................. 64 120 56 88 574
                Design search fee or Design CPA search fee..... Micro................................. 32 60 28 88 574
                Design examination fee or Design CPA Undiscounted.......................... 640 700 60 9 835
                 examination fee.
                Design examination fee or Design CPA Small................................. 256 280 24 9 835
                 examination fee.
                Design examination fee or Design CPA Micro................................. 128 140 12 9 835
                 examination fee.
                Design issue fee............................... Undiscounted.......................... 740 1,300 560 76 574
                Design issue fee............................... Small................................. 296 520 224 76 574
                Design issue fee............................... Micro................................. 148 260 112 76 574
                Hague design issue fee......................... Undiscounted.......................... 740 1,300 560 76 n/a
                Hague design issue fee......................... Small................................. 296 520 224 76 n/a
                Hague design issue fee......................... Micro................................. 148 260 112 76 n/a
                International Design Application First Part Undiscounted.......................... 1,020 1,300 280 27 n/a
                 U.S. Designation Fee.
                International Design Application First Part Small................................. 408 520 112 27 n/a
                 U.S. Designation Fee.
                International Design Application First Part Micro................................. 204 260 56 27 n/a
                 U.S. Designation Fee.
                (Part II Designation Fee) Issue Fee Paid Undiscounted.......................... 740 1,300 560 76 n/a
                 Through the International Bureau in an
                 International Design Application.
                (Part II Designation Fee) Issue Fee Paid Small................................. 296 520 224 76 n/a
                 Through the International Bureau in an
                 International Design Application.
                (Part II Designation Fee) Issue Fee Paid Micro................................. 148 260 112 76 n/a
                 Through the International Bureau in an
                 International Design Application.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO is proposing increases in the fees for filing, search,
                examination, and issuance of design patent applications. These
                proposals adjust the fees to account for inflationary cost increases,
                and to recover a larger portion of design costs from design applicants.
                 The proposed design fee increases will affect national design
                application filings and international design application filings that
                designate the United States under the Geneva Act of the Hague Agreement
                Concerning the International Registration of Industrial Designs, July
                2, 1999 (``Hague Agreement'').
                 As shown in the table above, the combined total of filing, search,
                examination, and issue fees for a design application that proceeds to
                issuance would increase from $1,760 to $2,600 for undiscounted
                applications, from $704 to $1,040 for applications receiving a small
                entity discount, and from $352 to $520 for applications receiving a
                micro entity discount. Note that under the Hague Agreement and its
                implementing regulations in the United States, including Sec. 1.1031,
                the required fees (known as ``designation fees'') for international
                design application filings that designate the United States are set by
                reference to the national fees. Thus, the first part of the designation
                fee corresponds to the sum of the filing fee, search fee, and
                examination fee, and the second part of the designation fee corresponds
                to the issue fee. See MPEP 2910 for more information about
                international design application fees.
                 Despite these increases, the proposed fees will not achieve full
                recovery of design costs. On an individual basis, the proposed fees
                including the issue fee do not fully recover the cost of examining and
                issuing a design application even when the applicant paid the
                undiscounted rate. On an aggregate basis, design fee payments will not
                fully recover design costs because most design applications qualify for
                discounted fees. For example, of the design applications filed in FY
                2023, 28% paid the micro entity fee amount, 38% paid the small entity
                fee amount, and only 34% paid the undiscounted fee amounts. The USPTO
                is required by law to reduce most patent fees by 60% for small entities
                and by 80% for micro entities. See Part II: Legal Framework, supra. As
                a result of the heavy use of these discounts by design applicants, the
                USPTO's collections from design fees have been significantly below
                design costs for more than 10 years. For example, based on the most
                recently
                [[Page 23240]]
                available cost data (FY 2022), the unit cost for a design application
                was $2,233, and for a design Continued Prosecution Application, $2,913.
                The collections (in the same year) from design fees averaged only
                $1,125 per application, resulting in an average shortfall of about
                $1,108 per application. Assuming the unit cost remains the same in FY
                2023, the average shortfall would increase to about $1,220 per
                application based on FY 2023 collections from design fees, which
                averaged only $1,013 per application.
                 Because USPTO operations are financed solely by user fees, the
                agency must make up the shortfall in the design area through fees set
                in other patent areas. While the USPTO has raised design fees twice in
                the last 10 years, those increases were not large enough to eliminate
                the shortfall over the long term. Thus, design costs continue to be
                subsidized by other fees, primarily utility patent maintenance fees.
                This subsidy has grown in recent years, as shown in figure 1. The graph
                depicts average fee collections per design application (``average
                collections'') in dark gray, and the average shortfall or subsidy per
                design application (``average subsidy'') in light gray. The average
                subsidy in FY 2022 was $1,108, and in FY 2023 was $1,220 (estimated
                based on FY 2022 unit cost).
                Figure 1: Subsidization of Design Applications Over Time
                [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP03AP24.044
                 The patent fee structure is designed to encourage innovation by
                maintaining low barriers to entry into the patent system. The USPTO
                accomplishes this goal by keeping initial filing fees for utility,
                plant, and design applications below the agency's costs for
                preexamination, search, and examination, and by recovering remaining
                costs of performing the work from maintenance fee payments made after
                issuance of a utility patent. See e.g., the FY 2022 Agency Financial
                Report at 45-46, available on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/AnnualReport. Although the USPTO is not permitted to
                establish maintenance fees for design or plant patents (see 35 U.S.C.
                41(b)(3)), the maintenance fees it collects from utility patentees
                represented 53.8% of patent revenue in FY 2022. This revenue is vital
                to providing the necessary aggregate revenue to recover the aggregate
                cost of patent operations.
                 Because design fee payors do not bear the full costs of design
                services, a disconnect between fees and costs, as currently exists in
                the design patent area, can lead to overuse of discounted services. See
                e.g., Federal User Fees: A Design Guide, Report No. GAO-08-386SP (May
                2008), available at https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-08-386sp, and the
                Patent and Trademark Office: New User Fee Design Presents Opportunities
                to Build on Transparency and Communication Success, Report No. GAO-12-
                514R (April 2012), available at https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-12-514r.
                 Historically, this difference between design fees and design costs
                did not result in a significant subsidy because the annual volume of
                design applications was much lower than the annual volume of issued
                utility patents. Since 2014, however, the number of design applications
                has surged 50% (from 36,254 in FY 2014 to 54,476 in FY 2022) while the
                number of issued utility patents (and thus the volume of potential
                future maintenance fees) has increased only 7% (from 303,930 in FY 2014
                to 325,455 in FY 2022). See e.g., FY 2022 Workload Table 1, available
                on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/AnnualReport. Moreover,
                virtually all growth in design application filings is attributable to
                applications in which discounted fees are paid. From FY 2014 to FY
                2022, the number of undiscounted design applications filed did not
                increase, but the number of small entity applications increased 24%,
                and the number of micro entity applications increased 313%. As a
                result, the entity spread for design applications changed dramatically.
                For example, in FY 2014, the entity spread for design applications was
                50% undiscounted, 40% small
                [[Page 23241]]
                entity, and 10% micro entity; during FY 2022, the entity spread for
                design applications was 35% undiscounted, 35% small entity, and 30%
                micro entity. In contrast, the entity spread in utility application
                filings has remained the same from FY 2014 to FY 2022, at about 72%
                undiscounted, 24% small entity, and 4% micro entity.
                 The combination of these factors makes it challenging for the USPTO
                to balance the setting of design fees that appropriately encourage
                innovation while also incenting design applicants to make appropriate
                economic decisions and not overuse design services. For example, based
                on the FY 2022 unit cost and assuming that filing volume and entity
                spread remain stable, recovering the full cost of design services from
                design applicants would require total fees of about $4,000 for
                undiscounted applications. Abruptly raising fees to these levels could
                discourage innovation, so the USPTO is proposing a more moderate
                increase to $2,600 for undiscounted applications. After considering all
                relevant factors, the agency believes the proposed design fee increases
                strike a balance that still encourages innovation while bringing in
                increased revenue to recover more design costs.
                4. Excess Claims Fees
                 Table 7--Excess Claims Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Each independent claim in excess of three...... Undiscounted.......................... $480 $600 $120 25 n/a
                Each independent claim in excess of three...... Small................................. 192 240 48 25 n/a
                Each independent claim in excess of three...... Micro................................. 96 120 24 25 n/a
                Each reissue independent claim in excess of Undiscounted.......................... 480 600 120 25 n/a
                 three.
                Each reissue independent claim in excess of Small................................. 192 240 48 25 n/a
                 three.
                Each reissue independent claim in excess of Micro................................. 96 120 24 25 n/a
                 three.
                Each claim in excess of 20..................... Undiscounted.......................... 100 200 100 100 n/a
                Each claim in excess of 20..................... Small................................. 40 80 40 100 n/a
                Each claim in excess of 20..................... Micro................................. 20 40 20 100 n/a
                Each reissue claim in excess of 20............. Undiscounted.......................... 100 200 100 100 n/a
                Each reissue claim in excess of 20............. Small................................. 40 80 40 100 n/a
                Each reissue claim in excess of 20............. Micro................................. 20 40 20 100 n/a
                Each reexamination independent claim in excess Undiscounted.......................... 480 600 120 25 n/a
                 of three and also in excess of the number of
                 such claims in the patent under reexamination.
                Each reexamination independent claim in excess Small................................. 192 240 48 25 n/a
                 of three and also in excess of the number of
                 such claims in the patent under reexamination.
                Each reexamination independent claim in excess Micro................................. 96 120 24 25 n/a
                 of three and also in excess of the number of
                 such claims in the patent under reexamination.
                Each reexamination claim in excess of 20 and Undiscounted.......................... 100 200 100 100 n/a
                 also in excess of the number of claims in the
                 patent under reexamination.
                Each reexamination claim in excess of 20 and Small................................. 40 80 40 100 n/a
                 also in excess of the number of claims in the
                 patent under reexamination.
                Each reexamination claim in excess of 20 and Micro................................. 20 40 20 100 n/a
                 also in excess of the number of claims in the
                 patent under reexamination.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Under Sec. 1.16(h) and (i), the USPTO charges a fee for filing, or
                later presenting at any other time, each independent claim in excess of
                three, as well as each claim (whether dependent or independent) in
                excess of 20. The agency proposes to increase the Sec. 1.16(h) and (i)
                excess claims fees. The Sec. 1.16(j) multiple dependent claim fee is
                part of the across-the-board adjustment and not included in this
                targeted proposal as well as the counterpart excess claims fees
                applicable to reexamination proceedings and applications that are the
                national stage of an international application filed under the Patent
                Cooperation Treaty. These changes would provide more revenue to help
                recover the additional search and examination costs associated with
                excess claims, as well as prosecution costs not covered by front-end
                fees. These changes would also promote compact prosecution, and the
                USPTO believes applicants motivated by costs would be incentivized to
                not file excess claims. In FY 2021, only about 15% of applications
                contained more than 20 total claims, and about 8% of applications
                contained more than three independent claims.
                 The USPTO has increased excess claim fees several times during the
                last 20 years, which has been very effective at reducing excess claims
                from their peak in the early 2000s. A high frequency of applications
                filed with exactly 20 claims and a very low frequency of applications
                with claim counts exceeding 20 to help promote compact prosecution. In
                absence of the agency's proposed increases to excess claims fees, it
                anticipates that excess claims numbers would increase in response to
                proposed fees for certain continuing applications discussed previously
                in this proposal.
                 Continuing application and excess claim fees are naturally linked
                and likely to have counterbalancing effects. For example, an increase
                in continuing applications could result from raising only excess claims
                fees, and an increase in excess claims could result from raising only
                the fee for continuing applications (even in specific, lesser-occurring
                situations). The proposed increases in excess claims fees are intended
                to avert the latter scenario.
                 An applicant who files a nonprovisional utility application having
                three independent claims and 40 claims total--double the Sec. 1.16(i)
                total claim-count threshold--is required to pay the Sec. 1.16(i) fee
                for 20 excess claims.
                [[Page 23242]]
                Under the USPTO's proposed fee rates, an application with double the 20
                total claim-count threshold would require an excess claims fee payment
                that equals the combined proposed fee amounts for filing, search, and
                examination. In other words, a double-sized application (three
                independent claims and 40 claims total) would require double the
                combined total in applicable fees for filing, search, and examination.
                5. Extension of Time for Provisional Application Fees
                 Table 8--Extension of Time for Provisional Application Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Extension for response within first month, Undiscounted.......................... $220 $50 -$170 -77 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within first month, Small................................. 88 20 -68 -77 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within first month, Micro................................. 44 10 -34 -77 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within second month, Undiscounted.......................... 640 100 -540 -84 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within second month, Small................................. 256 40 -216 -84 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within second month, Micro................................. 128 20 -108 -84 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within third month, Undiscounted.......................... 1,480 200 -1,280 -86 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within third month, Small................................. 592 80 -512 -86 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within third month, Micro................................. 296 40 -256 -86 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within fourth month, Undiscounted.......................... 2,320 400 -1,920 -83 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within fourth month, Small................................. 928 160 -768 -83 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within fourth month, Micro................................. 464 80 -384 -83 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within fifth month, Undiscounted.......................... 3,160 800 -2,360 -75 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within fifth month, Small................................. 1,264 320 -944 -75 n/a
                 provisional application.
                Extension for response within fifth month, Micro................................. 632 160 -472 -75 n/a
                 provisional application.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO proposes a separate extension of time (EOT) fee structure
                for provisional applications in which fees would be decreased from
                current amounts by an average of 81%. Under EOT practice, if an
                applicant is required to reply within a nonstatutory or shortened
                statutory time period, the applicant may normally petition to extend
                the time period for reply with the requisite fee. The time extension
                may be up to the earlier of the expiration of any maximum period set by
                statute or five months after the time period set for reply, if a
                petition for an EOT under Sec. 1.136(a), including the EOT fee set in
                Sec. 1.17(a), is filed.
                 Currently, the EOT fees specified in Sec. 1.17(a) apply equally to
                both provisional and nonprovisional applications. The USPTO proposes an
                average 81% EOT fee decrease in provisional applications under a new
                paragraph (u) of Sec. 1.17, with an additional proposal that Sec.
                1.136(a) be amended to refer to EOT fees under both Sec. 1.17(a) and
                new Sec. 1.17(u). For patent applications other than provisional
                applications, the EOT fee structure retained under Sec. 1.17(a) would
                be increased by 5%, in accordance with the across-the-board proposal.
                 With fees reduced by 81% on average, the proposed separate EOT fee
                structure for provisional applications would benefit filers in all
                entity status categories. The agency envisions that micro entity
                provisional application filers would benefit most. As explained in the
                Director's April 20, 2023, letter to PPAC:
                 ``The USPTO's fee review concluded that applicants who have
                certified micro entity status in provisional applications are more
                than twice as likely to request EOT as compared to other applicants.
                Thus, we are proposing reduced EOT fees for provisional applications
                by an average of 81% to reduce financial and entry barriers and
                further foster inclusive innovation.''
                 Some micro entity applicants need time extensions to accommodate
                attempts to meet additional formality requirements associated with
                establishing micro entity status. Another consideration favoring this
                proposal is that provisional applications are not examined; therefore,
                there is less urgency to expedite processing.
                6. Information Disclosure Statement Size Fees
                [[Page 23243]]
                 Table 9--Information Disclosure Statement Size Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee Proposed fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Filing an Information Disclosure Undiscounted................ New................. $200................... n/a n/a n/a
                 Statement that causes the
                 cumulative number of applicant-
                 provided items of information to
                 exceed 50 but not exceed 100.
                Filing an Information Disclosure Undiscounted................ New................. $500, less any amount n/a n/a n/a
                 Statement that causes the previously paid.
                 cumulative number of applicant-
                 provided items of information to
                 exceed 100 but not exceed 200.
                Filing an Information Disclosure Undiscounted................ New................. $800, less any amounts n/a n/a n/a
                 Statement that causes the previously paid.
                 cumulative number of applicant-
                 provided items of information to
                 exceed 200.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Sections 1.97 and 1.555 provide applicants and patent owners the
                opportunity to submit an information disclosure statement (IDS)
                containing items of information for consideration by the examiner. In a
                patent application, to be considered, the IDS must meet the timing
                requirements of Sec. 1.97 and the content requirements of Sec. 1.98.
                In a reexamination proceeding, the IDS must meet the content
                requirements of Sec. 1.98(a). There are no specific regulatory limits
                to the number of items of information that may be included in an IDS.
                Most applications contain relatively few items of information submitted
                by applicants for consideration. Approximately 77% of applications have
                fewer than 25 applicant-cited items of information submitted during
                prosecution.
                 The USPTO receives large IDS submissions in a small percentage of
                applications. Based on the agency's most recent data, in approximately
                13% of applications applicants submit over 50 total items of
                information and in 8% of applications applicants submit over 100 items
                of information. In an even smaller subset of applications, the number
                of applicant-submitted items can be quite large, sometimes in the
                thousands or even tens of thousands.
                 In many instances, these large IDS submissions contain clearly
                irrelevant, marginally relevant, or cumulative information. It is
                onerous for examiners and hinders the USPTO's statutory obligation to
                timely examine applications under 35 U.S.C. 154 to consider large
                numbers of clearly irrelevant, marginally relevant, or cumulative
                information. Additionally, large IDS submissions are costly for the
                agency to consider. Therefore, the USPTO suggests, as a best practice,
                that applicants and patent owners avoid filing large IDS submissions by
                eliminating clearly irrelevant, marginally relevant, or cumulative
                information. See MPEP 2004, item 13.
                 In 2006, the USPTO attempted to address large IDS submissions by
                proposing new requirements, including that IDSs with more than twenty
                citations be accompanied by an explanation of relevance. See Changes To
                Information Disclosure Statement Requirements and Other Related
                Matters, 71 FR 38808 (July 10, 2006). The proposal was not adopted;
                instead, to provide some relief for examiners burdened with large IDS
                submissions, the agency began providing examiners additional time to
                consider large IDS submissions in applications.
                 On average, the USPTO provides examiners approximately 80,000
                additional hours each year to consider large IDS submissions in
                applications, costing the agency $10 million annually. As there is
                currently no fee for large IDS submissions, this cost is subsidized
                generally by patent fees, primarily maintenance fees collected for
                patents that resulted from applications that did not contain large IDS
                submissions.
                 Accordingly, to have applicants and patent owners filing large IDS
                submissions cover more of the associated costs, the USPTO proposes to
                amend Sec. 1.17 to implement a new IDS size fee based on the
                cumulative number of items of information submitted by an applicant or
                patent owner during the pendency of the application or reexamination
                proceeding. The proposed IDS size fee sets forth: (1) a first amount
                ($200) for a cumulative number of applicant-provided or patent-owner
                provided items of information in excess of 50; (2) a second amount
                ($500) for a cumulative number of applicant-provided or patent-owner
                provided items of information in excess of 100 but not exceeding 200,
                less any amount previously paid; and (3) a third amount ($800) for a
                cumulative number of applicant-provided or patent owner provided items
                of information in excess of 200, less any amounts previously paid.
                 For example, if an applicant submits a single IDS during
                prosecution with 101 items of information, the applicant would pay $500
                under the proposed new Sec. 1.17(v)(2) for exceeding 100 items of
                information, but not exceeding 200. In another example, if an applicant
                files a first IDS with 51 items of information, they would pay $200
                under proposed new Sec. 1.17(v)(1) for exceeding 50 items of
                information, but not exceeding 100. Subsequently, in that same
                application, if the applicant files a second IDS with 50 items of
                information, the cumulative number of items of information in the
                application would be 101. The applicant would then pay $500 under
                proposed new Sec. 1.17(v)(2) for exceeding 100 items of information,
                but not exceeding 200, less the $200 previously paid under proposed new
                Sec. 1.17(v)(1), for a total of $300.
                 Further, in that same application, if the applicant files a third
                IDS with 100 items of information, the cumulative number of items of
                information in the application would be 201. The applicant would then
                pay $800 under proposed new Sec. 1.17(v)(3) for exceeding 200 items of
                information, less the $200 previously paid under proposed new Sec.
                1.17(v)(1) and less the $300 previously paid under proposed new Sec.
                1.17(v)(2), for a total of $300. Thus, in this example, the applicant
                would pay a combined IDS size fee of $800 for the three IDSs filed
                during the pendency of the application.
                 Additionally, the USPTO is proposing to amend Sec. 1.98(a) to
                include a new content requirement for an IDS that will facilitate
                implementation of the proposed IDS size fee. Specifically, the USPTO is
                proposing to require that an IDS contain a clear written assertion by
                applicant and patent owner that the IDS is accompanied by the
                appropriate IDS size fee, or that no IDS size fee is required. This
                assertion is necessary because it ensures the record is clear as
                [[Page 23244]]
                to which fee the applicant or patent owner believes may be due (or that
                no fee may be due), with the IDS so the examiner can promptly ascertain
                whether the IDS is compliant. There would be no specific language
                required for the written assertion, but it should be readily
                identifiable on the IDS and clearly convey the applicable IDS size fee.
                 The agency envisions modifying USPTO Form PTO/SB/08 to include the
                requisite written assertion stylized as a set of check boxes
                corresponding to each potential IDS size fee, along with an additional
                box indicating that no IDS size fee is due. Since the form must be
                signed in accordance with Sec. 1.33(b), certifications under
                Sec. Sec. 1.4 and 11.18 apply. Applicants and patent owners would be
                strongly advised to use the PTO/SB/08 form, but it will not be
                required. The USPTO does not foresee general authorizations to charge
                fees or a specific authorization to charge any applicable IDS size fee
                as a compliant written assertion under the proposed requirement. It
                would be the applicant's and patent owner's responsibility to track the
                cumulative number of items of information submitted in the application
                and provide a written assertion of any applicable IDS size fee due. In
                accordance with Sec. 1.97(i), an IDS filed in an application without
                the written assertion or the necessary IDS size fee will be placed in
                the file, but not considered by the agency. The applicant may then file
                a new IDS accompanied by the written assertion or necessary IDS size
                fee, but the date the new IDS is filed will be the date of the IDS for
                purposes of determining compliance with Sec. 1.97. See MPEP 609.05(a).
                An IDS filed in a reexamination proceeding without the written
                assertion or the necessary IDS size fee will be placed in the file and
                will remain of record, but the IDS will not be considered.
                 Applicants are reminded that the duty of disclosure under
                Sec. Sec. 1.56 and 1.555 only requires the submission of information
                material to patentability to the USPTO. Material information is
                described in Sec. Sec. 1.56(b) and 1.555(b) as information that is not
                cumulative to information already of record and (1) establishes, by
                itself or in combination with other information, a prima facie case of
                unpatentability of a claim; or (2) it refutes, or is inconsistent with,
                a position the applicant takes in: (i) opposing an argument of
                unpatentability relied on by the USPTO, or (ii) asserting an argument
                of patentability. The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal
                Circuit uses an even higher standard for materiality than the Sec.
                1.56(b) and 1.555(b) standards by requiring ``but-for'' materiality,
                such that the USPTO would not have allowed a claim had it been aware of
                the undisclosed information. Neither the Sec. 1.56(b) and 1.555(b)
                standards nor the Federal Circuit's ``but-for'' standard require the
                submission of clearly irrelevant or marginally relevant information.
                 The USPTO does not believe the proposed IDS size fee will have a
                large impact on patent applicants or owners. As stated previously, a
                majority of applicants do not submit large amounts of information for
                consideration. Based on current IDS filing volume, only 13% of
                applications will require the first-tier IDS size fee for submitting
                over 50 items of information. Even fewer applications will be subject
                to the succeeding two tiers, as only approximately 8% of applications
                contain over 100 items of information, and about 4% contain over 200
                items of information. Additionally, the fee should not
                disproportionately impact small and micro entities. During FY 2022,
                small entities accounted for only 25% of applications that would incur
                a fee, while micro entities made up less than 1%. By placing more of
                the service costs for considering IDS submissions totaling over 50
                items of information on the applicants who file such IDS submissions,
                less costs will be borne across the patent system.
                7. Patent Term Adjustment Fees
                 Table 10--Patent Term Adjustment Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Dollar Percent FY 2022 unit
                 Description Entity type Current fee Proposed fee change change cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Filing an application for patent term Undiscounted........................ $210 $300 $90 43 $745
                 adjustment.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO is proposing a fee increase from $210 to $300 for filing
                an application for patent term adjustment under Sec. 1.705(b), which
                allows patentees of utility and plant patents to request
                reconsideration of the patent term adjustment indicated on the face of
                the patent. This proposal adjusts the fee for inflation and supports
                the USPTO's fee setting policy of aligning fees with costs.
                 This service and fee were introduced in September 2000 as part of a
                rule package implementing the patent term adjustment provisions of 35
                U.S.C. 154(b), which were created by the Uruguay Round Agreements Act
                (Pub. L. 103-465, 108 Stat. 4809 (1994)) and amended by the American
                Inventors Protection Act of 1999 (Pub. L. 106-113, 113 Stat. 1501,
                1501A-552 through 1501A-591 (1999)). See Changes to Implement Patent
                Term Adjustment Under Twenty-Year Patent Term, 65 FR 56366 (Sept. 18,
                2000). Under 35 U.S.C. 154(b), patent term adjustment is a complex
                statutory scheme that compensates utility and plant patent owners for
                certain application processing delays that would otherwise reduce a
                patent's term. See MPEP 2730 through 2732 for more information
                regarding grounds for adjustment, the adjustment period, and reductions
                in the adjustment period due to applicant failures to engage in
                reasonable efforts to conclude prosecution of an application.
                 In accordance with these laws and their implementing regulations,
                the USPTO determines applicable patent term adjustment at the time of
                issuing each utility and plant patent and indicates such adjustment on
                the face of the patent. These determinations are performed using a
                computer program that relies upon information in the agency's patent
                application data repository--formerly Patent Application Locating and
                Monitoring, now the One Patent Service Gateway (OPSG). This information
                includes the type of document (e.g., an amendment or a notice of
                allowance) and the relevant date (e.g., for an amendment, the date of
                receipt in the USPTO). Applicants may use Patent Center to check the
                accuracy of the data entered in the OPSG throughout the examination
                process and are encouraged to notify the agency of any detected errors
                prior to allowance. See e.g., MPEP 2733 for guidance about checking
                records and reporting errors (note, Patent Center replaced the Patent
                Application Information Retrieval system discussed in the MPEP).
                 If the patentee disagrees with the adjustment indicated on the
                patent, they may file a request for reconsideration of patent term
                adjustment under Sec. 1.705(b) which must filed within two months of
                the date the patent was granted. The
                [[Page 23245]]
                request (also called an application) must include the patentee's
                requested patent term adjustment and a supporting statement of facts
                and be accompanied by the fee specified in Sec. 1.18(e). In response
                to a request, the USPTO will conduct a manual redetermination of the
                patent term adjustment, which may result in (1) an amount of patent
                term adjustment that is the amount of patent term adjustment requested
                by the applicant; (2) the same amount of patent term adjustment as
                indicated in the patent (i.e., no change); or (3) a different amount of
                patent term adjustment that may be higher or lower than the patent term
                adjustment indicated on the patent. More information regarding
                determination and reconsideration of patent term adjustment is
                available in MPEP 2733 and 2734.
                 When introduced in 2000, the agency set the fee for requests for
                reconsideration of patent term adjustment at $200, and since then has
                increased this fee only $10. See Changes To Implement Patent Term
                Adjustment Under Twenty-Year Patent Term, 65 FR 56366 (Sep. 18, 2000);
                FY 2020 Final Rule. If the agency had adjusted the fee for inflation as
                measured by the Consumer Price Index since the fee's introduction, it
                would be $351 as of June 2023. The USPTO's proposed increase to $300 is
                15% below the inflation-adjusted original fee. Thus, the proposed fee
                represents a partial recovery of the inflation-adjusted original fee.
                Moreover, the proposed fee will remain significantly less than the unit
                cost of this service ($745 in FY 2022). While this fee does not qualify
                for entity discounts, the proposed increase will not disproportionately
                impact small and micro entities. Based on data from FY 2021 and FY
                2022, small entities file about 19% of PTA reconsideration requests,
                and micro entities only 1%.
                 This service has a low volume of about 500 requests each year,
                meaning that patentees are requesting reconsideration of patent term
                adjustment in only 0.15% of issued patents (since FY 2019, the USPTO
                has issued over 325,000 utility and plant patents annually). This low
                volume is due partly to the USPTO's improvements to its computer
                program over the years, and partly to applicant diligence when
                submitting and reviewing papers. For example, as described previously,
                applicants are encouraged to bring any detected errors in OPSG data to
                the agency's attention before allowance. In addition, applicants can
                improve the accuracy of the USPTO's records (which, in turn, improves
                the accuracy of the computer program's determinations) by using the
                proper document codes when filing papers. See e.g., Standardization of
                the Patent Term Adjustment Statement Regarding Information Disclosure
                Statements, 88 FR 39172 (Jun. 15, 2023), which explains how using the
                agency's form and document code when filing a ``safe harbor'' statement
                for an IDS enhances the accuracy of the USPTO's automated process for
                calculating patent term adjustment when the ``safe harbor'' provisions
                of Sec. 1.704(d) are involved.
                8. Patent Term Extension Fees
                 Table 11--Patent Term Extension Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Application for extension of term of patent.... Undiscounted.......................... $1,180 $6,700 $5,520 468 $2,581
                Initial application for interim extension (see Undiscounted.......................... 440 1,320 880 200 2,347
                 37 CFR 1.790).
                Subsequent application for interim extension Undiscounted.......................... 230 680 450 196 2,347
                 (see 37 CFR 1.790).
                Supplemental redetermination after notice of Undiscounted.......................... New 1,440 n/a n/a n/a
                 final determination.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO is proposing fee increases for filing applications for
                patent term extension and applications for interim extensions under 35
                U.S.C. 156, and is also proposing a new fee for requesting a
                supplemental redetermination of the patent term extension in a pending
                application for patent term extension. These proposals adjust fees for
                inflation and reflect the full cost of these services and also supports
                the agency's fee setting policy of aligning fees with costs.
                 The patent term extension service and fee were introduced in
                October 1984 as part of initial operating guidelines established after
                enactment of the patent term extension provisions of 35 U.S.C. 156 in
                the Drug Price Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act of 1984
                (Pub. L. 98-417, 98 Stat. 1585 (1984)) (Hatch-Waxman Act). See
                Guidelines for Extension of Patent Term under 35 U.S.C. 156, 1047 OG 16
                (Oct. 9, 1984). In brief, patent term extensions under 35 U.S.C. 156
                enable owners of patents claiming certain products subject to premarket
                regulatory review to restore to the terms of those patents some of the
                time lost while awaiting premarket government approval for the products
                from a regulatory agency. The products eligible for patent term
                extension services under 35 U.S.C. 156 include human drug products,
                medical devices, animal drugs, and food or color additive products, all
                of which are regulated by the FDA, and veterinary biological products,
                which are regulated by the United States Department of Agriculture
                (USDA). See MPEP 2750 for more information regarding the legislative
                history and scope of the Hatch-Waxman Act with respect to patent term
                extensions.
                 In accordance with this law and its implementing regulations, the
                patent owner must file an application for patent term extension with
                the USPTO within a short time after the product receives permission for
                commercial marketing or use from the applicable regulatory agency (the
                FDA or USDA). See MPEP 2754 et seq. Upon receipt, the USPTO reviews the
                application, the applicant, the patent, and the claimed product or
                process and then works with the applicable regulatory agency to
                evaluate compliance with the statutory requirements for a patent term
                extension under 35 U.S.C. 156. While it is the USPTO's responsibility
                to decide whether an applicant has satisfied statutory requirements and
                whether the patent qualifies for patent term extension, the applicable
                regulatory agency possesses expertise and records regarding some
                statutory requirements and has certain direct responsibilities under 35
                U.S.C. 156 for determining length of the regulatory review period. See
                MPEP 2756 for a more detailed explanation of how the USPTO works with
                these regulatory agencies to determine a patent's eligibility for
                patent term extension under 35 U.S.C. 156. Once the USPTO has received
                the necessary information from the regulatory agency, it determines the
                [[Page 23246]]
                applicable patent term extension (if any) and formulates a Notice of
                Final Determination or determination of ineligibility, reviews any
                responses or reconsideration requests received from the patent owner,
                and then prepares a Final Determination or certificate as appropriate.
                See MPEP 2755 through 2759 for an explanation of this process. Because
                of the coordination and communication required between the USPTO and
                the appropriate regulatory agency, and the complexity of the legal
                determinations involved, it often takes two or more years to reach a
                Final Determination or determination of ineligibility. The time
                required varies greatly depending on the individual circumstances of
                each application.
                 When introduced in 1984, the fee for this service was set at $750
                and since then has increased to only $1,180. See e.g., Guidelines for
                Extension of Patent Term Under 35 U.S.C. 156, 1047 OG 16 (Oct. 9,
                1984), Rules for Extension of Patent Term, 52 FR 9386 (Mar. 24, 1987),
                and FY 2020 Final Rule. If the original fee were adjusted for inflation
                as measured by the CPI, it would be $2,173 as of June 2023. Moreover,
                the complexity and cost of this service has increased over time due to
                the subject matter and legal expertise required to evaluate the
                statutory requirements. Thus, the USPTO is proposing to raise the fee
                for this service from $1,180 to $6,700.
                 While the proposed fee is greater than the reported unit cost, the
                USPTO did not begin formally tracking the unit cost of this service (as
                a separate service through the ABI program) until midway through FY
                2021. Prior to FY 2018 the service volume was quite low at about 42
                applications each year. Since then, volume has averaged 100-plus
                applications each year. Accordingly, because the ABI for patent term
                extension is based on limited data, the currently reported unit cost is
                believed to be significantly lower than the actual cost of providing
                the service. As the amount of service information increases with time,
                the USPTO expects that the unit cost determined by the ABI program will
                more closely align with the actual cost.
                 The USPTO is also proposing a new service fee that would apply to
                the approximate one-third of applications for patent term extension in
                which the user files a response that includes a terminal disclaimer
                after receiving the Notice of Final Determination. The submission of
                terminal disclaimers at this late stage in the review process affects
                the patent term, requiring the USPTO to engage in a substantial amount
                of rework to recalculate the applicable patent term extension and make
                a supplemental redetermination of the appropriate extension in view of
                the disclaimer. These submissions became more common after the Federal
                Circuit's decision in Gilead Sciences, Inc. v. Natco Pharma Ltd., 753
                F.3d 1208 (Fed. Cir. 2014), which made it clear that the extended term
                of a patent can be affected by a terminal disclaimer filed against a
                later-issued but earlier-expiring reference patent, and after a 2015
                presentation by USPTO personnel at a public meeting discussing the
                Gilead decision. See Safekeeping of 35 U.S.C. 156 Extensions
                presentation from the USPTO Biotechnology/Chemical/Pharmaceutical
                Customer Partnership Meeting on April 7, 2015, available at https://www.aipla.org/docs/default-source/committee-documents/bcp-files/pte-for-4-7-15-bcp.pdf?sfvrsn=868807b4_2. These submissions are expected to
                become more common in the future, because of In re Cellect, 81 F.4th
                1216, 2023 U.S.P.Q.2d 1011 (Fed. Cir. 2023), in which the Federal
                Circuit explained that patent term adjustment and patent term extension
                are treated differently with respect to nonstatutory double patenting
                and terminal disclaimers. Currently, beneficiaries of this rework
                receive this additional service for free because the cost is subsidized
                by other users (e.g., by unrelated fee collections from other patent
                applicants and owners). In accordance with user fee design principles,
                the USPTO is proposing a new fee of $1,440 to cover the costs of this
                service, to be paid by users who benefit from it.
                 The USPTO is also proposing to increase the fees for filing
                applications for interim patent term extensions under Sec. 1.790. This
                service and fees were introduced in 1994 in response to an amendment of
                the Hatch-Waxman Act that added 35 U.S.C. 156(d)(5). See MPEP 2750 and
                Guidelines for Interim Extension Under 35 U.S.C. 156(d)(5) of a Patent
                Term Prior To Regulatory Approval of a Product for Commercial Marketing
                or Use--Public Law 103-179 (Dec. 3, 1993), 1159 OG 12 (Feb. 1, 1994).
                Interim patent extension under 35 U.S.C. 156(d)(5) is available for a
                patent claiming a product which is undergoing the approval phase of
                regulatory review as defined in 35 U.S.C. 156(g), if the patent is
                expected to expire before approval is granted. The application of an
                interim patent extension is very similar to an application for patent
                term extension, with a similar evaluation process, except the USPTO is
                not required to seek the advice of the regulatory agency. See MPEP
                2755.02 for more information regarding this service.
                 The interim extension service has a very low volume of about 20 or
                fewer applications each year, but it is costly and requires special
                handling due to the subject matter and legal expertise required to
                evaluate the statutory requirements. The USPTO is proposing to raise
                the fees from $440 to $1,320 for the initial (first) application for an
                interim extension of patent term, and from $230 to $680 for each
                subsequent application. This fee increase will help recover the
                agency's costs of performing this service. Upon its introduction in
                1993, the fees for this service were set at $400 for an initial
                application and $200 for subsequent applications, and have increased by
                only $40 and $30, respectively, since. See FY 2020 Final Rule. The
                proposed fee amounts remain significantly less than the agency's costs
                of providing the service; as of FY 2022, the unit cost was $2,347.
                 No patent term extension-related fees are eligible for entity
                discounts. The users of these services are typically large
                pharmaceutical and medical device companies due to the expense required
                to develop and obtain marketing approval for such inventions, in
                addition to limits on service availability set forth in 35 U.S.C. 156.
                For example, over the last 40 years, 81% of applications for patent
                term extension concerned human drug products, 15% concerned medical
                devices, 3% concerned animal drugs, and about 1% concerned food or
                color additive products or veterinary biological products. See e.g.,
                the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/patents/laws/patent-term-extension/patent-terms-extended-under-35-usc-156, which provides a list
                of patents that have been extended via this service. Additionally, the
                costs for regulatory approval of these products are extremely high. For
                example, as reported by the CBO, three recent studies estimated the
                average research and development costs per new drug to range from $0.8
                billion to $2.3 billion. See Congressional Budget Office, Research and
                Development in the Pharmaceutical Industry, Report No. 57126 pp. 15 and
                16 (April 2021), available at https://www.cbo.gov/publication/57126. It
                is not clear whether the figures reported in these studies included FDA
                user fees, which are currently between $1.6 million and $3.2 million as
                a one-time sum, with an additional annual program fee of $393,933. See
                e.g., the FDA's user fee page for prescription drugs at https://www.fda.gov/industry/fda-user-fee-programs/prescription-drug-user-fee-amendments. Thus, when compared to
                [[Page 23247]]
                either FDA user fees or the research and development costs required to
                develop a new drug and obtain marketing approval, the proposed fees to
                obtain a patent term extension for the patent covering such a new drug
                are quite small.
                9. Request for Continued Examination Fees
                 Table 12--Request for Continued Examination Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Request for continued examination (RCE)--1st Undiscounted.......................... $1,360 $1,500 $140 10 $3,059
                 request (see 37 CFR 1.114).
                Request for continued examination (RCE)--1st Small................................. 544 600 56 10 3,059
                 request (see 37 CFR 1.114).
                Request for continued examination (RCE)--1st Micro................................. 272 300 28 10 3,059
                 request (see 37 CFR 1.114).
                Request for continued examination (RCE)--2nd Undiscounted.......................... 2,000 2,500 500 25 2,191
                 request (see 37 CFR 1.114).
                Request for continued examination (RCE)--2nd Small................................. 800 1,000 200 25 2,191
                 request (see 37 CFR 1.114).
                Request for continued examination (RCE)--2nd Micro................................. 400 500 100 25 2,191
                 request (see 37 CFR 1.114).
                Request for continued examination (RCE)--3rd Undiscounted.......................... 2,000 3,600 1,600 80 2,169
                 and subsequent request (see 37 CFR 1.114).
                Request for continued examination (RCE)--3rd Small................................. 800 1,440 640 80 2,169
                 and subsequent request (see 37 CFR 1.114).
                Request for continued examination (RCE)--3rd Micro................................. 400 720 320 80 2,169
                 and subsequent request (see 37 CFR 1.114).
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 For utility and plant applications where prosecution is closed
                (e.g., a final rejection has been mailed), the applicant may file an
                RCE and pay a specified fee within the requisite time period.
                Applicants typically file an RCE when they choose to continue
                prosecution before an examiner, rather than appeal a rejection or
                abandon the application. Prior to application abandonment, applicants
                may also file a continuing application to extend prosecution rather
                than file an RCE. The USPTO's proposal would split the existing RCE
                fees into three parts--a fee for a first RCE, a higher fee for a second
                RCE, and a still higher fee for third and subsequent RCEs filed in a
                single patent application.
                 Since FY 2013, the USPTO has split RCE fees into two parts: (1) a
                fee for a first RCE; and (2) a second, higher fee for a second or
                subsequent RCE. See Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees, 78 FR 4212 (Jan.
                18, 2013). The USPTO's FY 2017 fee setting rulemaking maintained the
                undiscounted fee for a first RCE well below cost but set the
                undiscounted fee for second and subsequent RCEs at 19% above cost. See
                Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees During Fiscal Year 2017, 82 FR 52780
                (Nov. 14, 2017). The initial RCE fee from FY 2017 would have required
                an applicant without any entity status discount to file four RCEs to
                mostly recover the USPTO's costs for treating all RCE filings.
                 These costs have increased annually since FY 2017. In fact, the
                current undiscounted fee for second and subsequent RCEs is set so far
                below cost that no amount of RCE filings would recapture the USPTO's
                costs of providing the service. Under this proposal to trifurcate the
                RCE fee structure, the undiscounted fee for a first RCE would be more
                than 50% below cost, and the undiscounted fee for a second RCE would be
                just above cost. The undiscounted fee for third and subsequent RCEs
                would be enough above cost that a third RCE from an applicant with no
                entity status discount, combined with the fees for filing the first two
                RCEs, would cover agency costs for treating all three RCEs.
                 Of course, applicants do not file multiple RCEs all at once, and
                the USPTO's costs typically rise over time due to inflationary factors.
                Under the proposed new trifurcated fee structure, by the time an
                applicant pays the third and subsequent RCE fee, it--when combined with
                the first two RCE fees--would likely not cover the USPTO's costs for
                treating all three RCEs. In addition, RCEs filed by applicants with an
                established entitlement to an entity status discount would never
                approach covering the agency's costs, regardless of the number of RCEs
                filed.
                 During FY 2011, when the agency's fee schedule set only one RCE
                fee, RCE filings comprised about 30% of all RCE and utility patent
                application filings collectively. In FY 2018, RCE filings comprised 29%
                of the total despite the bifurcated fee structure introduced in FY
                2013. The RCE filing percentage declined to 25% in FY 2021 and 23% in
                FY 2022. It is unlikely these recent decreases resulted from the
                bifurcated fee structure, as the RCE filing percentage was hardly
                affected in the years immediately following FY 2013.
                 By reducing RCE filings in favor of appeal or reaching agreement
                with an examiner, the proposed higher fee for RCEs filed subsequent to
                the first RCE should help promote more compact prosecutions. Higher
                fees for successively filed RCEs also address the inequities of
                providing further subsidies to those who make greater use of the patent
                system. As explained in the USPTO's FY 2013 rulemaking at 78 FR 4212,
                4245 (Jan. 18, 2013), because the USPTO set the fee for the first RCE
                below the cost to process it, the agency must recoup that cost
                elsewhere. Since most applicants resolve their issues with the first
                RCE, the agency determined that applicants that file more than one RCE
                are using the patent system more extensively than those who file zero
                or only one RCE. Therefore, the USPTO determined that the cost to
                review applications with multiple RCEs should not be subsidized with
                other back-end fees to the same extent as applications with a first
                RCE, newly filed applications, or other continuing applications. This
                proposal would promote compact prosecution and more appropriately
                dispense the low barrier to entry feature of below cost front end fees.
                 In FY 2011, around 70% of RCE applications were for first RCEs,
                with
                [[Page 23248]]
                the remaining 30% for a second or subsequent RCE. Based on FY 2021 and
                FY 2022 data, approximately 72% of current RCE filings are first RCEs,
                19% are second RCEs, and the remaining 9% are third or subsequent RCEs.
                If this proposal has its intended effect, less than 9% of RCE filings
                would qualify for the highest fee tier for third and subsequent RCEs.
                 As previously described, the undiscounted fee for a first RCE would
                be more than 50% below cost, and the undiscounted fee for a second RCE
                would be above cost. Accordingly, undiscounted fees paid for two RCEs
                would be 24% below cost for treating two RCEs. Under this proposal, it
                is not until the third and subsequent undiscounted RCEs, combined with
                fees for the first two RCEs, that the USPTO would recover its costs.
                 An applicant in a position to file a third RCE likely has undergone
                years of patent prosecution, and they could avoid the higher fee by
                appealing the examiner's rejection(s) should no agreement be reached to
                put the application in condition for allowance. Prolonged, years-long
                prosecution could result in patent expiration prior to maintenance fee
                payment, especially the third scheduled maintenance fee--another factor
                in the USPTO's proposal to limit excessive RCE filings.
                 That said, some applicants may see value in prolonged prosecution.
                Whereas the scope of an issued patent is fixed and avoiding patent
                infringement can be assessed by competitors, a patent that may result
                in the future from a pending application is harder to assess in that
                regard. Accordingly, the USPTO does not expect to eliminate third and
                subsequent RCE filings but envisions that the higher fee will help
                reduce their number.
                10. Suspension of Action Fees
                 Table 13--Suspension of Action Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                First request for suspension of action......... Undiscounted.......................... $220 $300 $80 36 n/a
                First request for suspension of action......... Small................................. 88 120 32 36 n/a
                First request for suspension of action......... Micro................................. 44 60 16 36 n/a
                Subsequent request for suspension of action.... Undiscounted.......................... 220 450 230 105 n/a
                Subsequent request for suspension of action.... Small................................. 88 180 92 105 n/a
                Subsequent request for suspension of action.... Micro................................. 44 90 46 105 n/a
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO proposes to create a new tiered fee structure for
                requests for suspension of action under Sec. 1.103(a). Specifically,
                the agency seeks to increase the undiscounted fee for a first
                suspension request to $300 and establish a new fee of $450
                (undiscounted) for the second or subsequent requests in the same
                application. The fee increase for the first request is targeted at
                shifting the cost of the service to those applicants requesting
                suspensions, thereby reducing subsidization from other fees. This
                increase will not affect fees for suspensions of action requested at
                the time of filing CPA under Sec. 1.103(b) or an RCE under Sec.
                1.103(c).
                 Currently, Sec. 1.103(a) permits applicants to request a
                suspension of action for a period not exceeding six months for good and
                sufficient cause. The patent examiner typically decides the first
                request for suspension. Second and subsequent requests require
                Technology Center director approval. Due to the heightened approval
                level, these requests cost the USPTO more to process. As such, in order
                to recoup the additional cost of the second and subsequent requests,
                the agency is proposing to charge a higher fee for these requests.
                Additionally, as more requests for suspension are requested and
                granted, the longer the pendency of the application.
                 The USPTO receives approximately 2,500 requests for suspension
                under Sec. 1.103(a) each year. Of those requests, 86% are filed by
                undiscounted entities, 12% by small entities, and 2% by micro entities.
                Given the availability of entity discounts, the USPTO believes this fee
                increase will generally have a negligible impact on small and micro
                entities.
                11. Terminal Disclaimer Fees
                 Table 14--Terminal Disclaimer Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Terminal disclaimer, filed prior to the first Undiscounted.......................... $170 $200 $30 18 n/a
                 action on the merits.
                Terminal disclaimer, filed prior to a final Undiscounted.......................... 170 500 330 194 n/a
                 action or allowance.
                Terminal disclaimer, filed after final or Undiscounted.......................... 170 800 630 371 n/a
                 allowance.
                Terminal disclaimer, filed on or after a notice Undiscounted.......................... 170 1,100 930 547 n/a
                 of appeal.
                Terminal disclaimer, filed in a patented case Undiscounted.......................... 170 1,400 1,230 724 n/a
                 or in an application for reissue.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO proposes to create a new tiered fee structure for
                terminal disclaimers, specifically splitting Sec. 1.20(d) into two
                parts.
                 The first part, in proposed Sec. 1.20(d)(1), would apply only to
                statutory disclaimers under 35 U.S.C. 253(a) and Sec. 1.321(a). As
                explained in MPEP 1490, a statutory disclaimer is a statement in which
                a patent owner relinquishes legal rights to one or more claims of a
                patent. The proposed fee for filing such a statutory disclaimer would
                be increased slightly (from $170 to $179) as part of the across-the-
                board fee increase.
                 The second part, in proposed Sec. 1.20(d)(2), would apply only to
                [[Page 23249]]
                terminal disclaimers under 35 U.S.C. 253(b) and Sec. 1.321. As
                explained in MPEP 1490, a terminal disclaimer is a statement in which a
                patentee or applicant disclaims or dedicates to the public the entire
                term or any terminal part of the term of a patent, or of a patent to be
                granted when filed in an application. The proposed fees for filing such
                terminal disclaimers would be increased as described in this section
                and would vary depending on the stage of examination of the application
                in which the terminal disclaimer is filed. In particular, proposed
                Sec. 1.20(d)(2) would create five tiers of fees for filing terminal
                disclaimers, beginning at $200 for the first tier and increasing by
                $300 for each subsequent tier.
                 1. The first-tier fee of $200 is set forth in proposed Sec.
                1.20(d)(2)(i), and would be required upon the filing of a terminal
                disclaimer in a non-reissue application before the mailing of a first
                Office action on the merits.
                 2. The second-tier fee of $500 is set forth in proposed Sec.
                1.20(d)(2)(ii) and would be required upon the filing of a terminal
                disclaimer in a non-reissue application after the period specified in
                Sec. 1.20(d)(2)(i) and before the mailing date of any final action
                under Sec. 1.113, a notice of allowance under Sec. 1.311, or an
                action that otherwise closes prosecution in the application.
                 3. The third-tier fee of $800 is set forth in proposed Sec.
                1.20(d)(2)(iii) and would be required upon the filing of a terminal
                disclaimer in a non-reissue application after the period specified in
                Sec. 1.20(d)(2)(ii) and before any submission of a notice of appeal
                under Sec. 41.31.
                 4. The fourth-tier fee of $1,100 is set forth in proposed Sec.
                1.20(d)(2)(iv) and would be required upon the filing of a terminal
                disclaimer in a non-reissue application on or after the submission of a
                notice of appeal under Sec. 41.31.
                 5. The fifth-tier fee of $1,400 is set forth in proposed Sec.
                1.20(d)(2)(v) and would be required upon the filing of a terminal
                disclaimer in a patent, or in an application for reissue of a patent.
                 These fee increases and the tiered structure in proposed Sec.
                1.20(d)(2) are focused on encouraging applicants to promptly address
                double patenting issues that arise during prosecution, which will then
                promote more efficient patent examination by reducing unnecessary
                costs. The proposals will also foster greater public certainty by
                providing earlier notice of when the patent term will end.
                 Patent applications and patents are subject to the doctrine of
                nonstatutory double patenting to prevent both the unjust timewise
                extension of the right to exclude and multiple infringement suits by
                different parties. These situations may arise from the granting of
                multiple patents with patentably indistinct claims where the patents
                have a common owner, applicant, or inventor, or where the patents are
                not commonly owned but are subject to a joint research agreement. See
                MPEP 804 for a more extensive discussion of the doctrine of
                nonstatutory double patenting. An applicant may avoid or overcome a
                nonstatutory double patenting rejection by filing a terminal disclaimer
                in the application or proceeding in which the rejection is anticipated
                or actually made. As explained in MPEP 804.02, the use of a terminal
                disclaimer in overcoming a nonstatutory double patenting rejection is
                in the public interest because it encourages the disclosure of
                additional developments, the earlier filing of applications, and the
                earlier expiration of patents whereby the inventions covered become
                freely available to the public.
                 Filing terminal disclaimers early in prosecution reduces the amount
                of time examiners must spend on nonstatutory double patenting analyses.
                Because double patenting rejections are made on a claim-by-claim basis,
                an examiner must compare each claim of the application being examined
                against each claim of the reference patent or application. As explained
                in MPEP 804 subsection II.B, this comparison includes construing the
                reference claims and determining whether an anticipation analysis or
                obviousness analysis is appropriate for each examined claim. Examiners
                may spend a substantial amount of time on these analyses and must
                repeat the process for each reference patent or application used in a
                double patenting rejection. If an applicant files terminal disclaimers
                prior to the first action on the merits, the examiner can avoid the
                time-intensive double patenting analyses that would otherwise be
                required. Further, if an applicant does not file a terminal disclaimer
                after a rejection has been made, the examiner will often have to repeat
                the analysis one or more times. Double patenting rejections may need to
                be modified throughout prosecution based on amendments to the claims
                under examination and, in the case of a provisional rejection,
                amendments to the claims of the reference application. If a terminal
                disclaimer is not promptly filed, the examiner may have to repeat the
                analysis in a final rejection and at appeal, and the time spent
                repeating this analysis detracts from the total time available to
                review the application for other issues such as patentability over the
                art and compliance with 35 U.S.C. 112.
                 Terminal disclaimers filed in patents and applications for reissue
                are subject to the highest fee tier in proposed Sec. 1.20(d)(2)(v) to
                more strongly encourage the earlier filing of such disclaimers given
                the public interest in knowing exactly when the term will end,
                particularly as disclaimer filings during this time period are often
                motivated by the patent owner's plans to assert the patent. Relatively
                few disclaimers are filed during this time period (approximately 40 to
                80 a year, or about 1% of all terminal disclaimers). Moreover, terminal
                disclaimers in patented cases require additional processing such as
                printing the terminal disclaimer data in the Official Gazette; and
                incorporating the notice of the terminal disclaimer published in the
                Official Gazette into the specification of the patent as required by
                Sec. 1.321(a). See MPEP 1490(IV) for more information about this
                additional processing by the USPTO's Certificates of Correction Branch.
                 Other than requiring payment of the fifth-tier fee in Sec.
                1.20(d)(2)(v), this proposed rule will not change the processing of
                terminal disclaimers after issuance or the conditions under which a
                terminal disclaimer may be filed in a patent when the patent is
                involved in a post-grant proceeding at the USPTO such as a
                reexamination or a proceeding before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board
                under part 42 of 37 CFR (e.g., inter partes review). See MPEP 1490(III)
                for more information about filing a disclaimer in a patent or
                reexamination proceeding.
                 Based on workload numbers from the last five full fiscal years (FY
                2018 through FY 2022), about 63,000 terminal disclaimers are filed
                annually. Of these, about 6% would incur the first-tier fee in Sec.
                1.20(d)(2)(i), about 65% would incur the second-tier fee in Sec.
                1.20(d)(2)(ii), about 28% would incur the third-tier fee in Sec.
                1.20(d)(2)(iii), slightly less than 1% would incur the fourth-tier fee
                in Sec. 1.20(d)(2)(iv), and approximately 0.1% would incur the fifth-
                tier fee in proposed Sec. 1.20(d)(2)(v). After implementation of the
                proposed fees, the USPTO anticipates that applicants will file earlier
                terminal disclaimers, particularly those currently filed in the time
                periods that fall into the third and fourth tiers.
                 While these fees do not qualify for entity discounts, the proposed
                fees are not expected to disproportionately impact small and micro
                entities based on current trends in filing continuation applications
                and terminal disclaimers. For instance, because about 80% of
                [[Page 23250]]
                continuation applications have a patented parent, in general they may
                be more likely than non-continuing applications to raise double
                patenting issues requiring filing of a terminal disclaimer. Thus, it is
                reasonable to expect that terminal disclaimer filings would be somewhat
                proportional to continuation filings (the correlation is not exact,
                because double patenting may also arise in noncontinuing applications,
                as explained in MPEP 804). This expectation is supported by the USPTO's
                workload data for FY 2021 and FY 2022, which indicate that small
                entities file about 25% of continuation applications and about 26% of
                terminal disclaimers each year. Micro entities are much less affected,
                in that they file about 8% of continuation applications but only about
                1% of terminal disclaimers each year. Thus, the anticipated impact of
                the proposed terminal disclaimer fees on small entities is the same as
                what would be expected based on their respective share of continuation
                application filings, and micro entities are much less likely to be
                impacted.
                 The USPTO also anticipates that the proposed fees will be
                relatively technology-neutral. Slightly higher impacts may occur in
                technology areas examined in Technology Center 1600 (biotechnology and
                organic chemistry) and Technology Center 2400 (computer networks,
                multiplex, cable, and cryptography/security).
                12. Unintentional Delay Petition Fees
                 Table 15--Unintentional Delay Petition Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Petition for the delayed payment of the fee for Undiscounted.......................... $2,100 $2,200 $100 5 $161
                 maintaining a patent in force, delay less than
                 or equal to two years.
                Petition for the delayed payment of the fee for Small................................. 840 880 40 5 161
                 maintaining a patent in force, delay less than
                 or equal to two years.
                Petition for the delayed payment of the fee for Micro................................. 420 440 20 5 161
                 maintaining a patent in force, delay less than
                 or equal to two years.
                Petition for the delayed payment of the fee for Undiscounted.......................... 2,100 3,000 900 43 n/a
                 maintaining a patent in force, delay greater
                 than two years.
                Petition for the delayed payment of the fee for Small................................. 840 1,200 360 43 n/a
                 maintaining a patent in force, delay greater
                 than two years.
                Petition for the delayed payment of the fee for Micro................................. 420 600 180 43 n/a
                 maintaining a patent in force, delay greater
                 than two years.
                Petition for revival of an abandoned Undiscounted.......................... 2,100 2,200 100 5 376
                 application for a patent, for the delayed
                 payment of the fee for issuing each patent, or
                 for the delayed response by the patent owner
                 in any reexamination proceeding, delay less
                 than or equal to two years.
                Petition for revival of an abandoned Small................................. 840 880 40 5 376
                 application for a patent, for the delayed
                 payment of the fee for issuing each patent, or
                 for the delayed response by the patent owner
                 in any reexamination proceeding, delay less
                 than or equal to two years.
                Petition for revival of an abandoned Micro................................. 420 440 20 5 376
                 application for a patent, for the delayed
                 payment of the fee for issuing each patent, or
                 for the delayed response by the patent owner
                 in any reexamination proceeding, delay less
                 than or equal to two years.
                Petition for revival of an abandoned Undiscounted.......................... 2,100 3,000 900 43 n/a
                 application for a patent, for the delayed
                 payment of the fee for issuing each patent, or
                 for the delayed response by the patent owner
                 in any reexamination proceeding, delay greater
                 than two years.
                Petition for revival of an abandoned Small................................. 840 1,200 360 43 n/a
                 application for a patent, for the delayed
                 payment of the fee for issuing each patent, or
                 for the delayed response by the patent owner
                 in any reexamination proceeding, delay greater
                 than two years.
                Petition for revival of an abandoned Micro................................. 420 600 180 43 n/a
                 application for a patent, for the delayed
                 payment of the fee for issuing each patent, or
                 for the delayed response by the patent owner
                 in any reexamination proceeding, delay greater
                 than two years.
                Petition for the delayed submission of a Undiscounted.......................... 2,100 2,200 100 5 376
                 priority or benefit claim, delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                Petition for the delayed submission of a Small................................. 840 880 40 5 376
                 priority or benefit claim, delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                [[Page 23251]]
                
                Petition for the delayed submission of a Micro................................. 420 440 20 5 376
                 priority or benefit claim, delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                Petition for the delayed submission of a Undiscounted.......................... 2,100 3,000 900 43 n/a
                 priority or benefit claim, delay greater than
                 two years.
                Petition for the delayed submission of a Small................................. 840 1,200 360 43 n/a
                 priority or benefit claim, delay greater than
                 two years.
                Petition for the delayed submission of a Micro................................. 420 600 180 43 n/a
                 priority or benefit claim, delay greater than
                 two years.
                Petition to excuse applicant's failure to act Undiscounted.......................... 2,100 2,200 100 5 n/a
                 within prescribed time limits in an
                 international design application, delay less
                 than or equal to two years.
                Petition to excuse applicant's failure to act Small................................. 840 880 40 5 n/a
                 within prescribed time limits in an
                 international design application, delay less
                 than or equal to two years.
                Petition to excuse applicant's failure to act Micro................................. 420 440 20 5 n/a
                 within prescribed time limits in an
                 international design application, delay less
                 than or equal to two years.
                Petition to excuse applicant's failure to act Undiscounted.......................... 2,100 3,000 900 43 n/a
                 within prescribed time limits in an
                 international design application, delay
                 greater than two years.
                Petition to excuse applicant's failure to act Small................................. 840 1,200 360 43 n/a
                 within prescribed time limits in an
                 international design application, delay
                 greater than two years.
                Petition to excuse applicant's failure to act Micro................................. 420 600 180 43 n/a
                 within prescribed time limits in an
                 international design application, delay
                 greater than two years.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 During FY 2020, the USPTO issued a notice to clarify when
                additional information is required to support a petition for
                unintentional delay. See Clarification of the Practice for Requiring
                Additional Information in Petitions Filed in Patent Applications and
                Patents Based on Unintentional Delay, 85 FR 12222 (March 2, 2020) (2020
                Notice). Petitions based on unintentional delay include petitions
                seeking revival of an abandoned application, acceptance of a delayed
                maintenance fee payment, and acceptance of a delayed priority or
                benefit claim. The 2020 Notice clarified that ``any applicant filing a
                petition to revive an abandoned application under Sec. 1.137 more than
                two years after the date of abandonment, any patentee filing a petition
                to accept a delayed maintenance fee under Sec. 1.378 more than two
                years after the date of expiration for nonpayment of a maintenance fee,
                and any applicant or patent owner filing a petition to accept a delayed
                priority or benefit claim under Sec. 1.55(e) or Sec. 1.78(c) and (e)
                more than two years after the due date of the priority or benefit claim
                should expect to be required to provide an additional explanation of
                the circumstances surrounding the delay that establishes that the
                entire delay was unintentional.'' Id at 112223.
                As the evidentiary requirements for these petitions have increased,
                the costs to review and treat these petitions have also increased due
                to the higher level of review needed to consider the additional
                explanation. Accordingly, the USPTO seeks to create a new higher fee
                for petitions based on unintentional delay over two years to recover
                their additional associated costs. The higher fee should encourage
                timely petition filings and avoid delays in the examination process.
                The new higher fee would apply to petitions under Sec. 1.78(c) and (e)
                to accept a delayed benefit claim submitted more than two years after
                the date the benefit claim was due; under Sec. 1.55(e) to accept a
                delayed priority claim more than two years after the date the foreign
                priority claim was due; under Sec. 1.137 to revive an abandoned
                application or reexamination proceeding more than two years after the
                date of abandonment; under Sec. 1.378 to seek reinstatement of an
                expired patent more than two years after the date of expiration for
                nonpayment of a maintenance fee; and under Sec. 1.1051 to excuse an
                applicant's failure to act within prescribed time limits in an
                international design application.
                 The USPTO receives approximately 12,000 petitions each year based
                upon the unintentional standard (FY 2021, 12,752 petitions; FY 2022,
                11,755 petitions). About 10% of these petitions (1,200) have a delay of
                more than two years. Therefore, the higher cost for petitions having a
                delay of greater than two years should not have a significant impact on
                patent applicants overall. The increased fee will help ensure those
                applicants requesting the service pay its costs, thereby reducing
                subsidization from other patent applicants.
                13. America Invents Act Trial Fees
                 Table 16--AIA Trial Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Inter partes review request fee--Up to 20 Undiscounted.......................... $19,000 $23,750 $4,750 25 $21,980
                 claims.
                Inter partes review post-institution fee--Up to Undiscounted.......................... 22,500 28,125 5,625 25 37,563
                 20 claims.
                [[Page 23252]]
                
                Inter partes review request of each claim in Undiscounted.......................... 375 470 95 25 n/a
                 excess of 20.
                Inter partes post-institution request of each Undiscounted.......................... 750 940 190 25 n/a
                 claim in excess of 20.
                Post-grant or covered business method review Undiscounted.......................... 20,000 25,000 5,000 25 37,683
                 request fee--Up to 20 claims.
                Post-grant or covered business method review Undiscounted.......................... 27,500 34,375 6,875 25 49,198
                 post-institution fee--Up to 20 claims.
                Post-grant or covered business method review Undiscounted.......................... 475 595 120 25 n/a
                 request of each claim in excess of 20.
                Post-grant or covered business method review Undiscounted.......................... 1,050 1,315 265 25 n/a
                 post-institution request of each claim in
                 excess of 20.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO proposes increasing existing fees for AIA trial
                proceedings by 25%. Under 35 U.S.C. 311(a) and 321(a), the USPTO
                Director must establish reasonable fees for inter partes and post-grant
                review in relation to their aggregate costs. The proposed fee increases
                will better align the fee rates charged to petitioners with the actual
                costs borne by the USPTO in providing these proceedings. This proposed
                change will help the PTAB maintain the appropriate level of judicial
                and administrative resources to continue providing high-quality and
                timely decisions for AIA trials.
                14. Request for Review of a PTAB Decision by the Director
                 Table 17--Request for Review of a PTAB Decision by the Director Fees
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Proposed Dollar Percent FY 2022
                 Description Entity type Current fee fee change change unit cost
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Request for review of a PTAB decision by the Undiscounted.......................... New $440 n/a n/a n/a
                 Director.
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The USPTO proposes to charge a new fee in AIA trial proceedings
                under part 42 to parties requesting Director Review of the PTAB's: (1)
                decision whether to institute a trial; (2) final written decision; or
                (3) decision granting a request for rehearing from either the Board's
                decision whether to institute trial or the Board's final written
                decision. The proposed fee is set at the same rate as a petition to the
                Chief Judge in ex parte appeals and is designed to partially recover
                the USPTO's costs for conducting Director Reviews. The proposed fee is
                part of the agency's ongoing efforts to formalize the Director Review
                process developed in response to the Supreme Court's decision in United
                States v. Arthrex, Inc. and furthers the USPTO's goals of promoting
                innovation through consistent, transparent decision-making and the
                issuance and maintenance of reliable patents.
                 More specifically, the Director of the USPTO is a statutory member
                of the PTAB. See 35 U.S.C. 6(a). On June 21, 2021, the Supreme Court
                issued a decision in United States v. Arthrex, Inc., and explained that
                ``constitutional principles chart a clear course: Decisions by
                [administrative patent judges (APJs)] must be subject to review by the
                Director.'' See 141 S. Ct. 1970, 1986 (2021). Following the statutory
                authority provided to the Director by Congress and the constitutional
                principles explained by the Supreme Court, the USPTO set forth an
                interim process for Director Review, which has been updated
                periodically. The agency sought public feedback on the interim process
                and is using feedback to promulgate rules.
                 As a part of the interim process, when the USPTO receives a
                Director Review request from a party to an AIA proceeding, the request
                is processed and routed to an advisory committee that assists with
                Director Review. The committee includes at least 11 representatives
                from various USPTO business units who serve at the Director's
                discretion. Members independently review each request and associated
                case materials, and the committee meets regularly to recommend which
                requests for review should be granted. The Director considers each
                request, its case materials, and the committee's recommendation in
                determining whether to grant or deny review. When the Director
                determines to grant review, personnel from various USPTO business units
                assist in case processing and in issuing and publicizing the Director
                Review decision.
                 Given the number of agency personnel involved in Director Review,
                the USPTO expects its costs to be significantly higher than the
                proposed fee. The agency plans to formally capture and evaluate these
                costs in the future.
                D. Amendment to Obtaining a Refund Through Express Abandonment
                 The USPTO proposes amending paragraph (d) of Sec. 1.138, which
                permits an applicant to obtain a refund of the search and excess claims
                fees that were paid in an application by submitting a petition and
                declaration of express abandonment before an examination has been made
                of the application. The current rule permits such refunds only in
                nonprovisional applications filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) and Sec.
                1.53(b). The proposed amendment would expand the applicability of the
                rule to permit such refunds in national stage applications filed under
                35 U.S.C. 371.
                 The amendment would also clarify that refunds of search and excess
                claim fee payments under these provisions are limited to the search and
                excess claim fees set forth in Sec. 1.16 (which apply to applications
                filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) and Sec. 1.53(b)) and search and excess
                claim fees set forth in Sec. 1.492 (which apply to national stage
                [[Page 23253]]
                applications filed under 35 U.S.C. 371). No refunds would be permitted
                of any search fees paid under Sec. 1.445 during the international
                stage of an application filed under the PCT, even if such an
                application later enters the national stage under 35 U.S.C. 371.
                 The petition process and the conditions under which a refund will
                be granted will not otherwise change. See MPEP 711.01 subsection III
                for more information. The proposed amendment would put national stage
                applications on the same footing as applications filed under 35 U.S.C.
                111(a) when an application is expressly abandoned prior to examination.
                VI. Discussion of Specific Rules
                 The following part shows the Code of Federal Regulations proposed
                fee amendments. The discussion below includes all proposed fee
                amendments and all proposed changes to the CFR text.
                 Title 37 of the CFR, parts 1, 41, and 42, are proposed to be
                amended as follows:
                Section 1.16
                 Section 1.16 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a)
                through (s) and (u) to set forth national application filing, search,
                examination, and related fees as authorized under section 10 of the
                AIA. The changes to the fee amounts indicated in Sec. 1.16 are shown
                in table 18.
                 Table 18--Section 1.16 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.16(a)..................... 1011 Basic filing fee-- Undiscounted............. $320 $350
                 Utility (paper
                 filing also
                 requires non-
                 electronic filing
                 fee under 1.16(t)).
                1.16(a)..................... 2011 Basic filing fee-- Small.................... 128 140
                 Utility (paper
                 filing also
                 requires non-
                 electronic filing
                 fee under 1.16(t)).
                1.16(a)..................... 3011 Basic filing fee-- Micro.................... 64 70
                 Utility (paper
                 filing also
                 requires non-
                 electronic filing
                 fee under 1.16(t)).
                1.16(a)..................... 4011 Basic filing fee-- Small.................... 64 70
                 Utility (electronic
                 filing for small
                 entities).
                1.16(b)..................... 1012 Basic filing fee-- Undiscounted............. 220 300
                 Design.
                1.16(b)..................... 2012 Basic filing fee-- Small.................... 88 120
                 Design.
                1.16(b)..................... 3012 Basic filing fee-- Micro.................... 44 60
                 Design.
                1.16(b)..................... 1017 Basic filing fee-- Undiscounted............. 220 300
                 Design CPA.
                1.16(b)..................... 2017 Basic filing fee-- Small.................... 88 120
                 Design CPA.
                1.16(b)..................... 3017 Basic filing fee-- Micro.................... 44 60
                 Design CPA.
                1.16(c)..................... 1013 Basic filing fee-- Undiscounted............. 220 240
                 Plant.
                1.16(c)..................... 2013 Basic filing fee-- Small.................... 88 96
                 Plant.
                1.16(c)..................... 3013 Basic filing fee-- Micro.................... 44 48
                 Plant.
                1.16(d)..................... 1005 Provisional Undiscounted............. 300 315
                 application filing
                 fee.
                1.16(d)..................... 2005 Provisional Small.................... 120 126
                 application filing
                 fee.
                1.16(d)..................... 3005 Provisional Micro.................... 60 63
                 application filing
                 fee.
                1.16(e)..................... 1014 Basic filing fee-- Undiscounted............. 320 350
                 Reissue.
                1.16(e)..................... 2014 Basic filing fee-- Small.................... 128 140
                 Reissue.
                1.16(e)..................... 3014 Basic filing fee-- Micro.................... 64 70
                 Reissue.
                1.16(e)..................... 1019 Basic filing fee-- Undiscounted............. 320 350
                 Reissue (Design
                 CPA).
                1.16(e)..................... 2019 Basic filing fee-- Small.................... 128 140
                 Reissue (Design
                 CPA).
                1.16(e)..................... 3019 Basic filing fee-- Micro.................... 64 70
                 Reissue (Design
                 CPA).
                1.16(f)..................... 1051 Surcharge--Late Undiscounted............. 160 170
                 filing fee, search
                 fee, examination
                 fee, inventor's
                 oath or
                 declaration, or
                 application filed
                 without at least
                 one claim or by
                 reference.
                1.16(f)..................... 2051 Surcharge--Late Small.................... 64 68
                 filing fee, search
                 fee, examination
                 fee, inventor's
                 oath or
                 declaration, or
                 application filed
                 without at least
                 one claim or by
                 reference.
                1.16(f)..................... 3051 Surcharge--Late Micro.................... 32 34
                 filing fee, search
                 fee, examination
                 fee, inventor's
                 oath or
                 declaration, or
                 application filed
                 without at least
                 one claim or by
                 reference.
                1.16(g)..................... 1052 Surcharge--Late Undiscounted............. 60 65
                 provisional filing
                 fee or cover sheet.
                1.16(g)..................... 2052 Surcharge--Late Small.................... 24 26
                 provisional filing
                 fee or cover sheet.
                1.16(g)..................... 3052 Surcharge--Late Micro.................... 12 13
                 provisional filing
                 fee or cover sheet.
                1.16(h)..................... 1201 Each independent Undiscounted............. 480 600
                 claim in excess of
                 three.
                1.16(h)..................... 2201 Each independent Small.................... 192 240
                 claim in excess of
                 three.
                1.16(h)..................... 3201 Each independent Micro.................... 96 120
                 claim in excess of
                 three.
                1.16(h)..................... 1204 Each reissue Undiscounted............. 480 600
                 independent claim
                 in excess of three.
                1.16(h)..................... 2204 Each reissue Small.................... 192 240
                 independent claim
                 in excess of three.
                1.16(h)..................... 3204 Each reissue Micro.................... 96 120
                 independent claim
                 in excess of three.
                1.16(i)..................... 1202 Each claim in excess Undiscounted............. 100 200
                 of 20.
                1.16(i)..................... 2202 Each claim in excess Small.................... 40 80
                 of 20.
                1.16(i)..................... 3202 Each claim in excess Micro.................... 20 40
                 of 20.
                1.16(i)..................... 1205 Each reissue claim Undiscounted............. 100 200
                 in excess of 20.
                1.16(i)..................... 2205 Each reissue claim Small.................... 40 80
                 in excess of 20.
                1.16(i)..................... 3205 Each reissue claim Micro.................... 20 40
                 in excess of 20.
                1.16(j)..................... 1203 Multiple dependent Undiscounted............. 860 905
                 claim.
                1.16(j)..................... 2203 Multiple dependent Small.................... 344 362
                 claim.
                1.16(j)..................... 3203 Multiple dependent Micro.................... 172 181
                 claim.
                1.16(k)..................... 1111 Utility search fee.. Undiscounted............. 700 770
                1.16(k)..................... 2111 Utility search fee.. Small.................... 280 308
                1.16(k)..................... 3111 Utility search fee.. Micro.................... 140 154
                1.16(l)..................... 1112 Design search fee or Undiscounted............. 160 300
                 Design CPA search
                 fee.
                [[Page 23254]]
                
                1.16(l)..................... 2112 Design search fee or Small.................... 64 120
                 Design CPA search
                 fee.
                1.16(l)..................... 3112 Design search fee or Micro.................... 32 60
                 Design CPA search
                 fee.
                1.16(m)..................... 1113 Plant search fee.... Undiscounted............. 440 485
                1.16(m)..................... 2113 Plant search fee.... Small.................... 176 194
                1.16(m)..................... 3113 Plant search fee.... Micro.................... 88 97
                1.16(n)..................... 1114 Reissue search fee Undiscounted............. 700 770
                 or Reissue (Design
                 CPA) search fee.
                1.16(n)..................... 2114 Reissue search fee Small.................... 280 308
                 or Reissue (Design
                 CPA) search fee.
                1.16(n)..................... 3114 Reissue search fee Micro.................... 140 154
                 or Reissue (Design
                 CPA) search fee.
                1.16(o)..................... 1311 Utility examination Undiscounted............. 800 880
                 fee.
                1.16(o)..................... 2311 Utility examination Small.................... 320 352
                 fee.
                1.16(o)..................... 3311 Utility examination Micro.................... 160 176
                 fee.
                1.16(p)..................... 1312 Design examination Undiscounted............. 640 700
                 fee or Design CPA
                 examination fee.
                1.16(p)..................... 2312 Design examination Small.................... 256 280
                 fee or Design CPA
                 examination fee.
                1.16(p)..................... 3312 Design examination Micro.................... 128 140
                 fee or Design CPA
                 examination fee.
                1.16(q)..................... 1313 Plant examination Undiscounted............. 660 725
                 fee.
                1.16(q)..................... 2313 Plant examination Small.................... 264 290
                 fee.
                1.16(q)..................... 3313 Plant examination Micro.................... 132 145
                 fee.
                1.16(r)..................... 1314 Reissue examination Undiscounted............. 2,320 2,550
                 fee or Reissue
                 (Design CPA)
                 examination fee.
                1.16(r)..................... 2314 Reissue examination Small.................... 928 1,020
                 fee or Reissue
                 (Design CPA)
                 examination fee.
                1.16(r)..................... 3314 Reissue examination Micro.................... 464 510
                 fee or Reissue
                 (Design CPA)
                 examination fee.
                1.16(s)..................... 1082 Design application Undiscounted............. 420 440
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 2082 Design application Small.................... 168 176
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 3082 Design application Micro.................... 84 88
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 1083 Plant application Undiscounted............. 420 440
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 2083 Plant application Small.................... 168 176
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 3083 Plant application Micro.................... 84 88
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 1085 Provisional Undiscounted............. 420 440
                 application size
                 fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 2085 Provisional Small.................... 168 176
                 application size
                 fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 3085 Provisional Micro.................... 84 88
                 application size
                 fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 1084 Reissue application Undiscounted............. 420 440
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 2084 Reissue application Small.................... 168 176
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 3084 Reissue application Micro.................... 84 88
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 1081 Utility application Undiscounted............. 420 440
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 2081 Utility application Small.................... 168 176
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(s)..................... 3081 Utility application Micro.................... 84 88
                 size fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.16(u)..................... 1054 Non-DOCX Filing Undiscounted............. 400 420
                 Surcharge Fee.
                1.16(u)..................... 2054 Non-DOCX Filing Small.................... 160 168
                 Surcharge Fee.
                1.16(u)..................... 3054 Non-DOCX Filing Micro.................... 80 84
                 Surcharge Fee.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 1.17
                 Section 1.17 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a),
                (c) through (i), (k), (m), and (o) through (t); and adding paragraphs
                (u), (v), (w), and (x) to set forth application processing fees as
                authorized under section 10 of the AIA. The changes to the fee amounts
                indicated in Sec. 1.17 are shown in table 19.
                 The USPTO proposes to revise the introductory text of paragraph (a)
                to exclude provisional applications filed under 1.53(c).
                 The USPTO proposes to revise paragraph (e)(2) to include only the
                second request for continued examination and adding paragraph (e)(3) to
                create a fee for third and subsequent requests for continued
                examination. The USPTO proposes to revise paragraph (g) by splitting it
                into two paragraphs (g)(1) and (2). Proposed paragraph (g)(1) would be
                the same as existing paragraph (g) except for the removal of Sec.
                1.103(a) from its coverage. Proposed new paragraphs (g)(2)(i) and (ii)
                would specify the fees for filing a first request pursuant to Sec.
                1.103(a) respectively. The USPTO proposes to add paragraphs (m)(1)
                through (3) to
                [[Page 23255]]
                create tiered fees for unintentionally delayed petitions based on the
                length of the delay.
                 The USPTO proposes to add paragraphs (u) through (x). Paragraph (u)
                creates a lower fee for extension fees pursuant to Sec. 1.136(a) in
                provisional applications filed under Sec. 1.53(c). Paragraph (v)
                creates fees for information disclosure statements filed under Sec.
                1.97. Paragraph (w) creates fees for presenting a benefit claim in a
                nonprovisional application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, 365(c), or 386(c)
                and Sec. 1.78(d). Paragraph (x) creates a fee for the After Final
                Consideration Pilot Program 2.0.
                 Table 19--Section 1.17 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.17(a)(1)................... 1251 Extension for Undiscounted............ $220 $230
                 response within
                 first month, except
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(1)................... 2251 Extension for Small................... 88 92
                 response within
                 first month, except
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(1)................... 3251 Extension for Micro................... 44 46
                 response within
                 first month, except
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(2)................... 1252 Extension for Undiscounted............ 640 670
                 response within
                 second month,
                 except provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(2)................... 2252 Extension for Small................... 256 268
                 response within
                 second month,
                 except provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(2)................... 3252 Extension for Micro................... 128 134
                 response within
                 second month,
                 except provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(3)................... 1253 Extension for Undiscounted............ 1,480 1,555
                 response within
                 third month, except
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(3)................... 2253 Extension for Small................... 592 622
                 response within
                 third month, except
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(3)................... 3253 Extension for Micro................... 296 311
                 response within
                 third month, except
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(4)................... 1254 Extension for Undiscounted............ 2,320 2,435
                 response within
                 fourth month,
                 except provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(4)................... 2254 Extension for Small................... 928 974
                 response within
                 fourth month,
                 except provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(4)................... 3254 Extension for Micro................... 464 487
                 response within
                 fourth month,
                 except provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(5)................... 1255 Extension for Undiscounted............ 3,160 3,320
                 response within
                 fifth month, except
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(5)................... 2255 Extension for Small................... 1,264 1,328
                 response within
                 fifth month, except
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(a)(5)................... 3255 Extension for Micro................... 632 664
                 response within
                 fifth month, except
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(c)...................... 1817 Request for Undiscounted............ 4,200 4,410
                 prioritized
                 examination.
                1.17(c)...................... 2817 Request for Small................... 1,680 1,764
                 prioritized
                 examination.
                1.17(c)...................... 3817 Request for Micro................... 840 882
                 prioritized
                 examination.
                1.17(d)...................... 1819 Correction of Undiscounted............ 640 670
                 inventorship after
                 first action on
                 merits.
                1.17(d)...................... 2819 Correction of Small................... 256 268
                 inventorship after
                 first action on
                 merits.
                1.17(d)...................... 3819 Correction of Micro................... 128 134
                 inventorship after
                 first action on
                 merits.
                1.17(e)(1)................... 1801 Request for Undiscounted............ 1,360 1,500
                 continued
                 examination (RCE)--
                 1st request (see 37
                 CFR 1.114).
                1.17(e)(1)................... 2801 Request for Small................... 544 600
                 continued
                 examination (RCE)--
                 1st request (see 37
                 CFR 1.114).
                1.17(e)(1)................... 3801 Request for Micro................... 272 300
                 continued
                 examination (RCE)--
                 1st request (see 37
                 CFR 1.114).
                1.17(e)(2)................... 1820 Request for Undiscounted............ 2,000 2,500
                 continued
                 examination (RCE)--
                 2nd request (see 37
                 CFR 1.114).
                1.17(e)(2)................... 2820 Request for Small................... 800 1,000
                 continued
                 examination (RCE)--
                 2nd request (see 37
                 CFR 1.114).
                1.17(e)(2)................... 3820 Request for Micro................... 400 500
                 continued
                 examination (RCE)--
                 2nd request (see 37
                 CFR 1.114).
                1.17(e)(3)................... New Request for Undiscounted............ 2,000 3,600
                 continued
                 examination (RCE)--
                 3rd and subsequent
                 request (see 37 CFR
                 1.114).
                1.17(e)(3)................... New Request for Small................... 800 1,440
                 continued
                 examination (RCE)--
                 3rd and subsequent
                 request (see 37 CFR
                 1.114).
                1.17(e)(3)................... New Request for Micro................... 400 720
                 continued
                 examination (RCE)--
                 3rd and subsequent
                 request (see 37 CFR
                 1.114).
                1.17(f)...................... 1462 Petitions requiring Undiscounted............ 420 440
                 the petition fee
                 set forth in 37 CFR
                 1.17(f) (Group I).
                1.17(f)...................... 2462 Petitions requiring Small................... 168 176
                 the petition fee
                 set forth in 37 CFR
                 1.17(f) (Group I).
                1.17(f)...................... 3462 Petitions requiring Micro................... 84 88
                 the petition fee
                 set forth in 37 CFR
                 1.17(f) (Group I).
                1.17(g)(1)................... 1463 Petitions requiring Undiscounted............ 220 230
                 the petition fee
                 set forth in 37 CFR
                 1.17(g) (Group II),
                 except suspension
                 of action.
                [[Page 23256]]
                
                1.17(g)(1)................... 2463 Petitions requiring Small................... 88 92
                 the petition fee
                 set forth in 37 CFR
                 1.17(g) (Group II),
                 except suspension
                 of action.
                1.17(g)(1)................... 3463 Petitions requiring Micro................... 44 46
                 the petition fee
                 set forth in 37 CFR
                 1.17(g) (Group II),
                 except suspension
                 of action.
                1.17(g)(2)(i)................ New First request for Undiscounted............ 220 300
                 suspension of
                 action.
                1.17(g)(2)(i)................ New First request for Small................... 88 120
                 suspension of
                 action.
                1.17(g)(2)(i)................ New First request for Micro................... 44 60
                 suspension of
                 action.
                1.17(g)(2)(ii)............... New Subsequent request Undiscounted............ 220 450
                 for suspension of
                 action.
                1.17(g)(2)(ii)............... New Subsequent request Small................... 88 180
                 for suspension of
                 action.
                1.17(g)(2)(ii)............... New Subsequent request Micro................... 44 90
                 for suspension of
                 action.
                1.17(h)...................... 1464 Petitions requiring Undiscounted............ 140 145
                 the petition fee
                 set forth in 37 CFR
                 1.17(h) (Group III).
                1.17(h)...................... 2464 Petitions requiring Small................... 56 58
                 the petition fee
                 set forth in 37 CFR
                 1.17(h) (Group III).
                1.17(h)...................... 3464 Petitions requiring Micro................... 28 29
                 the petition fee
                 set forth in 37 CFR
                 1.17(h) (Group III).
                1.17(i)(1)................... 1053 Non-English Undiscounted............ 140 145
                 translation.
                1.17(i)(1)................... 2053 Non-English Small................... 56 58
                 translation.
                1.17(i)(1)................... 3053 Non-English Micro................... 28 29
                 translation.
                1.17(i)(1)................... 1830 Processing fee, Undiscounted............ 140 145
                 except in
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(i)(1)................... 2830 Processing fee, Small................... 56 58
                 except in
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(i)(1)................... 3830 Processing fee, Micro................... 28 29
                 except in
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(i)(2)................... 1808 Other publication Undiscounted............ 140 147
                 processing fee.
                1.17(i)(2)................... 2808 Other publication Small................... 140 147
                 processing fee.
                1.17(i)(2)................... 3808 Other publication Micro................... 140 147
                 processing fee.
                1.17(i)(2)................... 1803 Request for Undiscounted............ 140 147
                 voluntary
                 publication or
                 republication.
                1.17(i)(2)................... 2803 Request for Small................... 140 147
                 voluntary
                 publication or
                 republication.
                1.17(i)(2)................... 3803 Request for Micro................... 140 147
                 voluntary
                 publication or
                 republication.
                1.17(k)...................... 1802 Request for Undiscounted............ 1,600 1,680
                 expedited
                 examination of a
                 design application.
                1.17(k)...................... 2802 Request for Small................... 640 672
                 expedited
                 examination of a
                 design application.
                1.17(k)...................... 3802 Request for Micro................... 320 336
                 expedited
                 examination of a
                 design application.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition for the Undiscounted............ 2,100 3,000
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for
                 maintaining a
                 patent in force,
                 delay greater than
                 two years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition for the Small................... 840 1,200
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for
                 maintaining a
                 patent in force,
                 delay greater than
                 two years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition for the Micro................... 420 600
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for
                 maintaining a
                 patent in force,
                 delay greater than
                 two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 1558 Petition for the Undiscounted............ 2,100 2,200
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for
                 maintaining a
                 patent in force,
                 delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 2558 Petition for the Small................... 840 880
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for
                 maintaining a
                 patent in force,
                 delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 3558 Petition for the Micro................... 420 440
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for
                 maintaining a
                 patent in force,
                 delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition for revival Undiscounted............ 2,100 3,000
                 of an abandoned
                 application for a
                 patent, for the
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for issuing
                 each patent, or for
                 the delayed
                 response by the
                 patent owner in any
                 reexamination
                 proceeding, delay
                 greater than two
                 years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition for revival Small................... 840 1,200
                 of an abandoned
                 application for a
                 patent, for the
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for issuing
                 each patent, or for
                 the delayed
                 response by the
                 patent owner in any
                 reexamination
                 proceeding, delay
                 greater than two
                 years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition for revival Micro................... 420 600
                 of an abandoned
                 application for a
                 patent, for the
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for issuing
                 each patent, or for
                 the delayed
                 response by the
                 patent owner in any
                 reexamination
                 proceeding, delay
                 greater than two
                 years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 1453 Petition for revival Undiscounted............ 2,100 2,200
                 of an abandoned
                 application for a
                 patent, for the
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for issuing
                 each patent, or for
                 the delayed
                 response by the
                 patent owner in any
                 reexamination
                 proceeding, delay
                 less than or equal
                 to two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 2453 Petition for revival Small................... 840 880
                 of an abandoned
                 application for a
                 patent, for the
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for issuing
                 each patent, or for
                 the delayed
                 response by the
                 patent owner in any
                 reexamination
                 proceeding, delay
                 less than or equal
                 to two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 3453 Petition for revival Micro................... 420 440
                 of an abandoned
                 application for a
                 patent, for the
                 delayed payment of
                 the fee for issuing
                 each patent, or for
                 the delayed
                 response by the
                 patent owner in any
                 reexamination
                 proceeding, delay
                 less than or equal
                 to two years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition for the Undiscounted............ 2,100 3,000
                 delayed submission
                 of a priority or
                 benefit claim,
                 delay greater than
                 two years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition for the Small................... 840 1,200
                 delayed submission
                 of a priority or
                 benefit claim,
                 delay greater than
                 two years.
                [[Page 23257]]
                
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition for the Micro................... 420 600
                 delayed submission
                 of a priority or
                 benefit claim,
                 delay greater than
                 two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 1454 Petition for the Undiscounted............ 2,100 2,200
                 delayed submission
                 of a priority or
                 benefit claim,
                 delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 2454 Petition for the Small................... 840 880
                 delayed submission
                 of a priority or
                 benefit claim,
                 delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 3454 Petition for the Micro................... 420 440
                 delayed submission
                 of a priority or
                 benefit claim,
                 delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition to excuse Undiscounted............ 2,100 3,000
                 applicant's failure
                 to act within
                 prescribed time
                 limits in an
                 international
                 design application,
                 delay greater than
                 two years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition to excuse Small................... 840 1,200
                 applicant's failure
                 to act within
                 prescribed time
                 limits in an
                 international
                 design application,
                 delay greater than
                 two years.
                1.17(m)(1)................... New Petition to excuse Micro................... 420 600
                 applicant's failure
                 to act within
                 prescribed time
                 limits in an
                 international
                 design application,
                 delay greater than
                 two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 1784 Petition to excuse Undiscounted............ 2,100 2,200
                 applicant's failure
                 to act within
                 prescribed time
                 limits in an
                 international
                 design application,
                 delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 2784 Petition to excuse Small................... 840 880
                 applicant's failure
                 to act within
                 prescribed time
                 limits in an
                 international
                 design application,
                 delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                1.17(m)(2)................... 3784 Petition to excuse Micro................... 420 440
                 applicant's failure
                 to act within
                 prescribed time
                 limits in an
                 international
                 design application,
                 delay less than or
                 equal to two years.
                1.17(m)(3)................... 1628 Petition for the Undiscounted............ 2,100 2,200
                 extension of the
                 twelve-month (six-
                 month for designs)
                 period for filing a
                 subsequent
                 application.
                1.17(m)(3)................... 2628 Petition for the Small................... 840 880
                 extension of the
                 twelve-month (six-
                 month for designs)
                 period for filing a
                 subsequent
                 application.
                1.17(m)(3)................... 3628 Petition for the Micro................... 420 440
                 extension of the
                 twelve-month (six-
                 month for designs)
                 period for filing a
                 subsequent
                 application.
                1.17(o)...................... 1818 Document fee for Undiscounted............ 180 190
                 third-party
                 submissions (see 37
                 CFR 1.290(f)).
                1.17(o)...................... 2818 Document fee for Small................... 72 76
                 third-party
                 submissions (see 37
                 CFR 1.290(f)).
                1.17(p)...................... 1806 Submission of an Undiscounted............ 260 275
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement.
                1.17(p)...................... 2806 Submission of an Small................... 104 110
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement.
                1.17(p)...................... 3806 Submission of an Micro................... 52 55
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement.
                1.17(q)...................... 1807 Processing fee for Undiscounted............ 50 53
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(q)...................... 2807 Processing fee for Small................... 50 53
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(q)...................... 3807 Processing fee for Micro................... 50 53
                 provisional
                 applications.
                1.17(r)...................... 1809 Filing a submission Undiscounted............ 880 925
                 after final
                 rejection (see 37
                 CFR 1.129(a)).
                1.17(r)...................... 2809 Filing a submission Small................... 352 370
                 after final
                 rejection (see 37
                 CFR 1.129(a)).
                1.17(r)...................... 3809 Filing a submission Micro................... 176 185
                 after final
                 rejection (see 37
                 CFR 1.129(a)).
                1.17(s)...................... 1810 For each additional Undiscounted............ 880 925
                 invention to be
                 examined (see 37
                 CFR 1.129(b)).
                1.17(s)...................... 2810 For each additional Small................... 352 370
                 invention to be
                 examined (see 37
                 CFR 1.129(b)).
                1.17(s)...................... 3810 For each additional Micro................... 176 185
                 invention to be
                 examined (see 37
                 CFR 1.129(b)).
                1.17(t)...................... 1783 Petition to convert Undiscounted............ 180 190
                 an international
                 design application
                 to a design
                 application under
                 35 U.S.C. chapter
                 16.
                1.17(t)...................... 2783 Petition to convert Small................... 72 76
                 an international
                 design application
                 to a design
                 application under
                 35 U.S.C. chapter
                 16.
                1.17(t)...................... 3783 Petition to convert Micro................... 36 38
                 an international
                 design application
                 to a design
                 application under
                 35 U.S.C. chapter
                 16.
                1.17(u)(1)................... New Extension for Undiscounted............ 220 50
                 response within
                 first month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(1)................... New Extension for Small................... 88 20
                 response within
                 first month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(1)................... New Extension for Micro................... 44 10
                 response within
                 first month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(2)................... New Extension for Undiscounted............ 640 100
                 response within
                 second month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(2)................... New Extension for Small................... 256 40
                 response within
                 second month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(2)................... New Extension for Micro................... 128 20
                 response within
                 second month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(3)................... New Extension for Undiscounted............ 1,480 200
                 response within
                 third month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(3)................... New Extension for Small................... 592 80
                 response within
                 third month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                [[Page 23258]]
                
                1.17(u)(3)................... New Extension for Micro................... 296 40
                 response within
                 third month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(4)................... New Extension for Undiscounted............ 2,320 400
                 response within
                 fourth month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(4)................... New Extension for Small................... 928 160
                 response within
                 fourth month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(4)................... New Extension for Micro................... 464 80
                 response within
                 fourth month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(5)................... New Extension for Undiscounted............ 3,160 800
                 response within
                 fifth month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(5)................... New Extension for Small................... 1,264 320
                 response within
                 fifth month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(u)(5)................... New Extension for Micro................... 632 160
                 response within
                 fifth month,
                 provisional
                 application.
                1.17(v)(1)................... New First time filing an Undiscounted............ n/a 200
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement that
                 causes the
                 cumulative number
                 of applicant-
                 provided citations
                 to exceed 50.
                1.17(v)(1)................... New First time filing an Small................... n/a 200
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement that
                 causes the
                 cumulative number
                 of applicant-
                 provided citations
                 to exceed 50.
                1.17(v)(1)................... New First time filing an Micro................... n/a 200
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement that
                 causes the
                 cumulative number
                 of applicant-
                 provided citations
                 to exceed 50.
                1.17(v)(2)................... New Filing an Undiscounted............ n/a 300
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement that
                 causes the
                 cumulative number
                 of applicant-
                 provided citations
                 to exceed 100.
                1.17(v)(2)................... New Filing an Small................... n/a 300
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement that
                 causes the
                 cumulative number
                 of applicant-
                 provided citations
                 to exceed 100.
                1.17(v)(2)................... New Filing an Micro................... n/a 300
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement that
                 causes the
                 cumulative number
                 of applicant-
                 provided citations
                 to exceed 100.
                1.17(v)(3)................... New Filing an Undiscounted............ n/a 300
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement that
                 causes the
                 cumulative number
                 of applicant-
                 provided citations
                 to exceed 200.
                1.17(v)(3)................... New Filing an Small................... n/a 300
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement that
                 causes the
                 cumulative number
                 of applicant-
                 provided citations
                 to exceed 200.
                1.17(v)(3)................... New Filing an Micro................... n/a 300
                 Information
                 Disclosure
                 Statement that
                 causes the
                 cumulative number
                 of applicant-
                 provided citations
                 to exceed 200.
                1.17(w)(1)................... New Filing an Undiscounted............ n/a 2,200
                 application or
                 presentation of
                 benefit claim more
                 than five years
                 after earliest
                 benefit date.
                1.17(w)(1)................... New Filing an Small................... n/a 880
                 application or
                 presentation of
                 benefit claim more
                 than five years
                 after earliest
                 benefit date.
                1.17(w)(1)................... New Filing an Micro................... n/a 440
                 application or
                 presentation of
                 benefit claim more
                 than five years
                 after earliest
                 benefit date.
                1.17(w)(2)................... New Filing an Undiscounted............ n/a 3,500
                 application or
                 presentation of
                 benefit claim more
                 than eight years
                 after earliest
                 benefit date.
                1.17(w)(2)................... New Filing an Small................... n/a 1,400
                 application or
                 presentation of
                 benefit claim more
                 than eight years
                 after earliest
                 benefit date.
                1.17(w)(2)................... New Filing an Micro................... n/a 700
                 application or
                 presentation of
                 benefit claim more
                 than eight years
                 after earliest
                 benefit date.
                1.17(x)...................... New Consideration of Undiscounted............ n/a 500
                 AFCP 2.0 request.
                1.17(x)...................... New Consideration of Small................... n/a 200
                 AFCP 2.0 request.
                1.17(x)...................... New Consideration of Micro................... n/a 100
                 AFCP 2.0 request.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 1.18
                 Section 1.18 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a)
                through (f) to set forth patent issue fees as authorized under section
                10 of the AIA. The changes to the fee amounts indicated in Sec. 1.18
                are shown in table 20.
                 Table 20--Section 1.18 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.18(a)....................... 1511 Reissue issue fee.. Undiscounted............ $1,200 $1,260
                1.18(a)....................... 2511 Reissue issue fee.. Small................... 480 504
                [[Page 23259]]
                
                1.18(a)....................... 3511 Reissue issue fee.. Micro................... 240 252
                1.18(a)....................... 1501 Utility issue fee.. Undiscounted............ 1,200 1,260
                1.18(a)....................... 2501 Utility issue fee.. Small................... 480 504
                1.18(a)....................... 3501 Utility issue fee.. Micro................... 240 252
                1.18(b)(1).................... 1502 Design issue fee... Undiscounted............ 740 1,300
                1.18(b)(1).................... 2502 Design issue fee... Small................... 296 520
                1.18(b)(1).................... 3502 Design issue fee... Micro................... 148 260
                1.18(b)(1).................... 1509 Hague design issue Undiscounted............ 740 1,300
                 fee.
                1.18(b)(1).................... 2509 Hague design issue Small................... 296 520
                 fee.
                1.18(b)(1).................... 3509 Hague design issue Micro................... 148 260
                 fee.
                1.18(c)....................... 1503 Plant issue fee.... Undiscounted............ 840 880
                1.18(c)....................... 2503 Plant issue fee.... Small................... 336 352
                1.18(c)....................... 3503 Plant issue fee.... Micro................... 168 176
                1.18(d)(3).................... 1505 Publication fee for Undiscounted............ 320 336
                 republication.
                1.18(d)(3).................... 2505 Publication fee for Small................... 320 336
                 republication.
                1.18(d)(3).................... 3505 Publication fee for Micro................... 320 336
                 republication.
                1.18(e)....................... 1455 Filing an Undiscounted............ 210 300
                 application for
                 patent term
                 adjustment.
                1.18(e)....................... 2455 Filing an Small................... 210 300
                 application for
                 patent term
                 adjustment.
                1.18(e)....................... 3455 Filing an Micro................... 210 300
                 application for
                 patent term
                 adjustment.
                1.18(f)....................... 1456 Request for Undiscounted............ 420 440
                 reinstatement of
                 term reduced.
                1.18(f)....................... 2456 Request for Small................... 420 440
                 reinstatement of
                 term reduced.
                1.18(f)....................... 3456 Request for Micro................... 420 440
                 reinstatement of
                 term reduced.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 1.19
                 Section 1.19 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a),
                (b), and (f) to set forth document supply fees as authorized under
                section 10 of the AIA. The changes to the fee amounts indicated in
                Sec. 1.19 are shown in table 21.
                 Table 21--Section 1.19 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.19(a)(2).................... 8003 Printed copy of Undiscounted............ $15 $16
                 plant patent in
                 color.
                1.19(b)(1)(i)(A) and (ii)(A).. 8007 Copy of patent Undiscounted............ 35 37
                 application as
                 filed.
                1.19(b)(1)(i)(B).............. 8051 Copy patent file Undiscounted............ 290 305
                 wrapper, paper
                 medium, any number
                 of sheets.
                1.19(b)(1)(i)(D).............. 8010 Individual Undiscounted............ 25 26
                 application
                 documents, other
                 than application
                 as filed, per
                 document.
                1.19(b)(1)(ii)(B)............. 8052 Copy patent file Undiscounted............ 60 63
                 wrapper,
                 electronic medium,
                 any size or
                 provided
                 electronically.
                1.19(b)(3).................... 8013 Copy of office Undiscounted............ 25 26
                 records, except
                 copies of
                 applications as
                 filed.
                1.19(b)(4).................... 8014 For assignment Undiscounted............ 35 37
                 records, abstract
                 of title and
                 certification, per
                 patent.
                1.19(f)....................... 8017 Copy of non-U.S. Undiscounted............ 25 26
                 document.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 1.20
                 Section 1.20 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a)
                through (h), (j), and (k) to set forth post issuance fees as authorized
                under section 10 of the AIA. The changes to the fee amounts indicated
                in Sec. 1.20 are shown in table 22.
                 The USPTO proposes to revise the introductory text to paragraph (d)
                and to add paragraphs (d)(1) and (d)(2)(i) through (v) to create
                separate tiered fees for terminal disclaimers under Sec. 1.321.
                 The USPTO proposes to add paragraph (j)(4) to create a fee for
                requesting supplemental redetermination after Notice of Final
                Determination.
                 Table 22--Section 1.20 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.20(a)...................... 1811 Certificate of Undiscounted............ $160 $168
                 correction.
                1.20(a)...................... 2811 Certificate of Small................... 160 168
                 correction.
                1.20(a)...................... 3811 Certificate of Micro................... 160 168
                 correction.
                1.20(b)...................... 1816 Processing fee for Undiscounted............ 160 168
                 correcting
                 inventorship in a
                 patent.
                1.20(b)...................... 2816 Processing fee for Small................... 160 168
                 correcting
                 inventorship in a
                 patent.
                1.20(b)...................... 3816 Processing fee for Micro................... 160 168
                 correcting
                 inventorship in a
                 patent.
                1.20(c)(1)(i)................ 1831 Ex parte Undiscounted............ 6,300 6,615
                 reexamination (Sec.
                 1.510(a))
                 streamlined.
                [[Page 23260]]
                
                1.20(c)(1)(i)................ 2831 Ex parte Small................... 2,520 2,646
                 reexamination (Sec.
                 1.510(a))
                 streamlined.
                1.20(c)(1)(i)................ 3831 Ex parte Micro................... 1,260 1,323
                 reexamination (Sec.
                 1.510(a))
                 streamlined.
                1.20(c)(2)................... 1812 Ex parte Undiscounted............ 12,600 13,230
                 reexamination (Sec.
                 1.510(a)) non-
                 streamlined.
                1.20(c)(2)................... 2812 Ex parte Small................... 5,040 5,292
                 reexamination (Sec.
                 1.510(a)) non-
                 streamlined.
                1.20(c)(2)................... 3812 Ex parte Micro................... 2,520 2,646
                 reexamination (Sec.
                 1.510(a)) non-
                 streamlined.
                1.20(c)(3)................... 1821 Each reexamination Undiscounted............ 480 600
                 independent claim
                 in excess of three
                 and also in excess
                 of the number of
                 such claims in the
                 patent under
                 reexamination.
                1.20(c)(3)................... 2821 Each reexamination Small................... 192 240
                 independent claim
                 in excess of three
                 and also in excess
                 of the number of
                 such claims in the
                 patent under
                 reexamination.
                1.20(c)(3)................... 3821 Each reexamination Micro................... 96 120
                 independent claim
                 in excess of three
                 and also in excess
                 of the number of
                 such claims in the
                 patent under
                 reexamination.
                1.20(c)(4)................... 1822 Each reexamination Undiscounted............ 100 200
                 claim in excess of
                 20 and also in
                 excess of the
                 number of claims in
                 the patent under
                 reexamination.
                1.20(c)(4)................... 2822 Each reexamination Small................... 40 80
                 claim in excess of
                 20 and also in
                 excess of the
                 number of claims in
                 the patent under
                 reexamination.
                1.20(c)(4)................... 3822 Each reexamination Micro................... 20 40
                 claim in excess of
                 20 and also in
                 excess of the
                 number of claims in
                 the patent under
                 reexamination.
                1.20(c)(6)................... 1824 Petitions in a Undiscounted............ 2,040 2,140
                 reexamination
                 proceeding, except
                 for those
                 specifically
                 enumerated in 37
                 CFR 1.550(i) and
                 1.937(d).
                1.20(c)(6)................... 2824 Petitions in a Small................... 816 856
                 reexamination
                 proceeding, except
                 for those
                 specifically
                 enumerated in 37
                 CFR 1.550(i) and
                 1.937(d).
                1.20(c)(6)................... 3824 Petitions in a Micro................... 408 428
                 reexamination
                 proceeding, except
                 for those
                 specifically
                 enumerated in 37
                 CFR 1.550(i) and
                 1.937(d).
                1.20(d)(1)................... 1814 Statutory Undiscounted............ 170 179
                 disclaimer,
                 excluding terminal
                 disclaimer.
                1.20(d)(1)................... 2814 Statutory Small................... 170 179
                 disclaimer,
                 excluding terminal
                 disclaimer.
                1.20(d)(1)................... 3814 Statutory Micro................... 170 179
                 disclaimer,
                 excluding terminal
                 disclaimer.
                1.20(d)(2)(i)................ New Terminal disclaimer, Undiscounted............ 170 200
                 filed prior to the
                 first action on the
                 merits.
                1.20(d)(2)(i)................ New Terminal disclaimer, Small................... 170 200
                 filed prior to the
                 first action on the
                 merits.
                1.20(d)(2)(i)................ New Terminal disclaimer, Micro................... 170 200
                 filed prior to the
                 first action on the
                 merits.
                1.20(d)(2)(ii)............... New Terminal disclaimer, Undiscounted............ 170 500
                 filed prior to a
                 final action or
                 allowance.
                1.20(d)(2)(ii)............... New Terminal disclaimer, Small................... 170 500
                 filed prior to a
                 final action or
                 allowance.
                1.20(d)(2)(ii)............... New Terminal disclaimer, Micro................... 170 500
                 filed prior to a
                 final action or
                 allowance.
                1.20(d)(2)(iii).............. New Terminal disclaimer, Undiscounted............ 170 800
                 filed after final
                 or allowance.
                1.20(d)(2)(iii).............. New Terminal disclaimer, Small................... 170 800
                 filed after final
                 or allowance.
                1.20(d)(2)(iii).............. New Terminal disclaimer, Micro................... 170 800
                 filed after final
                 or allowance.
                1.20(d)(2)(iv)............... New Terminal disclaimer, Undiscounted............ 170 1,100
                 filed on or after a
                 notice of appeal.
                1.20(d)(2)(iv)............... New Terminal disclaimer, Small................... 170 1,100
                 filed on or after a
                 notice of appeal.
                1.20(d)(2)(iv)............... New Terminal disclaimer, Micro................... 170 1,100
                 filed on or after a
                 notice of appeal.
                1.20(d)(2)(v)................ New Terminal disclaimer, Undiscounted............ 170 1,400
                 filed in a patented
                 case or in an
                 application for
                 reissue.
                1.20(d)(2)(v)................ New Terminal disclaimer, Small................... 170 1,400
                 filed in a patented
                 case or in an
                 application for
                 reissue.
                1.20(d)(2)(v)................ New Terminal disclaimer, Micro................... 170 1,400
                 filed in a patented
                 case or in an
                 application for
                 reissue.
                1.20(e)...................... 1551 For maintaining an Undiscounted............ 2,000 2,100
                 original or any
                 reissue patent, due
                 at 3.5 years.
                1.20(e)...................... 2551 For maintaining an Small................... 800 840
                 original or any
                 reissue patent, due
                 at 3.5 years.
                1.20(e)...................... 3551 For maintaining an Micro................... 400 420
                 original or any
                 reissue patent, due
                 at 3.5 years.
                1.20(f)...................... 1552 For maintaining an Undiscounted............ 3,760 3,950
                 original or any
                 reissue patent, due
                 at 7.5 years.
                1.20(f)...................... 2552 For maintaining an Small................... 1,504 1,580
                 original or any
                 reissue patent, due
                 at 7.5 years.
                1.20(f)...................... 3552 For maintaining an Micro................... 752 790
                 original or any
                 reissue patent, due
                 at 7.5 years.
                1.20(g)...................... 1553 For maintaining an Undiscounted............ 7,700 8,085
                 original or any
                 reissue patent, due
                 at 11.5 years.
                1.20(g)...................... 2553 For maintaining an Small................... 3,080 3,234
                 original or any
                 reissue patent, due
                 at 11.5 years.
                1.20(g)...................... 3553 For maintaining an Micro................... 1,540 1,617
                 original or any
                 reissue patent, due
                 at 11.5 years.
                1.20(h)...................... 1554 Surcharge--3.5 year-- Undiscounted............ 500 525
                 late payment within
                 6 months.
                1.20(h)...................... 2554 Surcharge--3.5 year-- Small................... 200 210
                 late payment within
                 6 months.
                1.20(h)...................... 3554 Surcharge--3.5 year-- Micro................... 100 105
                 late payment within
                 6 months.
                1.20(h)...................... 1555 Surcharge--7.5 year-- Undiscounted............ 500 525
                 late payment within
                 6 months.
                1.20(h)...................... 2555 Surcharge--7.5 year-- Small................... 200 210
                 late payment within
                 6 months.
                1.20(h)...................... 3555 Surcharge--7.5 year-- Micro................... 100 105
                 late payment within
                 6 months.
                [[Page 23261]]
                
                1.20(h)...................... 1556 Surcharge--11.5 Undiscounted............ 500 525
                 year--late payment
                 within 6 months.
                1.20(h)...................... 2556 Surcharge--11.5 Small................... 200 210
                 year--late payment
                 within 6 months.
                1.20(h)...................... 3556 Surcharge--11.5 Micro................... 100 105
                 year--late payment
                 within 6 months.
                1.20(j)(1)................... 1457 Application for Undiscounted............ 1,180 6,700
                 extension of term
                 of patent.
                1.20(j)(1)................... 2457 Application for Small................... 1,180 6,700
                 extension of term
                 of patent.
                1.20(j)(1)................... 3457 Application for Micro................... 1,180 6,700
                 extension of term
                 of patent.
                1.20(j)(2)................... 1458 Initial application Undiscounted............ 440 1,320
                 for interim
                 extension (see 37
                 CFR 1.790).
                1.20(j)(2)................... 2458 Initial application Small................... 440 1,320
                 for interim
                 extension (see 37
                 CFR 1.790).
                1.20(j)(2)................... 3458 Initial application Micro................... 440 1,320
                 for interim
                 extension (see 37
                 CFR 1.790).
                1.20(j)(3)................... 1459 Subsequent Undiscounted............ 230 680
                 application for
                 interim extension
                 (see 37 CFR 1.790).
                1.20(j)(3)................... 2459 Subsequent Small................... 230 680
                 application for
                 interim extension
                 (see 37 CFR 1.790).
                1.20(j)(3)................... 3459 Subsequent Micro................... 230 680
                 application for
                 interim extension
                 (see 37 CFR 1.790).
                1.20(j)(4)................... New Supplemental Undiscounted............ n/a 1,440
                 redetermination
                 after notice of
                 final determination.
                1.20(j)(4)................... New Supplemental Small................... n/a 1,440
                 redetermination
                 after notice of
                 final determination.
                1.20(j)(4)................... New Supplemental Micro................... n/a 1,440
                 redetermination
                 after notice of
                 final determination.
                1.20(k)(1)................... 1826 Request for Undiscounted............ 4,620 4,850
                 supplemental
                 examination.
                1.20(k)(1)................... 2826 Request for Small................... 1,848 1,940
                 supplemental
                 examination.
                1.20(k)(1)................... 3826 Request for Micro................... 924 970
                 supplemental
                 examination.
                1.20(k)(2)................... 1827 Reexamination Undiscounted............ 12,700 13,335
                 ordered as a result
                 of supplemental
                 examination.
                1.20(k)(2)................... 2827 Reexamination Small................... 5,080 5,334
                 ordered as a result
                 of supplemental
                 examination.
                1.20(k)(2)................... 3827 Reexamination Micro................... 2,540 2,667
                 ordered as a result
                 of supplemental
                 examination.
                1.20(k)(3)(i)................ 1828 Supplemental Undiscounted............ 180 190
                 examination
                 document size fee--
                 for nonpatent
                 document having
                 between 21 and 50
                 sheets.
                1.20(k)(3)(i)................ 2828 Supplemental Small................... 72 76
                 examination
                 document size fee--
                 for nonpatent
                 document having
                 between 21 and 50
                 sheets.
                1.20(k)(3)(i)................ 3828 Supplemental Micro................... 36 38
                 examination
                 document size fee--
                 for nonpatent
                 document having
                 between 21 and 50
                 sheets.
                1.20(k)(3)(ii)............... 1829 Supplemental Undiscounted............ 300 315
                 examination
                 document size fee--
                 for each additional
                 50 sheets or a
                 fraction thereof in
                 a nonpatent
                 document.
                1.20(k)(3)(ii)............... 2829 Supplemental Small................... 120 126
                 examination
                 document size fee--
                 for each additional
                 50 sheets or a
                 fraction thereof in
                 a nonpatent
                 document.
                1.20(k)(3)(ii)............... 3829 Supplemental Micro................... 60 63
                 examination
                 document size fee--
                 for each additional
                 50 sheets or a
                 fraction thereof in
                 a nonpatent
                 document.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 1.21
                 Section 1.21 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a),
                (e), (h), (i), and (n) through (q) to set forth miscellaneous fees and
                charges as authorized under section 10 of the AIA. The changes to the
                fee amounts indicated in Sec. 1.21 are shown in table 23.
                 Table 23--Section 1.21 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.21(a)(1)(i)................. 9001 Application fee Undiscounted............ $110 $116
                 (non-refundable).
                1.21(a)(1)(ii)(A)............. 9010 For test Undiscounted............ 210 221
                 administration by
                 commercial entity.
                1.21(a)(1)(iii)............... 9029 For USPTO- Undiscounted............ 470 494
                 administered
                 review of
                 registration
                 examination.
                1.21(a)(1)(iv)................ 9030 Request for Undiscounted............ 115 121
                 extension of time
                 in which to
                 schedule
                 examination for
                 registration to
                 practice (non-
                 refundable).
                1.21(a)(2)(i)................. 9003 On registration to Undiscounted............ 210 221
                 practice under
                 Sec. 11.6.
                1.21(a)(2)(ii)................ 9026 On grant of limited Undiscounted............ 210 221
                 recognition under
                 Sec. 11.9(b).
                1.21(a)(4)(i)................. 9005 Certificate of good Undiscounted............ 40 42
                 standing as an
                 attorney or agent,
                 standard.
                1.21(a)(4)(ii)................ 9006 Certificate of good Undiscounted............ 50 53
                 standing as an
                 attorney or agent,
                 suitable for
                 framing.
                1.21(a)(5)(i)................. 9012 Review of decision Undiscounted............ 420 440
                 by the Director of
                 Enrollment and
                 Discipline under
                 Sec. 11.2(c).
                1.21(a)(5)(ii)................ 9013 Review of decision Undiscounted............ 420 440
                 of the Director of
                 Enrollment and
                 Discipline under
                 Sec. 11.2(d).
                1.21(a)(6)(ii)................ 9028 For USPTO-assisted Undiscounted............ 70 74
                 change of address
                 within the Office
                 of Enrollment and
                 Discipline
                 Information System.
                1.21(a)(9)(i)................. 9020 Delinquency fee.... Undiscounted............ 50 53
                1.21(a)(9)(ii)................ 9004 Administrative Undiscounted............ 210 221
                 reinstatement fee.
                [[Page 23262]]
                
                1.21(a)(10)................... 9014 On petition for Undiscounted............ 1,680 1,764
                 reinstatement by a
                 person excluded or
                 suspended on
                 ethical grounds,
                 or excluded on
                 consent from
                 practice before
                 the Office.
                1.21(e)....................... 8020 International type Undiscounted............ 40 42
                 search report.
                1.21(h)(2).................... 8021 Recording each Undiscounted............ 50 53
                 patent assignment,
                 agreement or other
                 paper, per
                 property--if not
                 submitted
                 electronically.
                1.21(i)....................... 8022 Publication in Undiscounted............ 25 26
                 Official Gazette.
                1.21(n)....................... 8026 Handling fee for Undiscounted............ 140 147
                 incomplete or
                 improper
                 application.
                1.21(o)(1).................... 1091 Submission of Undiscounted............ 1,060 1,115
                 sequence listings
                 of 300MB to 800MB.
                1.21(o)(1).................... 2091 Submission of Small................... 424 446
                 sequence listings
                 of 300MB to 800MB.
                1.21(o)(1).................... 3091 Submission of Micro................... 212 223
                 sequence listings
                 of 300MB to 800MB.
                1.21(o)(2).................... 1092 Submission of Undiscounted............ 10,500 11,025
                 sequence listings
                 of more than 800MB.
                1.21(o)(2).................... 2092 Submission of Small................... 4,200 4,410
                 sequence listings
                 of more than 800MB.
                1.21(o)(2).................... 3092 Submission of Micro................... 2,100 2,205
                 sequence listings
                 of more than 800MB.
                1.21(p)....................... 8053 Additional fee for Undiscounted............ 40 42
                 overnight delivery.
                1.21(q)....................... 8054 Additional fee for Undiscounted............ 170 179
                 expedited service.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 1.78
                 Section 1.78 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraph
                (d)(3)(i) to include the fee cited in Sec. 1.17(w) as one of the
                requirements that must be submitted during the pendency of the later-
                filed application.
                 The USPTO proposes to revise paragraph (e)(2) to add the applicable
                fee in Sec. 1.17(w) to the list of required items that must accompany
                a petition to accept an unintentionally delayed claim under 35 U.S.C.
                120, 121, 365(c), or 386(c) for the benefit of a prior-filed
                application.
                Section 1.97
                 Section 1.97 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraph (a) to
                require the proposed information disclosure statement size fee under
                Sec. 1.17(v) for an information disclosure statement in compliance
                with Sec. 1.98 to be considered by the USPTO during the pendency of
                the application.
                Section 1.98
                 Section 1.98 is proposed to be amended by revising the introductory
                text in paragraph (a) to include paragraph (a)(4) in the items that
                shall be included with any information disclosure statement.
                 The USPTO proposes to add paragraph (a)(4), which will require a
                clear written assertion that the information disclosure statement is
                accompanied by the applicable information disclosure statement size fee
                under Sec. 1.17(v) or a clear written assertion that no information
                disclosure statement size fee under Sec. 1.17(v) is required.
                Section 1.136
                 Section 1.136 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraph
                (a)(1) to include the addition of the fee set in Sec. 1.17(u) in
                extensions of time.
                Section 1.138
                 Section 1.138 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraph (d)
                to expand the applicability of the express abandonment rule to permit
                such refunds in national stage applications filed under 35 U.S.C. 371.
                The current rule permits such refunds only in nonprovisional
                applications filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) and Sec. 1.53(b). Paragraph
                (d) is also proposed to be amended to clarify that refunds of search
                and excess claim fee payments under these provisions are limited to the
                search and excess claim fees set forth in Sec. 1.16 (which apply to
                applications filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) and Sec. 1.53(b)) and search
                and excess claim fees set forth in Sec. 1.492 (which apply to national
                stage applications filed under 35 U.S.C. 371). Paragraph (d) is also
                proposed to be amended to clarify that refunds of search and excess
                claim fee payments under these provisions are limited to the search and
                excess claim fees set forth in Sec. 1.16 (which apply to applications
                filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) and Sec. 1.53(b)) and search and excess
                claim fees set forth in Sec. 1.492 (which apply to national stage
                applications filed under 35 U.S.C. 371).
                Section 1.445
                 Section 1.445 is proposed to be amended by revising and
                republishing paragraph (a) to set forth international filing,
                processing, and search fees as authorized under section 10 of the AIA.
                The changes to the fee amounts indicated in Sec. 1.445 are shown in
                table 24. The proposed fees are for or an international application
                having a receipt date that is on or after the effective date of the
                final rule. Fees previously provided for in paragraphs (a)(1)(i)(A),
                (a)(2)(i), and (a)(3)(i) for international applications having a
                receipt date that is on or after December 29, 2023 will be redesignated
                as (a)(1)(i)(B), (a)(2)(ii), and (a)(3)(ii) and will apply to
                international applications having a receipt date that is on or after
                December 29, 2022 and before the effective date of the final rule.
                Other paragraphs under paragraphs (a)(1) through (3) are proposed to be
                redesignated to accommodate these proposed changes.
                 Table 24--Section 1.445 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.445(a)(1)(i)(A)............. 1601 Transmittal fee.... Undiscounted............ $260 $285
                1.445(a)(1)(i)(A)............. 2601 Transmittal fee.... Small................... 104 114
                1.445(a)(1)(i)(A)............. 3601 Transmittal fee.... Micro................... 52 57
                1.445(a)(2)(i)................ 1602 Search fee-- Undiscounted............ 2,180 2,400
                 regardless of
                 whether there is a
                 corresponding
                 application (see
                 35 U.S.C. 361(d)
                 and PCT Rule 16).
                [[Page 23263]]
                
                1.445(a)(2)(i)................ 2602 Search fee-- Small................... 872 960
                 regardless of
                 whether there is a
                 corresponding
                 application (see
                 35 U.S.C. 361(d)
                 and PCT Rule 16).
                1.445(a)(2)(i)................ 3602 Search fee-- Micro................... 436 480
                 regardless of
                 whether there is a
                 corresponding
                 application (see
                 35 U.S.C. 361(d)
                 and PCT Rule 16).
                1.445(a)(3)(i)................ 1604 Supplemental search Undiscounted............ 2,180 2,400
                 fee when required,
                 per additional
                 invention.
                1.445(a)(3)(i)................ 2604 Supplemental search Small................... 872 960
                 fee when required,
                 per additional
                 invention.
                1.445(a)(3)(i)................ 3604 Supplemental search Micro................... 436 480
                 fee when required,
                 per additional
                 invention.
                1.445(a)(4)................... 1621 Transmitting Undiscounted............ 260 285
                 application to
                 Intl. Bureau to
                 act as receiving
                 office.
                1.445(a)(4)................... 2621 Transmitting Small................... 104 114
                 application to
                 Intl. Bureau to
                 act as receiving
                 office.
                1.445(a)(4)................... 3621 Transmitting Micro................... 52 57
                 application to
                 Intl. Bureau to
                 act as receiving
                 office.
                1.445(a)(5)................... 1627 Late furnishing fee Undiscounted............ 320 335
                 for providing a
                 sequence listing
                 in response to an
                 invitation under
                 PCT rule 13ter.
                1.445(a)(5)................... 2627 Late furnishing fee Small................... 128 134
                 for providing a
                 sequence listing
                 in response to an
                 invitation under
                 PCT rule 13ter.
                1.445(a)(5)................... 3627 Late furnishing fee Micro................... 64 67
                 for providing a
                 sequence listing
                 in response to an
                 invitation under
                 PCT rule 13ter.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 1.482
                 Section 1.482 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a)
                and (c) to set forth international preliminary examination and
                processing fees for international patent applications entering the
                international stage as authorized under section 10 of the AIA. The
                changes to the fee amounts indicated in Sec. 1.482 are shown in table
                25.
                 Table 25--Section 1.482 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.482(a)(1)(i)............... 1605 Preliminary Undiscounted............ $640 $705
                 examination fee--
                 U.S. was the ISA.
                1.482(a)(1)(i)............... 2605 Preliminary Small................... 256 282
                 examination fee--
                 U.S. was the ISA.
                1.482(a)(1)(i)............... 3605 Preliminary Micro................... 128 141
                 examination fee--
                 U.S. was the ISA.
                1.482(a)(1)(ii).............. 1606 Preliminary Undiscounted............ 800 880
                 examination fee--
                 U.S. was not the
                 ISA.
                1.482(a)(1)(ii).............. 2606 Preliminary Small................... 320 352
                 examination fee--
                 U.S. was not the
                 ISA.
                1.482(a)(1)(ii).............. 3606 Preliminary Micro................... 160 176
                 examination fee--
                 U.S. was not the
                 ISA.
                1.482(a)(2).................. 1607 Supplemental Undiscounted............ 640 705
                 examination fee per
                 additional
                 invention.
                1.482(a)(2).................. 2607 Supplemental Small................... 256 282
                 examination fee per
                 additional
                 invention.
                1.482(a)(2).................. 3607 Supplemental Micro................... 128 141
                 examination fee per
                 additional
                 invention.
                1.482(c)..................... 1627 Late furnishing fee Undiscounted............ 320 335
                 for providing a
                 sequence listing in
                 response to an
                 invitation under
                 PCT rule 13ter.
                1.482(c)..................... 2627 Late furnishing fee Small................... 128 134
                 for providing a
                 sequence listing in
                 response to an
                 invitation under
                 PCT rule 13ter.
                1.482(c)..................... 3627 Late furnishing fee Micro................... 64 67
                 for providing a
                 sequence listing in
                 response to an
                 invitation under
                 PCT rule 13ter.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 1.492
                 Section 1.492 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a)
                through (f) and (h) through (j) to set forth national stage fees for
                international patent applications as authorized under section 10 of the
                AIA. The changes to the fee amounts indicated in Sec. 1.492 are shown
                in table 26.
                 Table 26--Section 1.492 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.492(a)..................... 1631 Basic national stage Undiscounted............ $320 $350
                 fee.
                1.492(a)..................... 2631 Basic national stage Small................... 128 140
                 fee.
                1.492(a)..................... 3631 Basic national stage Micro................... 64 70
                 fee.
                1.492(b)(2).................. 1641 National stage Undiscounted............ 140 145
                 search fee--U.S.
                 was the ISA.
                1.492(b)(2).................. 2641 National stage Small................... 56 58
                 search fee--U.S.
                 was the ISA.
                1.492(b)(2).................. 3641 National stage Micro................... 28 29
                 search fee--U.S.
                 was the ISA.
                1.492(b)(3).................. 1642 National stage Undiscounted............ 540 565
                 search fee--search
                 report prepared and
                 provided to USPTO.
                [[Page 23264]]
                
                1.492(b)(3).................. 2642 National stage Small................... 216 226
                 search fee--search
                 report prepared and
                 provided to USPTO.
                1.492(b)(3).................. 3642 National stage Micro................... 108 113
                 search fee--search
                 report prepared and
                 provided to USPTO.
                1.492(b)(4).................. 1632 National stage Undiscounted............ 700 770
                 search fee--all
                 other situations.
                1.492(b)(4).................. 2632 National stage Small................... 280 308
                 search fee--all
                 other situations.
                1.492(b)(4).................. 3632 National stage Micro................... 140 154
                 search fee--all
                 other situations.
                1.492(c)(2).................. 1633 National stage Undiscounted............ 800 880
                 examination fee--
                 all other
                 situations.
                1.492(c)(2).................. 2633 National stage Small................... 320 352
                 examination fee--
                 all other
                 situations.
                1.492(c)(2).................. 3633 National stage Micro................... 160 176
                 examination fee--
                 all other
                 situations.
                1.492(d)..................... 1614 Each independent Undiscounted............ 480 600
                 claim in excess of
                 three.
                1.492(d)..................... 2614 Each independent Small................... 192 240
                 claim in excess of
                 three.
                1.492(d)..................... 3614 Each independent Micro................... 96 120
                 claim in excess of
                 three.
                1.492(e)..................... 1615 Each claim in excess Undiscounted............ 100 200
                 of 20.
                1.492(e)..................... 2615 Each claim in excess Small................... 40 80
                 of 20.
                1.492(e)..................... 3615 Each claim in excess Micro................... 20 40
                 of 20.
                1.492(f)..................... 1616 Multiple dependent Undiscounted............ 860 905
                 claim.
                1.492(f)..................... 2616 Multiple dependent Small................... 344 362
                 claim.
                1.492(f)..................... 3616 Multiple dependent Micro................... 172 181
                 claim.
                1.492(h)..................... 1617 Search fee, Undiscounted............ 160 170
                 examination fee or
                 oath or declaration
                 after the date of
                 commencement of the
                 national stage.
                1.492(h)..................... 2617 Search fee, Small................... 64 68
                 examination fee or
                 oath or declaration
                 after the date of
                 commencement of the
                 national stage.
                1.492(h)..................... 3617 Search fee, Micro................... 32 34
                 examination fee or
                 oath or declaration
                 after the date of
                 commencement of the
                 national stage.
                1.492(i)..................... 1618 English translation Undiscounted............ 140 145
                 after thirty months
                 from priority date.
                1.492(i)..................... 2618 English translation Small................... 56 58
                 after thirty months
                 from priority date.
                1.492(i)..................... 3618 English translation Micro................... 28 29
                 after thirty months
                 from priority date.
                1.492(j)..................... 1681 National stage Undiscounted............ 420 440
                 application size
                 fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.492(j)..................... 2681 National stage Small................... 168 176
                 application size
                 fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                1.492(j)..................... 3681 National stage Micro................... 84 88
                 application size
                 fee--for each
                 additional 50
                 sheets that exceeds
                 100 sheets.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 1.555
                 Section 1.555 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraph (a)
                to require the proposed information disclosure statement size fee under
                Sec. 1.17(v) for an information disclosure statement in compliance
                with Sec. 1.98 to be considered by the USPTO during the pendency of
                the reexamination proceeding.
                Section 1.1031
                 Section 1.1031 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraph (a)
                to set forth international design application fees as authorized under
                section 10 of the AIA. The changes to the fee amounts indicated in
                Sec. 1.1031 are shown in table 27.
                 Table 27--Section 1.1031 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                1.1031(a).................... 1781 Hague international Undiscounted............ $120 $125
                 design application--
                 transmittal fee.
                1.1031(a).................... 2781 Hague international Small................... 48 50
                 design application--
                 transmittal fee.
                1.1031(a).................... 3781 Hague international Micro................... 24 25
                 design application--
                 transmittal fee.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 41.20
                 Section 41.20 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a)
                and (b) to set forth petition and appeal fees as authorized under
                section 10 of the AIA. The changes to the fee amounts indicated in
                Sec. 41.20 are shown in table 28.
                 Table 28--Section 41.20 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                41.20(a)..................... 1405 Petitions to the Undiscounted............ $420 $440
                 Chief
                 Administrative
                 Patent Judge under
                 37 CFR 41.3.
                41.20(a)..................... 2405 Petitions to the Small................... 420 440
                 Chief
                 Administrative
                 Patent Judge under
                 37 CFR 41.3.
                [[Page 23265]]
                
                41.20(a)..................... 3405 Petitions to the Micro................... 420 440
                 Chief
                 Administrative
                 Patent Judge under
                 37 CFR 41.3.
                41.20(b)(1).................. 1401 Notice of appeal.... Undiscounted............ 840 880
                41.20(b)(1).................. 2401 Notice of appeal.... Small................... 336 352
                41.20(b)(1).................. 3401 Notice of appeal.... Micro................... 168 176
                41.20(b)(2)(ii).............. 1404 Filing a brief in Undiscounted............ 2,100 2,200
                 support of an
                 appeal in an inter
                 partes
                 reexamination
                 proceeding.
                41.20(b)(2)(ii).............. 2404 Filing a brief in Small................... 840 880
                 support of an
                 appeal in an inter
                 partes
                 reexamination
                 proceeding.
                41.20(b)(2)(ii).............. 3404 Filing a brief in Micro................... 420 440
                 support of an
                 appeal in an inter
                 partes
                 reexamination
                 proceeding.
                41.20(b)(3).................. 1403 Request for oral Undiscounted............ 1,360 1,430
                 hearing.
                41.20(b)(3).................. 2403 Request for oral Small................... 544 572
                 hearing.
                41.20(b)(3).................. 3403 Request for oral Micro................... 272 286
                 hearing.
                41.20(b)(4).................. 1413 Forwarding an appeal Undiscounted............ 2,360 2,480
                 in an application
                 or ex parte
                 reexamination
                 proceeding to the
                 Board.
                41.20(b)(4).................. 2413 Forwarding an appeal Small................... 944 992
                 in an application
                 or ex parte
                 reexamination
                 proceeding to the
                 Board.
                41.20(b)(4).................. 3413 Forwarding an appeal Micro................... 472 496
                 in an application
                 or ex parte
                 reexamination
                 proceeding to the
                 Board.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Section 42.15
                 Section 42.15 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraphs (a)
                through (e) and adding paragraph (f) to set forth inter partes review
                and post-grant review or covered business method patent review of a
                patent fees as authorized under section 10 of the AIA. The changes to
                the fee amounts indicated in Sec. 42.15 are shown in table 29.
                 Table 29--Section 42.15 Fee Changes
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee Proposed
                 CFR section code Description Entity type Current fee fee
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                42.15(a)(1).................. 1406 Inter partes review Undiscounted............ $19,000 $23,750
                 request fee--Up to
                 20 claims.
                42.15(a)(2).................. 1414 Inter partes review Undiscounted............ 22,500 28,125
                 post-institution
                 fee--Up to 20
                 claims.
                42.15(a)(3).................. 1407 Inter partes review Undiscounted............ 375 470
                 request of each
                 claim in excess of
                 20.
                42.15(a)(4).................. 1415 Inter partes post- Undiscounted............ 750 940
                 institution request
                 of each claim in
                 excess of 20.
                42.15(b)(1).................. 1408 Post-grant or Undiscounted............ 20,000 25,000
                 covered business
                 method review
                 request fee--Up to
                 20 claims.
                42.15(b)(2).................. 1416 Post-grant or Undiscounted............ 27,500 34,375
                 covered business
                 method review post-
                 institution fee--Up
                 to 20 claims.
                42.15(b)(3).................. 1409 Post-grant or Undiscounted............ 475 595
                 covered business
                 method review
                 request of each
                 claim in excess of
                 20.
                42.15(b)(4).................. 1417 Post-grant or Undiscounted............ 1,050 1,315
                 covered business
                 method review post-
                 institution request
                 of each claim in
                 excess of 20.
                42.15(c)(1).................. 1412 Petition for a Undiscounted............ 420 440
                 derivation
                 proceeding.
                42.15(d)..................... 1411 Request to make a Undiscounted............ 420 440
                 settlement
                 agreement available
                 and other requests
                 filed in a patent
                 trial proceeding.
                42.15(e)..................... 1418 Pro hac vice Undiscounted............ 250 263
                 admission fee.
                42.15(f)..................... New Request for review Undiscounted............ n/a 440
                 of a PTAB decision
                 by the Director.
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                VII. Rulemaking Considerations
                A. America Invents Act
                 This proposed rule seeks to set or adjust fees under section 10(a)
                of the AIA as amended by the SUCCESS Act, Public Law 115-273, 132 Stat.
                4158. Section 10(a) of the AIA authorizes the Director of the USPTO to
                set or adjust by rule any patent fee established, authorized, or
                charged under 35 U.S.C. for any services performed, or materials
                furnished, by the USPTO. The SUCCESS Act extends the USPTO fee setting
                authority until September 2026. Section 10 prescribes that fees may be
                set or adjusted only to recover the aggregate estimated cost to the
                USPTO for processing, activities, services, and materials relating to
                patents, including administrative costs of the agency with respect to
                such patent fees. Section 10 authority includes flexibility to set
                individual fees in a way that furthers key policy factors, while taking
                into account the cost of the respective services. Section 10(e) of the
                AIA sets forth the general requirements for rulemakings that set or
                adjust fees under this authority. In particular, section 10(e)(1)
                requires the Director to publish in the Federal Register any proposed
                fee change under section 10 and include in such publication the
                specific rationale and purpose for the proposal, including the possible
                expectations or benefits resulting from the proposed change. For such
                rulemakings, the AIA requires that the USPTO provide a public comment
                period of not less than 45 days.
                 PPAC advises the Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual
                Property and Director of the USPTO on the management, policies, goals,
                performance, budget, and user fees of
                [[Page 23266]]
                patent operations. When proposing fees under section 10 of the AIA, the
                Director must provide PPAC with the proposed fees at least 45 days
                prior to publishing the proposed fees in the Federal Register. PPAC
                then has at least 30 days within which to deliberate, consider, and
                comment on the proposal, as well as hold public hearing(s) on the
                proposed fees. PPAC must provide a written report to the public
                detailing the committee's comments, advice, and recommendations
                regarding the proposed fees before the USPTO issues a final rule. The
                USPTO must consider and analyze any comments, advice, or
                recommendations received from PPAC before setting or adjusting fees.
                 Consistent with this framework, on April 20, 2023, the Director
                notified PPAC of the USPTO's intent to set or adjust patent fees and
                submitted a preliminary patent fee proposal with supporting materials.
                The preliminary patent fee proposal and associated materials are
                available on the fee setting section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting. PPAC held a public hearing at the
                USPTO's headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia, on May 18, 2023, where
                members of the public were given the opportunity to provide oral
                testimony. Transcripts of the hearing are available for review on the
                USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/documents/PPAC_Hearing_Transcript-20230518.pdf. Members of the public were also
                given the opportunity to submit written comments for PPAC to consider
                and these comments are available on Regulations.gov at https://www.regulations.gov/document/PTO-P-2023-0017-0001. On August 14, 2023,
                PPAC released a written report setting forth in detail their comments,
                advice, and recommendations regarding the preliminary proposed fees.
                The PPAC Report is available on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/documents/PPAC-Report-on-2023-Fee-Proposal.docx. The USPTO considered and analyzed all comments, advice,
                and recommendations received from PPAC before publishing this NPRM.
                B. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
                 The USPTO publishes this Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
                (IRFA) as required by the RFA (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) to examine the
                impact of this proposed rule on small entities. Under the RFA, whenever
                an agency is required by 5 U.S.C. 553 (or any other law) to publish an
                NPRM, the agency must prepare and make available for public comment an
                IRFA, unless the agency certifies under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that this
                proposed rule, if implemented, will not have a significant economic
                impact on a substantial number of small entities. Given that this
                proposed fee schedule is projected to result in $2,050 million in
                additional aggregate revenue over the current fee schedule (baseline)
                for the period including FY 2025 to FY 2029, the USPTO acknowledges
                that the fee adjustments proposed will impact all entities seeking
                patent protection and could have a significant impact on small and
                micro entities. The $2,050 million in additional aggregate revenue
                results from an additional $301 million in FY 2025, $434 million in FY
                2026, $437 million in FY 2027, $437 million in FY 2028, and $441
                million in FY 2029.
                 While the USPTO welcomes all comments on this IRFA, it particularly
                seeks comments describing the type and extent of the impact of the
                proposed patent fees on commenters' specific businesses. In describing
                the impact, the USPTO requests biographic detail about the impacted
                businesses or concerns, including the size, average annual revenue,
                past patent activity (e.g., applications submitted, contested cases
                pursued, maintenance fees paid, patents abandoned, etc.), and planned
                patent activity of the impacted business or concern, where feasible.
                The USPTO will use this information to further assess the impact of
                this proposed rule on small entities. Where possible, comments should
                also describe any recommended alternative methods of setting and
                adjusting patent fees that would further reduce the impact on small
                entities.
                 Items 1-5 below discuss the five items specified in 5 U.S.C.
                603(b)(1)-(5) to be addressed in an IRFA. Item 6 below discusses the
                alternatives to this proposal that were considered.
                 1. A description of the reasons why the action by the agency is
                being considered.
                 Section 10 of the AIA authorizes the Director of the USPTO to set
                or adjust by rule any patent fee established, authorized, or charged
                under 35 U.S.C, for any services performed, or materials furnished, by
                the USPTO. Section 10 prescribes that patent fees may be set or
                adjusted only to recover the aggregate estimated costs for processing,
                activities, services, and materials relating to patents, including
                USPTO administrative costs with respect to such patent fees. This
                proposed fee schedule will recover the aggregate costs of patent
                operations while enabling the USPTO to predictably finance the agency's
                daily operations and mitigate financial risks.
                 2. The objectives of, and legal basis for, the proposed rule.
                 Since its inception, the AIA strengthened the patent system by
                affording the USPTO the ``resources it requires to clear the still
                sizeable backlog of patent applications and move forward to deliver to
                all American inventors the first rate service they deserve.'' H.R. Rep.
                No. 112-98(I), at 163 (2011). The objective of this proposed rule is to
                set or adjust patent fees under section 10 of the AIA to recover the
                aggregate costs of patent operations and secure sufficient revenue to
                deliver efficient and reliable services to the USPTO's stakeholders.
                The fee revenue would help to promote clear, enforceable patents that
                are essential to economic growth, global competitiveness, and promoting
                innovation. Additional information on the USPTO's goals and operating
                requirements may be found in the ``USPTO FY 2025 President's Budget
                Request,'' available on the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/about-us/performance-and-planning/budget-and-financial-information.
                 3. A description of and, where feasible, an estimate of the number
                of small entities to which the proposed rule will apply.
                a. SBA Size Standard
                 The Small Business Act (SBA) size standards applicable to most
                analyses conducted to comply with the RFA are set forth in 13 CFR
                121.201. These regulations generally define small businesses as those
                with less than a specified maximum number of employees or less than a
                specified level of annual receipts for the entity's industrial sector
                or North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code. As
                provided by the RFA, and after consulting with the Small Business
                Administration, the USPTO formally adopted an alternate size standard
                for the purpose of conducting an analysis or making a certification
                under the RFA for patent-related regulations. See Business Size
                Standard for Purposes of United States Patent and Trademark Office
                Regulatory Flexibility Analysis for Patent-Related Regulations, 71 FR
                67109, 67109 (Nov. 20, 2006), 1313 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 37, 60 (Dec.
                12, 2006). The USPTO's alternate small business size standard consists
                of the SBA's previously established size standard for entities entitled
                to pay reduced patent fees. See 13 CFR 121.802.
                 Unlike the SBA's generally applicable small business size
                standards, the size standard for the USPTO is not industry-specific.
                The USPTO's definition of a small business concern for RFA
                [[Page 23267]]
                purposes is a business or other concern that: (1) meets the SBA's
                definition of a ``business concern or concern'' set forth in Sec.
                121.105, and (2) meets the size standards set forth in Sec. 121.802
                for the purpose of paying reduced patent fees, namely, an entity: (a)
                whose number of employees, including affiliates, does not exceed 500
                persons, and (b) that has not assigned, granted, conveyed, or licensed
                (and is under no obligation to do so) any rights in the invention to
                any person who made it and could not be classified as an independent
                inventor, or to any concern that would not qualify as a nonprofit
                organization or a small business concern under this definition. See 71
                FR at 67109, 1313 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 60.
                 A patent applicant can self-identify on a patent application as
                qualifying as a small entity or may provide certification of micro
                entity status for reduced patent fees under the USPTO's alternative
                size standard. The data is captured and tracked for each patent
                application submitted.
                b. Small Entity Defined
                 The AIA, as amended by the UAIA, provides that fees set or adjusted
                under section 10(a) ``for filing, searching, examining, issuing,
                appealing, and maintaining patent applications and patents shall be
                reduced by 60 percent'' with respect to the application of such fees to
                any ``small entity'' (as defined in Sec. 1.27) that qualifies for
                reduced fees under 35 U.S.C. 41(h)(1). In turn, 125 Stat. at 316-17. 35
                U.S.C. 41(h)(1) provides that certain patent fees ``shall be reduced by
                60 percent'' for a small business concern as defined by section 3 of
                the SBA, and to any independent inventor or nonprofit organization as
                defined in regulations described by the Director.
                c. Micro Entity Defined
                 Section 10(g) of the AIA created a new category of entity called a
                ``micro entity.'' 35 U.S.C. 123; see also 125 Stat. at 318-19. Section
                10(b) of the AIA, as amended by the UAIA, provides that the fees set or
                adjusted under section 10(a) ``for filing, searching, examining,
                issuing, appealing, and maintaining patent applications and patents
                shall be reduced by 80 percent with respect to the application of such
                fees to any micro entity as defined by 35 U.S. Code 123.'' 125 Stat. at
                315-17. 35 U.S.C. 123(a) defines a ``micro entity'' as an applicant who
                makes a certification that the applicant: (1) qualifies as a small
                entity as defined in Sec. 1.27; (2) has not been named as an inventor
                on more than four previously filed patent applications, other than
                applications filed in another country, provisional applications under
                35 U.S.C. 111(b), 35 U.S.C. 111(b), or Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)
                applications for which the basic national fee under 35 U.S.C. 41(a) was
                not paid; (3) did not, in the calendar year preceding the calendar year
                in which the applicable fee is being paid, have a gross income, as
                defined in section 61(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26
                U.S.C. 61(a)), exceeding three times the median household income for
                that preceding calendar year, as most recently reported by the Bureau
                of the Census; and (4) has not assigned, granted, or conveyed, and is
                not under an obligation by contract or law, to assign, grant, or
                convey, a license or other ownership interest in the application
                concerned to an entity exceeding the income limit set forth in (3)
                above. See 125 Stat. at 318; see also https://www.uspto.gov/PatentMicroEntity. 35 U.S.C. 123(d) also defines a ``micro'' as an
                applicant who certifies that: (1) The applicant's employer, from which
                the applicant obtains the majority of the applicant's income, is an
                institution of higher education as defined in section 101(a) of the
                Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1001(a)); or (2) the applicant
                has assigned, granted, conveyed, or is under an obligation by contract
                or law, to assign, grant, or convey, a license or other ownership
                interest in the particular applications to such an institution of
                higher education.
                d. Estimate of Number of Small Entities Affected
                 The changes in this proposed rule will apply to any entity,
                including small and micro entities, that pays any patent fee set forth
                in the NPRM. The reduced fee rates (60% for small entities and 80% for
                micro entities) will continue to apply to any small entity asserting
                small entity status and to any micro entity certifying micro entity
                status for filing, searching, examining, issuing, appealing, and
                maintaining patent applications and patents.
                 The USPTO reviews historical data to estimate the percentages of
                application filings asserting small entity status. Table 30 presents a
                summary of such small entity filings by type of application (utility,
                reissue, plant, design) over the last five years.
                 Table 30--Number of Patent Applications Filed in the Last Five Years *
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 FY2020 FY2021 FY2022 FY2023 ** Average
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Utility:
                 All....................................... 607,496 594,078 590,086 594,858 596,630
                 Small..................................... 139,064 142,488 140,131 142,646 141,082
                 % Small................................... 22.9% 24.0% 23.7% 24.0% 23.6%
                 Micro..................................... 19,408 19,927 18,467 17,559 18,840
                 % Micro................................... 3.2% 3.4% 3.1% 3.0% 3.2%
                Reissue:
                 All....................................... 1,204 1,195 1,245 1,115 1,190
                 Small..................................... 363 381 394 381 380
                 % Small................................... 30.1% 31.9% 31.6% 34.2% 31.9%
                 Micro..................................... 31 19 33 14 24
                 % Micro................................... 2.6% 1.6% 2.7% 1.3% 2.0%
                Plant:
                 All....................................... 1,043 945 933 865 947
                 Small..................................... 504 424 444 415 447
                 % Small................................... 48.3% 44.9% 47.6% 48.0% 47.2%
                 Micro..................................... 7 6 10 5 7
                 % Micro................................... 0.7% 0.6% 1.1% 0.6% 0.7%
                Design:
                 All....................................... 50,002 56,086 55,670 54,659 54,104
                 Small..................................... 19,035 19,892 18,935 20,354 19,554
                 % Small................................... 38.1% 35.5% 34.0% 37.2% 36.1%
                 Micro..................................... 9,042 15,154 14,466 14,239 13,225
                [[Page 23268]]
                
                 % Micro................................... 18.1% 27.0% 26.0% 26.1% 24.4%
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * The patent application filing data in this table includes RCEs.
                ** FY 2023 application filing data are preliminary and will be finalized in the FY 2024 Annual Financial Report
                 (AFR) and Annual Performance Plan and Annual Performance Report (APPR).
                 Because the percentage of small entity filings varies widely
                between application types, the USPTO has averaged the small entity
                filing rates over the past five years for those application types to
                estimate future filing rates by small and micro entities. Those average
                rates appear in the last column of table 30. The USPTO estimates that
                small entity filing rates will continue for the next five years at
                these average historic rates.
                 The USPTO forecasts the number of projected patent applications
                (i.e., workload) for the next five years using a combination of
                historical data, economic analysis, and subject matter expertise. The
                USPTO estimates that UPR patent application filings will grow by 0.4%
                in FY 2024 and about 1.5% per year on average from FY 2025 through FY
                2029. Design patent applications are forecast independently of UPR
                applications because they exhibit different filing behaviors.
                 Using the estimated filings for the next five years, and the
                average historic rates of small entity filings, table 31 presents the
                USPTO's estimates of the number of patent application filings by all
                applicants, including small and micro entities, over the next five
                fiscal years by application type.
                 The USPTO has previously undertaken an elasticity analysis to
                examine if fee adjustments may impact small entities and whether
                increases in fees would result in some such entities not submitting
                applications. Elasticity measures how sensitive demand for services by
                patent applicants and patentees is to fee changes. If elasticity is low
                enough (demand is inelastic), then fee increases will not reduce
                patenting activity enough to negatively impact overall revenues. If
                elasticity is high enough (demand is elastic), then increasing fees
                will decrease patenting activity enough to decrease revenue. The USPTO
                analyzed elasticity at the overall filing level across all patent
                applicants with regard to entity size and estimated the potential
                impact to patent application filings across entities. Additional
                information about how the USPTO estimates elasticity is provided in
                ``Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees during Fiscal Year 2020--
                Description of Elasticity Estimates,'' available on the USPTO website
                at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/documents/Elasticity_Appendix.docx.
                 Table 31--Estimated Numbers of Patent Applications, FY 2024-2029
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 FY 2024
                 (current) FY 2025 FY 2026 FY 2027 FY 2028 FY 2029
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Utility--All...................... 595,315 607,897 613,902 622,038 628,036 641,784
                Reissue--All...................... 640 660 680 700 700 700
                Plant--All........................ 860 860 860 860 860 860
                Design--All....................... 54,986 57,185 59,472 62,446 65,568 68,847
                 Total--All.................... 651,801 666,602 674,914 686,044 695,164 712,191
                ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 4. A description of the projected reporting, recordkeeping, and
                other compliance requirements of the proposed rule, including an
                estimate of the classes of small entities which will be subject to the
                requirement and type of professional skills necessary for preparation
                of the report or record.
                 If implemented, this proposed rule will not change the burden of
                existing reporting and recordkeeping requirements for payment of fees.
                The current requirements for small and micro entities will continue to
                apply. Therefore, the professional skills necessary to file and
                prosecute an application through issue and maintenance remain unchanged
                under this proposal. This action proposes only to adjust patent fees
                and not to set procedures for asserting small entity status or
                certifying micro entity status, as previously discussed.
                 The full proposed fee schedule (see Part VI: Discussion of Specific
                Rules) is set forth in the NPRM. The proposed fee schedule sets or
                adjusts 455 patent fees in total. This includes 73 new fees.
                 5. Identification, to the extent practicable, of all relevant
                Federal rules which may duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the
                proposed rules.
                 The USPTO is the sole agency of the U.S. Government responsible for
                administering the provisions of 35 U.S.C. pertaining to examining and
                granting patents. It is solely responsible for issuing rules to comply
                with section 10 of the AIA. No other Federal, State, or local entity
                has jurisdiction over the examination and granting of patents.
                 Other countries, however, have their own patent laws, and an entity
                desiring a patent in a particular country must make an application for
                patent in that country, in accordance with the applicable law. Although
                the potential for overlap exists internationally, this cannot be
                avoided except by treaty (such as the Paris Convention for the
                Protection of Industrial Property, or the PCT). Nevertheless, the USPTO
                believes that there are no other duplicative or overlapping rules.
                 6. A description of any significant alternatives to the proposed
                rules which accomplish the stated objectives of applicable statutes and
                which minimize any significant economic impact of the proposed rules on
                small entities.
                 The USPTO considered several alternative approaches to this
                proposed rule, discussed below, including full cost recovery for
                individual services, an across-the-board adjustment to fees, and a
                baseline (current fee rates). The discussion here begins with a
                description of the fee schedule adopted for this proposed rule.
                a. Alternative 1: Proposed Alternative--Set and Adjust Patent Fees
                 The alternative proposed herein secures the USPTO's required
                revenue to facilitate the effective administration of the U.S. patent
                system, including implementing the Strategic Plan. The revenue will
                allow the USPTO to
                [[Page 23269]]
                continue to balance timely examination--to help innovators bring their
                ideas and products to impact more quickly and efficiently--with
                improvements in patent quality--particularly, the robustness and
                reliability of issued patents--and ensure the USPTO can resource
                mission success. This will benefit all applicants, including small and
                micro entities, without undue burden to patent applicants and holders,
                barriers to entry, or reduced incentives to innovate. This alternative
                maintains small and micro entity discounts. Compared to the current fee
                schedule, there are no new small or micro entity fee codes being
                extended to existing undiscounted fee rates and none are being
                eliminated.
                 As discussed throughout this document, the fee changes proposed in
                this alternative are moderate compared to other alternatives. Given
                that the proposed fee schedule will result in increased aggregate
                revenue under this alternative, small and micro entities would pay
                higher fees when compared to the current fee schedule (Alternative 4).
                 In summary, the fees to obtain a patent will increase. All fees are
                subject to the 5% across-the-board increase. In addition to the across-
                the-board increase, some fees will be subject to a larger increase. For
                example, the fee rate for a first RCE will increase by 10%, the second
                RCE by 25%, and third and subsequent RCEs by 80%, respectively. Also,
                AIA trial fees will increase 25% to better align the fee rates charged
                with the actual costs borne by the USPTO to provide these proceedings
                and so PTAB can continue to maintain the appropriate level of judicial
                and administrative resources to continue to provide high-quality and
                timely decisions for AIA trials.
                 Adjusting the patent fee schedule as proposed in this NPRM allows
                the USPTO to implement the patent-related strategic goals and
                objectives documented in the Strategic Plan and to carry out
                requirements as described in the FY 2025 Budget. Specifically, the
                revenue from this alternative is sufficient to recover the aggregate
                costs of patent operations and to support the strategic objectives to
                issue and maintain robust and reliable patents; improve patent
                application pendency; optimize the patent application process to enable
                efficiencies for applicants and other stakeholders; and enhance
                internal processes to prevent fraudulent and abusive behaviors that do
                not embody the USPTO's mission. Alternative 1 focuses on building
                resiliency against financial shocks by maintaining the minimum
                operating reserve balance (approximately one month of operating
                expenses) while building the operating reserve balance to the optimal
                reserve target (approximately three months of operating expenses).
                While the other alternatives discussed facilitate progress toward some
                of the USPTO's goals, the proposed alternative is the only one that
                does so in a way that does not impose undue costs on patent applicants
                and holders.
                 The fee schedule for Alternative 1: Proposed Alternative-Set and
                Adjust Patent Fees is available on the fee setting section of the USPTO
                website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting, in the
                document titled ``Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees During Fiscal Year
                2025--IRFA Tables.'' For the comparison between proposed fees under
                Alternative 1 and current fees, the ``current fees'' column displays
                the fees that are in effect as of the publication of this NPRM. This
                column is used to calculate dollar and percent fee change compared to
                proposed fees.
                b. Other Alternatives Considered
                 In addition to the proposed fee schedule set forth in Alternative 1
                above, several other alternative approaches were considered. For each
                alternative considered, the USPTO calculated proposed fees and the
                resulting revenue derived by each alternative scenario. The proposed
                fees and their corresponding revenue tables are available on the fee
                setting section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting. Please note, only the fees outlined in
                Alternative 1 are proposed in this NPRM; other scenarios are shown only
                to demonstrate the analysis of other options.
                Alternative 2: Unit Cost Recovery
                 It is common practice in the Federal Government to set individual
                fees at a level sufficient to recover the cost of that single service.
                In fact, official guidance on user fees, as cited in OMB Circular A-25,
                ``User Charges,'' states that user charges (fees) should be sufficient
                to recover the full cost to the Federal Government of providing the
                particular service, resource, or good, when the government is acting in
                its capacity as sovereign.
                 As such, the USPTO considered setting most individual undiscounted
                fees at the historical cost of performing the activities related to the
                particular service in FY 2022. The USPTO recognizes that using FY 2022
                costs to set fee rates beginning in FY 2025 does not account for
                inflationary factors that would likely increase costs and necessitate
                higher fees in the out-years. However, the USPTO contends that the FY
                2022 data is the best unit cost data available to inform this analysis.
                 There are several complexities in achieving individual fee unit
                cost recovery for the patent fee schedule. The most significant is the
                AIA requirement to provide a 60% discount on fees to small entities and
                an 80% discount on fees to micro entities. To account for this
                requirement, this alternative retains existing small and micro entity
                discounts where eligible under AIA authority. To provide these
                discounts and still generate sufficient revenue to recover the
                anticipated budgetary requirements over the five-year period,
                maintenance fees must be set significantly above unit cost under this
                alternative. Note that the USPTO no longer collects activity-based
                information for maintenance fees, and previous year unit costs were
                negligible.
                 Except for maintenance fees, this alternative sets fees for which
                there is no FY 2022 cost data at current rates. For the small number of
                services that have a variable fee, the aggregate revenue table does not
                list a fee. Instead, for those services with an estimated workload, the
                workload is listed in dollars rather than units to develop revenue
                estimates. Fees without either a fixed fee rate or a workload estimate
                are assumed to provide zero revenue.
                 Alternative 2 does not align well with the strategic and policy
                goals of this proposed rule. Front-end services (i.e., filing, search,
                and examination) are costlier for the USPTO to perform than back-end
                services (i.e., issuance and maintenance), but both the current (the
                Baseline) and proposed fee schedule (Alternative 1) are structured to
                collect fees at filing below the cost and more fees further along in
                the process, when the patent owner has better information about a
                patent's value, rather than at the time of filing, when applicants are
                less certain about the value of their invention. Setting fees at the
                cost of the service under Alternative 2 would reverse the long-
                established policy to set front-end fees below cost to foster
                innovation and would create a barrier for entry into the patent system.
                 The USPTO has estimated the potential quantitative elasticity
                impacts for application filings (e.g., filing, search, and examination
                fees), maintenance renewals (all three stages), and other major fee
                categories. Results of this analysis indicate that a high cost of entry
                into the patent system could lead to a significant decrease in the
                incentives to invest in innovative
                [[Page 23270]]
                activities among all entities, especially for small and micro entities.
                Under the current fee schedule, maintenance fees subsidize all
                applications. By setting fees to recover the cost of each service at
                each point in the application process, the USPTO is effectively
                charging high fees for every patent application, meaning those
                applicants who have less information about the patentability of their
                claims or the market value of their invention may be less likely to
                pursue patent prosecution. The ultimate effect of these changes in
                behavior is likely to stifle innovation. While the loss of the front-
                end subsidy designed to promote innovation strategies is the most
                obvious cost of this alternative, the impacts of much costlier patent
                processing options (e.g., RCEs and appeals) are also noticeable.
                 Similarly, the USPTO suspects that patent renewal rates could
                change as well, given fee reductions for maintenance fees at each of
                the three stages. While some innovators and firms may choose to file
                fewer applications given the higher front-end costs, others, whose
                claims are allowed or upheld, may seek to fully maximize the benefits
                of obtaining a patent by keeping those patents in force for longer than
                they would have previously (i.e., under the baseline). In the
                aggregate, patents that are maintained beyond their useful life weaken
                the IP system by slowing the rate of public accessibility and follow-on
                inventions, which is contrary to the USPTO's policy factor of promoting
                innovation strategies. In sum, this alternative is inadequate to
                accomplish the goals as stated in Part IV: Rulemaking Goals and
                Strategies.
                 The fee schedule for Alternative 2: Unit Cost Recovery is available
                on the fee setting section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting, in the document titled ``Setting
                and Adjusting Patent Fees During Fiscal Year 2025--IRFA Tables.'' For
                the comparison between proposed (unit cost recovery) fees and current
                fees, the ``current fees'' column displays the fees that are in effect
                as of the publication of this NPRM. This column is used to calculate
                dollar and percent fee change compared to proposed fees.
                Alternative 3: Across-the-Board Adjustment
                 In years past, the USPTO used its authority to adjust statutory
                fees annually according to increases in the consumer price index (CPI),
                which is a commonly used measure of inflation. Building on this prior
                approach and incorporating the additional authority under the AIA to
                set small and micro entity fees, Alternative 3 would set fees by
                applying a one-time 12.5%, across-the-board inflationary increase to
                the baseline (current fees) beginning in FY 2025. A 12.5% increase
                represents the change in revenue needed to achieve the aggregate
                revenue necessary to recover the aggregate costs laid out in the FY
                2025 Budget.
                 Under this alternative, nearly every existing fee would be
                increased, no new fees would be introduced, and no fees would be
                discontinued or reduced. This alternative maintains the status quo
                ratio of front-end and back-end fees, given that all fees would be
                adjusted by the same escalation factor, thereby promoting innovation
                strategies and allowing applicants to gain access to the patent system
                through fees set below cost while patent holders pay issue and
                maintenance fees above cost to subsidize the below-cost front-end fees.
                Alternative 3 nevertheless fails to implement policy factors and
                deliver benefits beyond what exists in the Baseline fee schedule (e.g.,
                no fee adjustments to offer new patent prosecution options or
                facilitate more effective administration of the patent system).
                 The fee schedule for Alternative 3: Across-the-Board Adjustment is
                available on the fee setting section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting, in the document titled ``Setting
                and Adjusting Patent Fees During Fiscal Year 2025--IRFA Tables.'' For
                the comparison between proposed (across-the-board adjustment) fees and
                current fees, the ``current fees'' column displays the fees that are in
                effect as of the publication of this NPRM. This column is used to
                calculate dollar and percent fee change compared to proposed fees.
                Alternative 4: Baseline (Current Fee Schedule)
                 The USPTO considered a no-action alternative. This alternative
                would retain the status quo, meaning that the USPTO would continue the
                small and micro entity discounts that the Congress provided in section
                10 of the AIA, as amended by the UAIA, and maintain the fees that
                became effective on December 29, 2022.
                 Alternative 4 would not secure aggregate revenue to recover the
                aggregate costs laid out in the FY 2025 Budget. Under this alternative,
                the USPTO only expects to collect sufficient revenue to continue
                executing some, not all, of the patent priorities. For example, the
                USPTO plans to hire approximately 800 to 850 patent examiners in FY
                2024 through FY 2025, and between 700 and 900 patent examiners in FY
                2026 through FY 2029 (averaging 350 over estimated attrition levels)
                during the five-year planning horizon. This additional examination
                capacity will allow the agency to improve patent reliability and
                maintain patent term adjustment (PTA) compliance rates. Alternative 4
                provides neither sufficient resources to hire the same number of
                examiners nor sufficient resources to continue building the patent
                operating reserve to its optimal level in the five-year planning
                horizon. In fact, current estimates project that under the Baseline fee
                schedule, the USPTO would withdraw funds from the patent operating
                reserve in every year, until the reserve is exhausted during FY 2027.
                This approach would not provide sufficient aggregate revenue to
                accomplish the USPTO's rulemaking goals as stated in Part IV:
                Rulemaking Goals and Strategies. IT improvements, progress on timely
                processing and quality, and other improvement activities would
                continue, but at a significantly slower rate as increases in core
                patent examination costs crowd out funding for other improvements.
                Likewise, without a fee increase, the USPTO would deplete its operating
                reserves, leaving the USPTO vulnerable to fiscal and economic events.
                This would expose core operations to unacceptable levels of financial
                risk and would position the USPTO to have to return to making
                inefficient, short-term funding decisions.
                Alternatives Specified by the RFA
                 The RFA provides that an agency also consider four specified
                ``alternatives'' or approaches, namely: (i) establishing different
                compliance or reporting requirements or timetables that take into
                account the resources available to small entities; (ii) clarifying,
                consolidating, or simplifying compliance and reporting requirements
                under the rule for small entities; (iii) using performance rather than
                design standards; and (iv) exempting small entities from coverage of
                the rule, or any part thereof. 5 U.S.C. 604(c). The USPTO discusses
                each of these specified alternatives or approaches below and describes
                how this NPRM is adopting these approaches.
                i. Differing Requirements
                 As discussed above, the changes proposed in this proposed rule
                would continue existing fee discounts for small and micro entities that
                take into account the reduced resources available to them as well as
                offer new discounts when applicable under AIA authority. Specifically,
                micro entities would continue to receive an 80% reduction in
                [[Page 23271]]
                most patent fees under this proposal and small entities that do not
                qualify as micro entities would continue to receive a 60% reduction in
                most patent fees.
                 This proposed rule sets fee levels but does not set or alter
                procedural requirements for asserting small or micro entity status. To
                pay reduced patent fees, small entities must merely assert small entity
                status to pay reduced patent fees. The small entity may make this
                assertion by either checking a box on the transmittal form, ``Applicant
                claims small entity status,'' or by paying the basic filing or basic
                national small entity fee exactly. The process to claim micro entity
                status is similar in that eligible entities need only submit a written
                certification of their status prior to or at the time a reduced fee is
                paid. This proposed rule does not change any reporting requirements for
                any small or micro entity. For both small and micro entities, the
                burden to establish their status is nominal (making an assertion or
                submitting a certification) and the benefit of the fee reductions (60%
                for small entities and 80% for micro entities) is significant.
                 This proposed rule makes the best use of differing requirements for
                small and micro entities. It also makes the best use of the redesigned
                fee structure, as discussed further below.
                ii. Clarification, Consolidation, or Simplification of Requirements
                 This proposed rule pertains to setting or adjusting patent fees.
                Any compliance or reporting requirements proposed in this rule are de
                minimis and necessary to implement lower proposed fees. Therefore, any
                clarifications, consolidations, or simplifications to compliance and
                reporting requirements for small entities are not applicable or would
                not achieve the objectives of this rulemaking.
                iii. Performance Standards
                 Performance standards do not apply to the current proposed rule.
                iv. Exemption for Small and Micro Entities
                 The proposed changes here maintain a 60% reduction in fees for
                small entities and an 80% reduction in fees for micro entities. The
                USPTO considered exempting small and micro entities from paying
                increased patent fees but determined that the USPTO would lack
                statutory authority for this approach. Section 10(b) of the AIA, as
                amended by the UAIA, provides that ``fees set or adjusted under
                subsection (a) for filing, searching, examining, issuing, appealing,
                and maintaining patent applications and patents shall be reduced by 60
                percent [for small entities] and shall be reduced by 80 percent [for
                micro entities]'' (emphasis added). Neither the AIA, UAIA, nor any
                other statute authorizes the USPTO simply to exempt small or micro
                entities, as a class of applicants, from paying increased patent fees.
                C. Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review)
                 This proposed rule has been determined to be economically
                significant for purposes of Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 (Sept. 30,
                1993), as amended by E.O. 14094 (April 6, 2023), Modernizing Regulatory
                Review. The USPTO has developed an RIA as required for rulemakings
                deemed to be economically significant. The complete RIA is available on
                the fee setting section of the USPTO website at https://www.uspto.gov/FeeSettingAndAdjusting.
                D. Executive Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review)
                 The USPTO has complied with E.O. 13563 (Jan. 18, 2011).
                Specifically, the USPTO has, to the extent feasible and applicable: (1)
                made a reasoned determination that the benefits justify the costs of
                the proposed rule; (2) tailored the proposed rule to impose the least
                burden on society consistent with obtaining the regulatory objectives;
                (3) selected a regulatory approach that maximizes net benefits; (4)
                specified performance objectives; (5) identified and assessed available
                alternatives; (6) involved the public in an open exchange of
                information and perspectives among experts in relevant disciplines,
                affected stakeholders in the private sector, and the public as a whole,
                and provided online access to the rulemaking docket; (7) attempted to
                promote coordination, simplification, and harmonization across
                government agencies and identified goals designed to promote
                innovation; (8) considered approaches that reduce burdens and maintain
                flexibility and freedom of choice for the public; and (9) ensured the
                objectivity of scientific and technological information and processes.
                E. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
                 This rulemaking does not contain policies with federalism
                implications sufficient to warrant preparation of a Federalism
                Assessment under E.O. 13132 (Aug. 4, 1999).
                F. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal Consultation)
                 This rulemaking will not: (1) have substantial direct effects on
                one or more Indian tribes; (2) impose substantial direct compliance
                costs on Indian tribal governments; or (3) preempt tribal law.
                Therefore, a tribal summary impact statement is not required under E.O.
                13175 (Nov. 6, 2000).
                G. Executive Order 13211 (Energy Effects)
                 This rulemaking is not a significant energy action under E.O. 13211
                because this proposed rulemaking is not likely to have a significant
                adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of energy.
                Therefore, a Statement of Energy Effects is not required under E.O.
                13211 (May 18, 2001).
                H. Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
                 This rulemaking meets applicable standards to minimize litigation,
                eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden as set forth in sections 3(a)
                and 3(b)(2) of E.O. 12988 (Feb. 5, 1996).
                I. Executive Order 13045 (Protection of Children)
                 This rulemaking does not concern an environmental risk to health or
                safety that may disproportionately affect children under E.O. 13045
                (Apr. 21, 1997).
                J. Executive Order 12630 (Taking of Private Property)
                 This rulemaking will not affect a taking of private property or
                otherwise have taking implications under E.O. 12630 (Mar. 15, 1988).
                K. Congressional Review Act
                 Under the Congressional Review Act provisions of the Small Business
                Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.),
                prior to issuing any final rule, the United States Patent and Trademark
                Office will submit a report containing the rule and other required
                information to the United States Senate, the United States House of
                Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the Government
                Accountability Office. The changes in this proposed rule are expected
                to result in an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more, a
                major increase in costs or prices, or significant adverse effects on
                competition, employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the
                ability of United States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-
                based enterprises in domestic and export markets. Therefore, this
                proposed rule is a ``major rule'' as defined in 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
                [[Page 23272]]
                L. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
                 The proposed changes set forth in this rulemaking do not involve a
                Federal intergovernmental mandate that will result in the expenditure
                by State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, of $100
                million (as adjusted) or more in any one year, or a Federal private
                sector mandate that will result in the expenditure by the private
                sector of $100 million (as adjusted) or more in any one year, and will
                not significantly or uniquely affect small governments. Therefore, no
                actions are necessary under the provisions of the Unfunded Mandates
                Reform Act of 1995. See 2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.
                M. National Environmental Policy Act
                 This rulemaking will not have any effect on the quality of the
                environment and is thus categorically excluded from review under the
                National Environmental Policy Act of 1969. See 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.
                N. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
                 The requirements of section 12(d) of the National Technology
                Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) are not
                applicable because this rulemaking does not contain provisions which
                involve the use of technical standards.
                O. Paperwork Reduction Act
                 The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.)
                requires that the USPTO consider the impact of paperwork and other
                information collection burdens imposed on the public. This proposed
                rule involves information collection requirements which are subject to
                review by the OMB under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
                3501-3549). The collection of information involved in this proposed
                rule has been reviewed and previously approved by OMB under control
                numbers 0651-0012, 0651-0016, 0651-0017, 0651-0020, 0651-0021, 0651-
                0022, 0651-0024, 0651-0027, 0651-0031, 0651-0032, 0651-0033, 0651-0034,
                0651-0035, 0651-0059, 0651-0062, 0651-0063, 0651-0064, 0651-0069, 0651-
                0073, and 0651-0075.
                 Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person is required
                to respond to nor shall any person be subject to a penalty for failure
                to comply with a collection of information subject to the requirements
                of the Paperwork Reduction Act unless that collection of information
                displays a currently valid OMB control number.
                P. E-Government Act Compliance
                 The USPTO is committed to compliance with the E-Government Act to
                promote the use of the internet and other information technologies, to
                provide increased opportunities for citizen access to government
                information and services, and for other purposes.
                List of Subjects
                37 CFR Part 1
                 Administrative practice and procedure, Biologics, Courts, Freedom
                of information, Inventions and patents, Reporting and recordkeeping
                requirements, Small businesses.
                37 CFR Part 41
                 Administrative practice and procedure, Inventions and patents,
                Lawyers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
                37 CFR Part 42
                 Administrative practice and procedure, Inventions and patents,
                Lawyers.
                 For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 37 CFR parts 1, 41, and
                42 are proposed to be amended as follows:
                PART 1--RULES OF PRACTICE IN PATENT CASES
                0
                1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read as follows:
                 Authority: 35 U.S.C. 2(b)(2), unless otherwise noted.
                0
                2. Section 1.16 is amended by revising the tables in paragraphs (a)
                through (s) and (u) to read as follows:
                Sec. 1.16 National application filing, search, and examination fees.
                 (a) * * *
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (a)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $70.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 140.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a)) if the application is 70.00
                 submitted in compliance with the USPTO electronic filing
                 system (Sec. 1.27(b)(2))................................
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 350.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (b) * * *
                 Table 2 to Paragraph (b)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $60.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 120.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 300.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (c) * * *
                 Table 3 to Paragraph (c)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $48.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 96.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 240.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                [[Page 23273]]
                 (d) * * *
                 Table 4 to Paragraph (d)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $63.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 126.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 315.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (e) * * *
                 Table 5 to Paragraph (e)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $70.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 140.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 350.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (f) * * *
                 Table 6 to Paragraph (f)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $34.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 68.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 170.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (g) * * *
                 Table 7 to Paragraph (g)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $13.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 26.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 65.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (h) * * *
                 Table 8 to Paragraph (h)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $120.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 240.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 600.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (i) * * *
                 Table 9 to Paragraph (i)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $40.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 80.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 200.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (j) * * *
                 Table 10 to Paragraph (j)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $181.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 362.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 905.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (k) * * *
                 Table 11 to Paragraph (k)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $154.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 308.00
                [[Page 23274]]
                
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 770.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (l) * * *
                 Table 12 to Paragraph (l)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $60.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 120.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 300.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (m) * * *
                 Table 13 to Paragraph (m)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $97.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 194.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 485.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (n) * * *
                 Table 14 to Paragraph (n)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $154.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 308.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 770.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (o) * * *
                 Table 15 to Paragraph (o)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $176.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 352.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 880.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (p) * * *
                 Table 16 to Paragraph (p)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $140.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 280.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 700.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (q) * * *
                 Table 17 to Paragraph (q)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $145.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 290.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 725.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (r) * * *
                [[Page 23275]]
                 Table 18 to Paragraph (r)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $510.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,020.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,550.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (s) * * *
                 Table 19 to Paragraph (s)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $88.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 176.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 440.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (u) * * *
                 Table 21 to Paragraph (u)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $84.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 168.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 420.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                0
                3. Section 1.17 is amended by:
                0
                a. Revising paragraph (a) introductory text;
                0
                b. Revising the tables in paragraphs (a)(1) through (5), (c), (d),
                (e)(1);
                0
                c. Revising paragraph (e)(2);
                0
                d. Adding paragraph (e)(3);
                0
                e. Revising the table in paragraph (f);
                0
                f. Revising paragraph (g);
                0
                g. Revising the tables in paragraphs (h), (i)(1) and (2), and (k);
                0
                h. Revising paragraph (m);
                0
                i. Revising the tables in paragraphs (o) and (p);
                0
                j. Revising paragraph (q);
                0
                k. Revising the tables in paragraphs (r) through (t); and
                0
                l. Adding paragraphs (u) through (x).
                 The revisions and additions read as follows:
                Sec. 1.17 Patent application and reexamination processing fees.
                 (a) Extension fees pursuant to Sec. 1.136(a), except in
                provisional applications filed under Sec. 1.53(c):
                 (1) * * *
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (a)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $46.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 92.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 230.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (2) * * *
                 Table 2 to Paragraph (a)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $134.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 268.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 670.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (3) * * *
                 Table 3 to Paragraph (a)(3)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $311.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 622.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 1,555.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (4) * * *
                 Table 4 to Paragraph (a)(4)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $487.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 974.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,435.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                [[Page 23276]]
                 (5) * * *
                 Table 5 to Paragraph (a)(5)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $664.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,328.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 3,320.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (c) * * *
                 Table 6 to Paragraph (c)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $882.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,764.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 4,410.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (d) * * *
                 Table 7 to Paragraph (d)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $134.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 268.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 670.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (e) * * *
                 (1) * * *
                 Table 8 to Paragraph (e)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $300.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 600.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 1,500.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (2) For filing a second request for continued examination pursuant
                to Sec. 1.114 in an application:
                 Table 9 to Paragraph (e)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $500.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,000.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,500.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (3) For filing a third or subsequent request for continued
                examination pursuant to Sec. 1.114 in an application:
                 Table 10 to Paragraph (e)(3)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $720.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,440.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 3,600.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (f) * * *
                 Table 11 to Paragraph (f)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $88.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 176.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 440.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Note 1 to table 11 to paragraph (f):
                Sec. 1.36(a)--for revocation of a power of attorney by fewer than all
                 of the applicants.
                Sec. 1.53(e)--to accord a filing date.
                Sec. 1.182--for decision on a question not specifically provided for
                 in an application for patent.
                [[Page 23277]]
                
                Sec. 1.183--to suspend the rules in an application for patent.
                Sec. 1.741(b)--to accord a filing date to an application under Sec.
                 1.740 for extension of a patent term.
                Sec. 1.1023--to review the filing date of an international design
                 application.
                 (g)(1) For filing a petition under one of the following sections
                which refers to this paragraph (g):
                 Table 12 to Paragraph (g)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $46.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 92.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 230.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Note 2 to table 12 to paragraph (g)(1):
                Sec. 1.12--for access to an assignment record.
                Sec. 1.14--for access to an application.
                Sec. 1.46--for filing an application on behalf of an inventor by a
                 person who otherwise shows sufficient proprietary interest in the
                 matter.
                Sec. 1.55(f)--for filing a belated certified copy of a foreign
                 application.
                Sec. 1.55(g)--for filing a belated certified copy of a foreign
                 application.
                Sec. 1.57(a)--for filing a belated certified copy of a foreign
                 application.
                Sec. 1.59--for expungement of information.
                Sec. 1.136(b)--for review of a request for extension of time when the
                 provisions of Sec. 1.136(a) are not available.
                Sec. 1.377--for review of decision refusing to accept and record
                 payment of a maintenance fee filed prior to expiration of a patent.
                Sec. 1.550(c)--for patent owner requests for extension of time in ex
                 parte reexamination proceedings.
                Sec. 1.956--for patent owner requests for extension of time in inter
                 partes reexamination proceedings.
                Sec. 5.12 of this chapter--for expedited handling of a foreign filing
                 license.
                Sec. 5.15 of this chapter--for changing the scope of a license.
                Sec. 5.25 of this chapter--for retroactive license.
                 (2) For filing a petition to suspend action in an application under
                Sec. 1.103(a):
                 (i) For filing a first request for suspension pursuant to Sec.
                1.103(a) in an application:
                 Table 13 to Paragraph (g)(2)(i)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $60.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 120.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 300.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (ii) For filing a second or subsequent request for suspension
                pursuant to Sec. 1.103(a) in an application:
                 Table 14 to Paragraph (g)(2)(ii)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $90.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 180.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 450.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (h) * * *
                 Table 15 to Paragraph (h)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $29.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 58.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 145.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Note 3 to table 15 to paragraph (h):
                Sec. 1.84--for accepting color drawings or photographs.
                Sec. 1.91--for entry of a model or exhibit.
                Sec. 1.102(d)--to make an application special.
                Sec. 1.138(c)--to expressly abandon an application to avoid
                 publication.
                Sec. 1.313--to withdraw an application from issue.
                Sec. 1.314--to defer issuance of a patent.
                 (i) * * *
                 (1) * * *
                [[Page 23278]]
                 Table 16 to Paragraph (i)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $29.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 58.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 145.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Note 4 to table 16 to paragraph (i)(1):
                Sec. 1.28(c)(3)--for processing a non-itemized fee deficiency based on
                 an error in small entity status.
                Sec. 1.29(k)(3)--for processing a non-itemized fee deficiency based on
                 an error in micro entity status.
                Sec. 1.41--for supplying the name or names of the inventor or joint
                 inventors in an application without either an application data sheet
                 or the inventor's oath or declaration, except in provisional
                 applications.
                Sec. 1.48--for correcting inventorship, except in provisional
                 applications.
                Sec. 1.52(d)--for processing a nonprovisional application filed with a
                 specification in a language other than English.
                Sec. 1.53(c)(3)--to convert a provisional application filed under Sec.
                 1.53(c) into a nonprovisional application under Sec. 1.53(b).
                Sec. 1.71(g)(2)--for processing a belated amendment under Sec.
                 1.71(g).
                Sec. 1.102(e)--for requesting prioritized examination of an
                 application.
                Sec. 1.103(b)--for requesting limited suspension of action, continued
                 prosecution application for a design patent (Sec. 1.53(d)).
                Sec. 1.103(c)--for requesting limited suspension of action, request
                 for continued examination (Sec. 1.114).
                Sec. 1.103(d)--for requesting deferred examination of an application.
                Sec. 1.291(c)(5)--for processing a second or subsequent protest by the
                 same real party in interest.
                Sec. 3.81of this chapter--for a patent to issue to assignee,
                 assignment submitted after payment of the issue fee.
                 (2) * * *
                 Table 17 to Paragraph (i)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $147.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 147.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 147.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Note 5 to table 17 to paragraph (i)(2):
                Sec. 1.217--for processing a redacted copy of a paper submitted in the
                 file of an application in which a redacted copy was submitted for the
                 patent application publication.
                Sec. 1.221--for requesting voluntary publication or republication of
                 an application.
                * * * * *
                 (k) * * *
                 Table 18 to Paragraph (k)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $336.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 672.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 1,680.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (m)(1) For filing a petition under one of the following sections
                which refers to this paragraph (m), when the petition is filed more
                than two years after the date when the required action was due:
                 Table 19 to Paragraph (m)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $600.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,200.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 3,000.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Note 6 to table 19 to paragraph (m)(1):
                Sec. 1.55(e)--for the delayed submission of a priority claim, when the
                 petition is filed more than two years after the date when the priority
                 claim was due.
                Sec. 1.78(c) or (e)--for the delayed submission of a benefit claim,
                 when the petition is filed more than two years after the date when the
                 benefit claim was due.
                Sec. 1.137--for filing a petition for the revival of an abandoned
                 application for a patent, or for the delayed payment of the fee for
                 issuing each patent, when the petition is filed more than two years
                 after the abandonment of the application.
                Sec. 1.137--for filing a petition for the revival of a reexamination
                 proceeding that was terminated or limited due to a delayed response by
                 the patent owner, when the petition is filed more than two years after
                 the termination or limitation of the reexamination proceeding.
                Sec. 1.378--for filing a petition to accept a delayed payment of the
                 fee for maintaining a patent in force, when the petition is filed more
                 than two years after the patent expiration date.
                Sec. 1.1051--for filing a petition to excuse an applicant's failure to
                 act within prescribed time limits in an international design
                 application, when the petition is filed more than two years after the
                 abandonment of the application.
                 (2) For filing a petition under Sec. 1.55(e), Sec. 1.78(c), Sec.
                1.78(e), Sec. 1.137, Sec. 1.1051, or Sec. 1.378, when the petition
                is filed before the time period specified in paragraph (m)(1) of this
                section:
                [[Page 23279]]
                 Table 20 to Paragraph (m)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $440.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 880.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,200.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (3) For filing a petition under Sec. 1.55(c), Sec. 1.78(b), or
                Sec. 1.452 for the extension of the 12-month (six-month for designs)
                period for filing a subsequent application:
                 Table 21 to Paragraph (m)(3)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $440.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 880.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,200.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (o) * * *
                 Table 22 to Paragraph (o)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a)) or micro entity (Sec. $76.00
                 1.29).....................................................
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 190.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (p) * * *
                 Table 23 to Paragraph (p)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $55.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 110.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 275.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (q) Processing fee for taking action under one of the following
                sections which refers to this paragraph (q): $53.00.
                 (1) Section 1.41--to supply the name or names of the inventor or
                inventors after the filing date without a cover sheet as prescribed by
                Sec. 1.51(c)(1) in a provisional application.
                 (2) Section 1.48--for correction of inventorship in a provisional
                application.
                 (3) Section 1.53(c)(2)--to convert a nonprovisional application
                filed under Sec. 1.53(b) to a provisional application under Sec.
                1.53(c).
                 (r) * * *
                 Table 24 to Paragraph (r)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $185.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 370.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 925.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (s) * * *
                 Table 25 to Paragraph (s)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $185.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 370.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 925.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (t) * * *
                 Table 26 to Paragraph (t)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $38.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 76.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 190.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                [[Page 23280]]
                 (u) Extension fees pursuant to Sec. 1.136(a) in provisional
                applications filed under Sec. 1.53(c):
                 (1) For reply within first month:
                 Table 27 to Paragraph (u)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $10.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 20.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 50.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (2) For reply within second month:
                 Table 28 to Paragraph (u)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $20.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 40.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 100.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (3) For reply within third month:
                 Table 29 to Paragraph (u)(3)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $40.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 80.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 200.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (4) For reply within fourth month:
                 Table 30 to Paragraph (u)(4)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $80.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 160.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 400.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (5) For reply within fifth month:
                 Table 31 to Paragraph (u)(5)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $160.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 320.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 800.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (v) Information disclosure statement size fee for an information
                disclosure statement filed under Sec. 1.97 that, inclusive of the
                number of applicant-provided or patent owner-provided items of
                information listed under Sec. 1.98(a)(1) on the information disclosure
                statement, causes the cumulative number of applicant-provided or patent
                owner-provided items of information under Sec. 1.98(a)(1) during the
                pendency of the application or reexamination proceeding to:
                 (1) Exceed 50 but not exceed 100. . . . . .$200;
                 (2) Exceed 100 but not exceed 200. . . . . .$500, less any amount
                previously paid under paragraph (v)(1) of this section; and
                 (3) Exceed 200. . . . . .$800, less any amounts previously paid
                under paragraphs (v)(1) and/or (2) of this section.
                 (w) Additional fee for presenting a benefit claim in a
                nonprovisional application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, 365(c), or 386(c)
                and Sec. 1.78(d):
                 (1) When the actual filing date of the nonprovisional application
                in which the benefit claim is presented is more than 5 years and no
                more than 8 years from the earliest filing date for which benefit is
                claimed under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, 365(c), or 386(c) and Sec. 1.78(d):
                 Table 32 to Paragraph (w)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $440.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 880.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,200.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (2) When the actual filing date of the nonprovisional application
                in which the benefit claim is presented is more than 8 years from the
                earliest filing date for which benefit is claimed under 35 U.S.C. 120,
                121, 365(c), or 386(c) and
                [[Page 23281]]
                Sec. 1.78(d), the amount shown in this paragraph is due, less any
                amount previously paid under paragraph (w)(1) of this section:
                 Table 33 to Paragraph (w)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $700.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,400.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 3,500.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (x) For submission of a request for consideration under the After
                Final Consideration Pilot Program 2.0:
                 Table 34 to Paragraph (x)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $100.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 200.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 500.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                0
                4. Section 1.18 is amended by:
                0
                a. Revising the tables in paragraphs (a), (b)(1), and (c); and
                0
                b. Revising paragraphs (d)(2) and (3), (e), and (f).
                 The revisions read as follows:
                Sec. 1.18 Patent post allowance (including issue) fees.
                 (a) * * *
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (a)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $252.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 504.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 1,260.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (b)(1) * * *
                 Table 2 to Paragraph (b)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ 260.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 520.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 1,300.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (c) * * *
                 Table 3 to Paragraph (c)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $176.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 352.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 880.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (d)(1) * * *
                 (2) Publication fee before January 1, 2014: $320.00
                 (3) Republication fee (Sec. 1.221(a)): $336.00
                 (e) For filing an application for patent term adjustment under
                Sec. 1.705: $300.00
                 (f) For filing a request for reinstatement of all or part of the
                term reduced pursuant to Sec. 1.704(b) in an application for patent
                term adjustment under Sec. 1.705: $440.00
                0
                5. Section 1.19 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(2), (b)(1)(i)(A),
                (B), and (D), (b)(1)(ii)(A) and (B), (b)(3) and (4), and (f) to read as
                follows:
                Sec. 1.19 Document supply fees.
                * * * * *
                 (a) * * *
                 (2) Printed copy of a plant patent in color: $16.00
                * * * * *
                 (b) * * *
                 (1) * * *
                 (i) * * *
                 (A) Application as filed: $37.00
                 (B) Copy Patent File Wrapper, Paper Medium, Any Number of Sheets:
                $305.00.
                * * * * *
                 (D) Individual application documents, other than application as
                filed, per document: $26.00
                 (ii) * * *
                 (A) Application as filed: $37.00
                 (B) Copy Patent File Wrapper, Electronic, Any Medium, Any Size:
                $63.00
                * * * * *
                 (3) Copy of Office records, except copies available under paragraph
                (b)(1) or (2) of this section: $26.00
                 (4) For assignment records, abstract of title and certification,
                per patent: $37.00
                * * * * *
                 (f) Uncertified copy of a non-United States patent document, per
                document: $26.00
                * * * * *
                0
                6. Section 1.20 is amended by:
                0
                a. Revising paragraphs (a) and (b);
                0
                b. Revising the tables in (c)(1)(i) through (c)(4) and (c)(6);
                [[Page 23282]]
                0
                c. Revising paragraph (d);
                0
                d. Revising the tables in paragraphs (e) through (h);
                0
                e. Revising paragraph (j); and
                0
                f. Revising the tables in (k)(1) and (2) and (k)(3)(i) and (ii).
                 The revisions read as follows:
                Sec. 1.20 Post-issuance fees.
                 (a) For providing a certificate of correction for an applicant's
                mistake (Sec. 1.323): $168.00.
                 (b) Processing fee for correcting inventorship in a patent (Sec.
                1.324): $168.00.
                 (c) * * *
                 (1)(i) * * *
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (c)(1)(i)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $1,323.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 2,646.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 6,615.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (2) * * *
                 Table 2 to Paragraph (c)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $2,646.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 5,292.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 13,320.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (3) * * *
                 Table 3 to Paragraph (c)(3)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $120.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 240.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 600.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (4) * * *
                 Table 4 to Paragraph (c)(4)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $40.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 80.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 200.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (6) * * *
                 Table 5 to Paragraph (c)(6)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $428.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 856.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,140.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (d) For filing statutory and terminal disclaimers.
                 (1) For filing each statutory disclaimer under Sec. 1.321(a),
                other than a terminal disclaimer: $179.00.
                 (2) For filing each terminal disclaimer under Sec. 1.321:
                 (i) In a non-reissue application before the mailing of a first
                Office action on the merits $200.00;
                 (ii) In a non-reissue application after the period specified in
                paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section and before the mailing date of any
                of a final action under Sec. 1.113, a notice of allowance under Sec.
                1.311, or an action that otherwise closes prosecution in the
                application $500.00;
                 (iii) In a non-reissue application after the period specified in
                paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this section, and before any submission of a
                notice of appeal under Sec. 41.31 $800.00;
                 (iv) In a non-reissue application on or after the submission of a
                notice of appeal under Sec. 41.31 $1,100.00; and
                 (v) In a patent or application for reissue $1,400.00.
                 (e) * * *
                 Table 7 to Paragraph (e)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $420.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 840.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,100.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                [[Page 23283]]
                 (f) * * *
                 Table 8 to Paragraph (f)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $790.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,580.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 3,950.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (g) * * *
                 Table 9 to Paragraph (g)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $1,617.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 3,234.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 8,805.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (h) * * *
                 Table 10 to Paragraph (h)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $105.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 210.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 525.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (j) For filing an application for extension of the term of a
                patent:
                 (1) Application for extension under Sec. 1.740: $6,700.00
                 (2) Initial application for interim extension under Sec. 1.790:
                $1,320.00
                 (3) Subsequent application for interim extension under Sec. 1.790:
                $680.00
                 (4) Requesting supplemental redetermination after notice of final
                determination: $1,440.00
                 (k) * * *
                 (1) * * *
                 Table 11 to Paragraph (k)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $970.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,940.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 4,850.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (2) * * *
                 Table 12 to Paragraph (k)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $2,667.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 5,334.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 13,335.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (3) * * *
                 (i) * * *
                 Table 13 to Paragraph (k)(3)(i)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $38.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 76.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 190.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (ii) * * *
                 Table 15 to Paragraph (k)(3)(ii)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $63.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 126.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 315.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                0
                7. Section 1.21 is amended by:
                0
                a. Revising paragraphs (a)(1)(i), (a)(1)(ii)(A), (a)(1)(iii) and (iv),
                (a)(2)(i) and (ii), (a)(4)(i) and (ii), (a)(5)(i) and
                [[Page 23284]]
                (ii), (a)(6)(ii), (a)(9)(i) and (ii), (a)(10), (e), (h)(2), (i), and
                (n);
                0
                b. Revising the tables in paragraphs (o)(1) and (2); and
                0
                c. Revising paragraphs (p) and (q).
                 The revisions read as follows:
                Sec. 1.21 Miscellaneous fees and charges.
                * * * * *
                 (a) * * *
                 (l) * * *
                 (i) Application Fee (non-refundable): $116.00.
                 (ii) * * *
                 (A) For test administration by commercial entity: $221.00.
                * * * * *
                 (iii) For USPTO-administered review of registration examination:
                $494.00.
                 (iv) Request for extension of time in which to schedule examination
                for registration to practice (non-refundable): $121.00
                 (2) * * *
                 (i) On registration to practice under Sec. 11.6 of this chapter:
                $221.00.
                 (ii) On grant of limited recognition under Sec. 11.9(b) of this
                chapter: $221.00.
                * * * * *
                 (4) * * *
                 (i) Standard: $42.00
                 (ii) Suitable for framing: $53.00
                 (5) * * *
                 (i) By the Director of Enrollment and Discipline under Sec.
                11.2(c) of this chapter: $440.00
                 (ii) Of the Director of Enrollment and Discipline under Sec.
                11.2(d) of this chapter: $440.00
                 (6) * * *
                 (i) * * *
                 (ii) For USPTO-assisted change of address: $74.00
                * * * * *
                 (9) * * *
                 (i) Delinquency fee: $53.00
                 (ii) Administrative reinstatement fee: $221.00
                 (10) On application by a person for recognition or registration
                after disbarment or suspension on ethical grounds, or resignation
                pending disciplinary proceedings in any other jurisdiction; on
                application by a person for recognition or registration who is
                asserting rehabilitation from prior conduct that resulted in an adverse
                decision in the Office regarding the person's moral character; on
                application by a person for recognition or registration after being
                convicted of a felony or crime involving moral turpitude or breach of
                fiduciary duty; and on petition for reinstatement by a person excluded
                or suspended on ethical grounds, or excluded on consent from practice
                before the Office: $1,764.00
                * * * * *
                 (e) International type search reports: For preparing an
                international type search report of an international type search made
                at the time of the first action on the merits in a national patent
                application: $42.00
                * * * * *
                 (h) * * *
                 (1) * * *
                 (2) If not submitted electronically: $53.00
                 (i) Publication in Official Gazette: For publication in the
                Official Gazette of a notice of the availability of an application or a
                patent for licensing or sale: Each application or patent: $26.00
                * * * * *
                 (n) For handling an application in which proceedings are terminated
                pursuant to Sec. 1.53(e): $147.00
                 (o) * * *
                 (1) * * *
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (o)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $223.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 446.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 1,115.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (2) * * *
                 Table 2 to Paragraph (o)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $2,205.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 4,410.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 11,025.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (p) Additional Fee for Overnight Delivery: $42.00
                 (q) Additional fee for expedited service: $179.00
                0
                8. Section 1.78 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(3)(i) and (e)(2)
                to read as follows:
                Sec. 1.78 Claiming benefit of earlier filing date and cross-
                references to other applications.
                * * * * *
                 (d) * * *
                 (3)(i) The reference required by 35 U.S.C. 120 and paragraph (d)(2)
                of this section, and the applicable fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(w),
                must be submitted during the pendency of the later-filed application.
                * * * * *
                 (e) * * *
                 (2) The petition fee as set forth in Sec. 1.17(m), and the
                applicable fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(w); and
                * * * * *
                0
                9. Section 1.97 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as
                follows:
                Sec. 1.97 Filing of information disclosure statement.
                 (a) In order for an applicant for a patent or for a reissue of a
                patent to have an information disclosure statement in compliance with
                Sec. 1.98 considered by the Office during the pendency of the
                application, the information disclosure statement must satisfy one of
                paragraphs (b), (c), or (d) of this section and be accompanied by any
                applicable information disclosure statement size fee under Sec.
                1.17(v).
                * * * * *
                0
                10. Section 1.98 is amended by revising paragraph (a) introductory text
                and adding paragraph (a)(4) to read as follows:
                Sec. 1.98 Content of information disclosure statement.
                 (a) Any information disclosure statement filed under Sec. 1.97
                shall include the items listed in paragraphs (a)(1) through (4) of this
                section.
                * * * * *
                 (4) A clear written assertion that the information disclosure
                statement is accompanied by the applicable information disclosure
                statement size fee under Sec. 1.17(v) or a clear written assertion
                that no information disclosure statement size fee under Sec. 1.17(v)
                is required.
                * * * * *
                [[Page 23285]]
                0
                11. Section 1.136 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(1) introductory
                text to read as follows:
                Sec. 1.136 Extensions of time.
                 (a)(1) If an applicant is required to reply within a nonstatutory
                or shortened statutory time period, applicant may extend the time
                period for reply up to the earlier of the expiration of any maximum
                period set by statute or five months after the time period set for
                reply, if a petition for an extension of time and the fee set in Sec.
                1.17(a) or (u) are filed, unless:
                * * * * *
                0
                12. Section 1.138 is amended by revising paragraph (d) to read as
                follows:
                Sec. 1.138 Express abandonment.
                * * * * *
                 (d) An applicant seeking to abandon an application filed under 35
                U.S.C. 111(a) and Sec. 1.53(b) on or after December 8, 2004, or a
                national stage application under 35 U.S.C. 371 in which the basic
                national fee was paid on or after December 8, 2004 to obtain a refund
                of the search fee and excess claims fee paid in the application, must
                submit a declaration of express abandonment by way of a petition under
                this paragraph before an examination has been made of the application.
                The date indicated on any certificate of mailing or transmission under
                Sec. 1.8 will not be taken into account in determining whether a
                petition under Sec. 1.138(d) was filed before an examination has been
                made of the application. Refunds under this paragraph are limited to
                the search fees and excess claim fees set forth in Sec. Sec. 1.16 and
                1.492. If a request for refund of the search fee and excess claims fee
                paid in the application is not filed with the declaration of express
                abandonment under this paragraph or within two months from the date on
                which the declaration of express abandonment under this paragraph was
                filed, the Office may retain the entire search fee and excess claims
                fee paid in the application. This two-month period is not extendable.
                If a petition and declaration of express abandonment under this
                paragraph are not filed before an examination has been made of the
                application, the Office will not refund any part of the search fee and
                excess claims fee paid in the application except as provided in Sec.
                1.26.
                0
                13. Section 1.445 is amended by revising and republishing paragraph (a)
                to read as follows:
                Sec. 1.445 International application filing, processing and search
                fees.
                 (a) The following fees and charges for international applications
                are established by law or by the director under the authority of 35
                U.S.C. 376:
                 (1) A transmittal fee (see 35 U.S.C. 361(d) and PCT Rule 14)
                consisting of:
                 (i) A basic portion:
                 (A) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE]:
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (a)(1)(i)(A)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $57.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 114.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 285.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (B) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after December 29, 2022, and before [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL
                RULE]:
                 Table 2 to Paragraph (a)(1)(i)(B)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $52.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 104.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 260.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (C) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after October 2, 2020, and before December 29, 2022:
                 Table 3 to Paragraph (a)(1)(i)(C)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $65.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 130.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 260.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (D) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after January 1, 2014, and before October 2, 2020:
                 Table 4 to Paragraph (a)(1)(i)(D)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $60.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 120.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 240.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (E) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                before January 1, 2014: $240.00
                 (ii) A non-electronic filing fee portion for any international
                application designating the United States of America that is filed on
                or after November 15, 2011, other than by the USPTO patent electronic
                filing system, except for a plant application:
                [[Page 23286]]
                 Table 5 to Paragraph (a)(1)(ii)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 200.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 400.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (2) A search fee (see 35 U.S.C. 361(d) and PCT Rule 16):
                 (i) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE]:
                 Table 6 to Paragraph (a)(2)(i)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $480.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 960.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,400.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (ii) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after April 1, 2023, and before [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE]:
                 Table 7 to Paragraph (a)(2)(ii)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $436.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 872.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,180.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (iii) For an international application having a receipt date that
                is on or after October 2, 2020, and before April 1, 2023:
                 Table 8 to Paragraph (a)(2)(iii)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $545.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,090.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,180.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (iv) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after January 1, 2014, and before October 2, 2020:
                 Table 9 to Paragraph (a)(2)(iv)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $520.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,040.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,080.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (v) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                before January 1, 2014: $2,080.00
                 (3) A supplemental search fee when required, per additional
                invention:
                 (i) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE]:
                 Table 10 to Paragraph (a)(3)(i)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $480.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 960.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,400.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (ii) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after April 1, 2023, and before [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE]:
                 Table 11 to Paragraph (a)(3)(ii)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $436.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 872.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,180.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                [[Page 23287]]
                 (iii) For an international application having a receipt date that
                is on or after October 2, 2020, and before April 1, 2023:
                 Table 12 to Paragraph (a)(3)(iii)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $545.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,090.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,180.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (iv) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                on or after January 1, 2014, and before October 2, 2020:
                 Table 13 to Paragraph (a)(3)(iv)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $520.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 1,040.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,080.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (v) For an international application having a receipt date that is
                before January 1, 2014: $2,080.00
                 (4) A fee equivalent to the transmittal fee in paragraph (a)(1) of
                this section that would apply if the USPTO was the Receiving Office for
                transmittal of an international application to the International Bureau
                for processing in its capacity as a Receiving Office (PCT Rule 19.4).
                 (5) Late furnishing fee for providing a sequence listing in
                response to an invitation under PCT Rule 13ter:
                 Table 14 to Paragraph (a)(5)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $67.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 134.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 335.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (6) Late payment fee pursuant to PCT Rule 16bis.2.
                * * * * *
                0
                14. Section 1.482 is amended by revising the tables in paragraphs
                (a)(1)(i) and (ii), (a)(2), and (c) to read as follows:
                Sec. 1.482 International preliminary examination and processing fees.
                 (a) * * *
                 (1) * * *
                 (i) * * *
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (a)(1)(i)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $141.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 282.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 705.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (ii) * * *
                 Table 2 to Paragraph (a)(1)(ii)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $176.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 352.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 880.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (2) * * *
                 Table 3 to Paragraph (a)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $141.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 282.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 705.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (c) * * *
                 Table 4 to Paragraph (c)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $67.00
                [[Page 23288]]
                
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 134.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 335.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                0
                15. Section 1.492 is amended by revising the tables in paragraphs (a),
                (b)(2) through (4), (c)(2), (d) through (f), and (h) through (j) to
                read as follows.
                Sec. 1.492 National stage fees.
                * * * * *
                 (a) * * *
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (a)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $70.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 140.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 350.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (b) * * *
                 (2) * * *
                 Table 3 to Paragraph (b)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $29.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 58.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 145.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (3) * * *
                 Table 4 to Paragraph (b)(3)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $113.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 226.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 565.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (4) * * *
                 Table 5 to Paragraph (b)(4)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $154.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 308.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 770.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (c) * * *
                 (2) * * *
                 Table 7 to Paragraph (c)(2)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $176.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 352.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 880.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (d) * * *
                 Table 8 to Paragraph (d)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $120.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 240.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 600.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (e) * * *
                 Table 9 to Paragraph (e)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $40.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 80.00
                [[Page 23289]]
                
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 200.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (f) * * *
                 Table 10 to Paragraph (f)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $181.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 362.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 905.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                 (h) * * *
                 Table 11 to Paragraph (h)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $34.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 68.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 170.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (i) * * *
                 Table 12 to Paragraph (i)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $29.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 58.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 145.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (j) * * *
                 Table 13 to Paragraph (j)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $88.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 176.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 440.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                0
                16. Section 1.555 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as
                follows:
                Sec. 1.555 Information material to patentability in ex parte
                reexamination and inter partes reexamination proceedings.
                 (a) A patent by its very nature is affected with a public interest.
                The public interest is best served, and the most effective
                reexamination occurs when, at the time a reexamination proceeding is
                being conducted, the Office is aware of and evaluates the teachings of
                all information material to patentability in a reexamination
                proceeding. Each individual associated with the patent owner in a
                reexamination proceeding has a duty of candor and good faith in dealing
                with the Office, which includes a duty to disclose to the Office all
                information known to that individual to be material to patentability in
                a reexamination proceeding. The individuals who have a duty to disclose
                to the Office all information known to them to be material to
                patentability in a reexamination proceeding are the patent owner, each
                attorney or agent who represents the patent owner, and every other
                individual who is substantively involved on behalf of the patent owner
                in a reexamination proceeding. The duty to disclose the information
                exists with respect to each claim pending in the reexamination
                proceeding until the claim is cancelled. Information material to the
                patentability of a cancelled claim need not be submitted if the
                information is not material to patentability of any claim remaining
                under consideration in the reexamination proceeding. The duty to
                disclose all information known to be material to patentability in a
                reexamination proceeding is deemed to be satisfied if all information
                known to be material to patentability of any claim in the patent after
                issuance of the reexamination certificate was cited by the Office or
                submitted to the Office in an information disclosure statement.
                However, the duties of candor, good faith, and disclosure have not been
                complied with if any fraud on the Office was practiced or attempted or
                the duty of disclosure was violated through bad faith or intentional
                misconduct by, or on behalf of, the patent owner in the reexamination
                proceeding. Any information disclosure statement must be filed with the
                items listed in Sec. 1.98(a) as applied to individuals associated with
                the patent owner in a reexamination proceeding, should be filed within
                two months of the date of the order for reexamination, or as soon
                thereafter as possible, and be accompanied by any applicable
                information disclosure statement size fee under Sec. 1.17(v).
                * * * * *
                0
                16. Section 1.1031 is amended by revising the table in paragraph (a) to
                read as follows:
                Sec. 1.1031 International design application fees.
                 (a) * * *
                [[Page 23290]]
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (a)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $25.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 50.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 125.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                * * * * *
                PART 41--PRACTICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
                0
                17. The authority citation for part 41 continues to read as follows:
                 Authority: 35 U.S.C. 2(b)(2), 3(a)(2)(A), 21, 23, 32, 41, 134,
                135, and Public Law 112-29.
                0
                18. Section 41.20 is amended by:
                0
                a. Revising paragraph (a); and
                0
                b. Revising the tables in paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2)(ii), and (b)(3) and
                (4).
                 The revisions read as follows:
                Sec. 41.20 Fees.
                 (a) Petition fee. The fee for filing petitions to the Chief
                Administrative Patent Judge under Sec. 41.3 is: $440.00
                 (b) * * *
                 (1) * * *
                 Table 1 to Paragraph (b)(1)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $176.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 352.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 880.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (2) * * *
                 (ii) * * *
                 Table 2 to Paragraph (b)(2)(ii)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $440.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 880.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,200.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (3) * * *
                 Table 3 to Paragraph (b)(3)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $286.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 572.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 1,430.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (4) * * *
                 Table 4 to Paragraph (b)(4)
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                By a micro entity (Sec. 1.29)............................ $496.00
                By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))......................... 992.00
                By other than a small or micro entity...................... 2,480.00
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                PART 42--TRIAL PRACTICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
                0
                19. The authority citation for part 42 continues to read as follows:
                 Authority: 35 U.S.C. 2(b)(2), 6, 21, 23, 41, 135, 311, 312, 316,
                321-326; Pub. L. 112-29, 125 Stat. 284; and Pub. L. 112-274, 126
                Stat. 2456.
                0
                20. Section 42.15 is amended by:
                0
                a. Revising paragraphs (a)(1) through (4), (b)(1) through (4), (c)(1),
                (d), and (e); and
                0
                b. Adding paragraph (f).
                 The revisions and addition read as follows:
                Sec. 42.15 Fees.
                 (a) * * *
                 (1) Inter Partes Review request fee--up to 20 claims: $23,750.00
                 (2) Inter Partes Review Post-Institution fee--up to 20 claims:
                $28,125.00
                 (3) In addition to the Inter Partes Review request fee, for
                requesting a review of each claim in excess of 20: $470.00
                 (4) In addition to the Inter Partes Post-Institution request fee,
                for requesting a review of each claim in excess of 20: $940.00
                 (b) * * *
                 (1) Post-Grant or Covered Business Method Patent Review request
                fee--up to 20 claims: $25,000.00
                 (2) Post-Grant or Covered Business Method Patent Review Post-
                Institution fee--up to 20 claims: $34,375.00
                [[Page 23291]]
                 (3) In addition to the Post-Grant or Covered Business Method Patent
                Review request fee, for requesting a review of each claim in excess of
                20: $595.00
                 (4) In addition to the Post-Grant or Covered Business Method Patent
                Review Post-Institution fee, for requesting a review of each claim in
                excess of 20: $1,315.00
                 (c) * * *
                 (1) Derivation petition fee: $440.00
                * * * * *
                 (d) Any request requiring payment of a fee under this part,
                including a written request to make a settlement agreement available:
                $440.00
                 (e) Fee for non-registered practitioners to appear pro hac vice
                before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board: $263.00
                 (f) Fee for requesting a review of a Patent Trial and Appeal Board
                decision by the Director: $440.
                Katherine Kelly Vidal,
                Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of
                the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
                [FR Doc. 2024-06250 Filed 4-2-24; 8:45 am]
                BILLING CODE 3510-16-P
                

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