IPR · Patent Services
Provisional Patent Filing & Drafting Coordination
The single most common and most expensive mistake in Indian patent practice is delay.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
The single most common and most expensive mistake in Indian patent practice is delay. India follows a strict first-to-file system — not first-to-invent — and public disclosure of an invention before filing (a demo, a pitch deck circulated without an NDA, a product launch, a published paper) can permanently destroy patentability under Section 29 of the Patents Act, 1970. A provisional patent application is the fastest, lowest-cost way to lock in a priority date the moment your invention is ready to describe — while the full technical specification, claims, and prior-art strategy are still being finalised. PNPC Global coordinates provisional filing, inventor documentation, and complete-specification handoff as part of our IPR advisory practice, working alongside registered patent agents for the technical drafting and prosecution that only a qualified patent agent or attorney registered with the Patent Office can undertake.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
A provisional patent application is filed under Section 9(1) of the Patents Act, 1970 when an invention is not yet fully developed or the applicant is not yet ready to disclose complete claims, but wants to establish a priority date immediately. It is filed with Form 1 (application for grant of patent) and Form 2 (provisional specification) describing the invention in reasonably sufficient detail — without the formal claims that a complete specification requires. The provisional application is not examined and does not itself mature into a granted patent. Its sole legal function is to fix a priority date: the date from which novelty and prior art are assessed for the invention described in it.
Once a provisional application is filed, the applicant has exactly 12 months under Section 9(1) to file the complete specification (Form 2, complete version) claiming priority from the provisional filing date. If the complete specification is not filed within this 12-month window, the provisional application is deemed abandoned under Section 9(4) and the priority date is lost entirely — there is no extension, condonation, or grace period available for this particular deadline under the Act. This makes the 12-month clock one of the most rigid and unforgiving deadlines in Indian IP practice, and it is the single most common way inventors lose patent rights they believed were secured.
The strategic value of a provisional filing lies in what it buys: 12 months of 'patent pending' status, during which the applicant can continue R&D, test market response, approach investors, or seek a manufacturing partner, all while using the invention described in the provisional application without destroying novelty (subject to the complete specification not exceeding what was reasonably disclosed in the provisional). It also buys time to decide whether to pursue the application at all, convert it to a complete specification, or let it lapse without cost consequence beyond the provisional filing fee already paid. For startups moving fast and CA/patent-agent teams working under time pressure — a hackathon-stage prototype, a product about to be demonstrated to investors, a component design finalised just before a trade show — the provisional route is frequently the only realistic way to secure a priority date before public disclosure occurs.
A provisional application under Indian law is comparable in spirit to a US provisional application, though the legal mechanics differ. It is a creature of Indian patent law and creates rights only in relation to Indian patent prosecution and, where relevant, international filings claiming Indian priority under the Paris Convention (12-month priority window) or the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT, which also runs on the same 12-month priority clock from the first filing in any Paris Convention or WTO member country). Only patent agents registered with the Indian Patent Office under Section 126 of the Act, or patent attorneys, are legally permitted to draft specifications and represent applicants before the Patent Office — a Chartered Accountancy firm's role is advisory, coordination, documentation, and IPR strategy alongside the registered patent agent who handles the technical drafting and prosecution.
When a provisional filing is the right move
The invention or product is functional or substantially designed, but the technical write-up, claims strategy, or supporting data (test results, working examples) is not yet complete
A public disclosure event is imminent — an investor pitch, a trade show demonstration, a product launch, a conference paper, or a client demo — and there is no signed NDA covering it
You need to establish priority quickly and cheaply before a competitor or independent inventor files first, given India's strict first-to-file rule under Section 6
The invention is still evolving and you expect to add improvements, variants, or additional embodiments before the complete specification is finalised — provisional filing lets you capture the current state without foreclosing later refinement
You are assessing commercial viability or seeking a licensing/manufacturing partner and want 'patent pending' status to strengthen your negotiating position without committing to the higher cost of a complete specification immediately
You are a startup, MSME, or academic institution and want to defer the higher cost of complete specification drafting, claims strategy, and examination request by 12 months while validating the business case
You plan to file a PCT international application or claim Paris Convention priority in other countries and need an early first filing date to start that 12-month international priority clock
Multiple related inventions or improvements are emerging from ongoing R&D and you want to file provisional applications as each matures, later consolidating into one or more complete specifications
When to file the complete specification directly instead
The invention is fully developed, all claims and technical details are finalised, and there is no urgency driving an immediate priority-date filing — filing the complete specification directly saves one filing fee and one filing step
You have already missed, or are at serious risk of missing, the discipline required to file a complete specification within 12 months — an abandoned provisional with no follow-up wastes the filing fee and the priority date entirely
The invention has already been publicly disclosed more than 12 months ago in a way that destroys novelty — in this situation, no filing route (provisional or complete) can rescue patentability under Section 29
You intend to rely on trade secret protection instead of a patent — for inventions like formulations or processes that are difficult to reverse-engineer, a provisional filing (or any patent filing) may be counter-strategic, since a granted patent requires public disclosure of the invention
The subject matter is per se excluded from patentability under Section 3 of the Act (e.g., a mere business method, a mere algorithm without technical effect, a mere discovery, an abstract idea without a working system) — filing a provisional and complete specification for excluded subject matter, without careful claim drafting, generally leads to a refusal at examination and wastes both the filing fee and the 12-month window
You need enforceable rights immediately — a provisional application confers no enforceable exclusivity by itself; you cannot sue for infringement until a patent is actually granted, and even then, damages for the pre-grant period generally require the application to have been published and the alleged infringer to have had notice
Provisional Application vs Complete Specification vs Direct Complete Filing
| Feature | Provisional Application (Form 2 - Provisional) | Complete Specification Filed After Provisional | Complete Specification Filed Directly (No Provisional) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Secures a priority date quickly while invention/claims are still being finalised | Converts the provisional filing into a full patent application with claims, ready for examination | Files the full patent application with claims from Day 1, no separate priority-securing step |
| Claims required | Not required — description of the invention in reasonably sufficient detail is enough | Mandatory — must include one or more claims defining the scope of protection sought | Mandatory — claims required at filing |
| Priority date | Date of provisional filing | Retains the provisional's priority date, provided filed within 12 months and subject matter does not exceed the provisional disclosure | Date of the complete specification filing itself |
| Deadline discipline | Must be followed by complete specification within 12 months (Section 9(1)) — no extension available; deemed abandoned under Section 9(4) if missed | Filed within the 12-month window from the provisional | No linked deadline — but request for examination (Form 18) is still due within 48 months of the priority/filing date |
| Examination | Never examined — no First Examination Report issued on a provisional application itself | Examined only after Request for Examination (Form 18) is filed, within 48 months of the priority date | Examined only after Request for Examination (Form 18) is filed, within 48 months of the filing date |
| Cost at this stage (approx.) | Lower — provisional filing fee only, per First Schedule fee category | Additional fee for complete specification filing, plus examination request fee when filed | Combined complete-specification filing fee at the outset, plus examination request fee when filed |
| Suitable when | Invention is still evolving, public disclosure is imminent, or budget/claims strategy needs more time | The natural next step after any provisional filing — mandatory to preserve the priority date | Invention and claims are fully settled and there is no time pressure to file before specification is complete |
| Risk if mismanaged | Missing the 12-month deadline forfeits the priority date permanently with no condonation route under the Act | Complete specification cannot introduce new matter beyond what the provisional disclosed, or the added matter loses the earlier priority date | No specific added risk beyond the general patent prosecution deadlines |
| Publication | Published (along with the complete specification) ordinarily after 18 months from the earliest priority date, under Section 11A, unless early publication is requested via Form 9 | Published together with the application after 18 months, or earlier on request | Published after 18 months from filing, or earlier on request via Form 9 |
| International (PCT/Paris Convention) filing window | Starts the 12-month Paris Convention/PCT priority clock from the provisional filing date | Does not restart the clock — international filings still measured from the original provisional priority date | 12-month clock runs from this complete specification filing date |
This is a strategic decision, not a purely legal one — it depends on how developed the invention is, how imminent public disclosure is, and the applicant's budget and timeline. A pre-filing consultation with a registered patent agent, coordinated through PNPC's IPR advisory practice, is the right first step before choosing a route.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Coordinates | What Applicants Often Miss | Realistic Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Invention Disclosure & Documentation — capturing the invention before any external conversation happens | PNPC works with inventors to prepare an invention disclosure document — what the invention does, how it differs from existing solutions, who invented it, and when the key breakthroughs happened. This record matters later for inventorship declarations (Form 5) and for defending priority date challenges. Many inventors approach us only after they have already discussed the idea at a pitch event or investor meeting — by then, the novelty clock may already be running against them. | Day 1 — before any external disclosure |
| 2 | Prior Art & Patentability Screening | A preliminary prior-art search on databases such as the Indian Patent Office's InPASS, Google Patents, and WIPO Patentscope helps assess whether the invention is genuinely novel and non-obvious, and whether it falls foul of the Section 3 exclusions (abstract ideas, mere business methods, mere algorithms, mere discoveries, and others). This is advisory screening — not a substitute for the patent agent's formal patentability opinion — but it prevents wasted filing fees on subject matter that has little chance of grant. | 3–7 working days |
| 3 | Selection of Registered Patent Agent / Attorney | Only a person registered under Section 126 of the Patents Act, or a patent attorney, can draft the specification and represent the applicant before the Patent Office. PNPC coordinates with our network of registered patent agents for the technical drafting; we do not hold ourselves out as patent agents. Choosing an agent with relevant technical domain experience (mechanical, software, biotech, chemical) materially affects both drafting quality and eventual examination outcomes. | 3–5 working days, run in parallel with prior-art screening |
| 4 | Provisional Specification Drafting (Form 2 - Provisional) | The provisional specification must describe the invention in 'reasonably sufficient detail' — a vague or overly narrow provisional description weakens the priority claim later if the complete specification needs to rely on details not actually present in the provisional. This is the most common quality gap in rushed provisional filings — a one-page description that does not actually support what the complete specification later claims. | 3–10 working days depending on invention complexity |
| 5 | Applicant & Inventor Documentation — Form 1, Form 5, Form 26 | Form 1 (application for grant of patent), Form 5 (declaration as to inventorship — mandatory even at provisional stage where the application is filed by an assignee rather than the inventor directly, and mandatory for the complete specification), and Form 26 (Power of Attorney authorising the patent agent to act) are prepared and signed. Employer-inventor assignment documentation must be in place if the inventor is an employee and the applicant is the employing company — an unassigned invention can create ownership disputes later. | 2–3 working days |
| 6 | Applicant Category Verification — natural person / startup / small entity / others | The government fee schedule under the First Schedule to the Patents Rules gives significantly lower fees to natural persons, startups (as recognised by DPIIT), small entities (as per the MSME definition applicable under the Rules), and educational institutions, compared to 'other' (large company) applicants. Getting this classification right — and keeping DPIIT/Udyam recognition current — materially affects the fee payable at every subsequent stage, not just at filing. | 1–2 working days to verify and document eligibility |
| 7 | Filing on the IP India e-filing Portal | The provisional application (Form 1 + Form 2 Provisional + Form 26 + Form 5, as applicable) is filed electronically through the Patent Office's online e-filing facility, which also carries a fee discount compared to physical filing under the First Schedule. Filing can be made at the appropriate jurisdictional Patent Office (Chennai, Delhi, Mumbai, or Kolkata) based on the applicant's place of business or residence, or the patent agent's registered address. | Same day as documentation is finalised — filing itself is near-instant once documents are ready |
| 8 | Application Number & Priority Date Confirmation | On successful filing, the Patent Office issues an application number and an official filing receipt confirming the priority date. This receipt is the single most important document from this stage — it is the evidence of the priority date that everything downstream (the 12-month complete specification deadline, any PCT/Paris Convention filing, any investor or licensing due diligence) depends on. | Same day to 2–3 working days for the acknowledgement to be generated |
| 9 | 12-Month Clock Management — the critical compliance step | PNPC adds the complete specification deadline to the client's compliance calendar on the day of provisional filing, with reminders well ahead of the 12-month mark. Missing this deadline is not correctable — Section 9(4) deems the application abandoned and the priority date is lost permanently, with no condonation or extension mechanism available under the Act for this specific deadline. | Ongoing — tracked for the full 12 months |
| 10 | Continued R&D & Refinement During the Provisional Period | During the 12-month window, the invention can be refined, tested, or improved. PNPC advises on documenting these developments so the patent agent can assess, closer to the 9–10 month mark, whether the improvements can be captured within the existing priority date or require a fresh provisional filing for the new subject matter (which would carry its own, later priority date). | Months 1–10 of the provisional period |
| 11 | Complete Specification Decision Point (around Month 9–10) | PNPC coordinates a review meeting with the patent agent around month 9–10 to confirm: is the invention ready for a complete specification with finalised claims? Is continued pursuit commercially justified? Should the application be allowed to lapse instead (at no further cost beyond the provisional fee already paid)? This decision should never be made in the final week before the deadline. | Month 9–10 of the provisional period |
| 12 | Complete Specification Filing (Form 2 - Complete) — within 12 months | The complete specification, including the finalised claims, abstract, drawings, and best method of performing the invention, must be filed within exactly 12 months of the provisional filing date under Section 9(1). PNPC coordinates document collection, inventor sign-off, and fee payment with the patent agent to ensure this filing happens with buffer time before the deadline — not on the final day. | By Month 12 from the provisional filing date — no extension available |
| 13 | Post-Filing Roadmap — publication, examination request, and prosecution | Once the complete specification is filed, the application is ordinarily published around 18 months from the earliest priority date (or earlier if Form 9 for early publication is filed and the request is allowed). A separate Request for Examination (Form 18, or Form 18A for expedited examination in eligible cases) must be filed within 48 months of the priority date to bring the application up for substantive examination — this is a distinct step and deadline from the provisional-to-complete conversion, and PNPC continues to track it as part of the client's IPR compliance calendar. | Publication ~18 months from priority date; examination request due within 48 months of priority date |
The provisional filing itself is typically completed within days once the invention disclosure and documentation are ready. The critical, unforgiving deadline is the 12-month window to file the complete specification under Section 9(1) — there is no extension, condonation, or grace period for this specific deadline under the Patents Act, 1970. Every timeline in this table assumes coordination with a registered patent agent for the technical drafting and Patent Office representation, which PNPC facilitates as part of its IPR advisory engagement.
A clear written description of the invention — what problem it solves, how it works, and what makes it different from existing solutions known to the inventor
Drawings, diagrams, flowcharts, or schematics that illustrate the invention, even in rough or hand-drawn form at this stage — the patent agent will formalise these for filing
Any working prototype, test data, or experimental results available at the time of filing, even if incomplete — these help the patent agent write a more defensible provisional description
A record of the invention timeline — when the core idea was conceived, when it was reduced to a working form, and who contributed which parts — relevant to the inventorship declaration
Details of any public disclosure that has already occurred (a talk, a demo, a published paper, a product sold) — needed to assess whether the 12-month grace period under Section 31 (in specific limited circumstances, such as disclosure at a recognised exhibition or before a learned society) might apply, or whether novelty has already been irretrievably lost
PAN card of the applicant (individual or company) — required for Patent Office records and for fee category verification
Certificate of Incorporation and CIN, if the applicant is a company, or LLP registration details if the applicant is an LLP
DPIIT Startup Recognition Certificate, if claiming the reduced 'startup' fee category under the First Schedule — must be current and valid at the time of filing
Udyam/MSME registration certificate, if claiming the 'small entity' fee category — entity classification under the applicable MSME thresholds must be verifiable
Proof of natural person status (individual PAN and identity document) if filing as a natural person applicant claiming the natural-person fee category
Registered address proof of the applicant, used to determine which jurisdictional Patent Office (Chennai, Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata) the application should be filed at
Full name, nationality, and address of each inventor — every actual contributor to the inventive concept must be named; omitting a genuine inventor or naming a non-inventor is a defect that can be challenged later
Signed Form 5 (Declaration as to Inventorship) where required — mandatory for the complete specification and, in most cases involving an assignee applicant, at the time of filing or shortly after
Assignment deed or employment agreement clause establishing that the invention rights have been assigned from the inventor(s) to the applicant, where the applicant is not the inventor personally (e.g., a company employing the inventor)
Signed consent from each inventor confirming accuracy of the inventorship declaration and their agreement to the filing
Form 26 — Power of Attorney authorising the registered patent agent or attorney to file and prosecute the application on the applicant's behalf
If multiple applicants (joint applicants) are involved, each must individually execute the Power of Attorney or a joint authorisation acceptable to the Patent Office
Details of the chosen patent agent's registration number with the Patent Office, confirming their authority to represent the applicant under Section 126
If any inventor resides outside India, or the invention was made outside India, confirmation of whether a foreign filing licence under Section 39 is required before filing outside India first — Indian residents generally must either file first in India or obtain a foreign filing permit before filing abroad for inventions made in India
Details of any prior foreign application already filed (if this Indian provisional is claiming Paris Convention priority from an earlier foreign filing, or vice versa) — priority document details and certified copies as required
For inventions with UAE, GCC, or other cross-border commercial elements, coordination between PNPC's Dubai office and the India IPR team on parallel or subsequent foreign filing strategy, since Indian provisional filing alone does not create rights outside India
Declaration confirming which applicant fee category applies — natural person, startup, small entity, or others (the 'others' category, typically larger companies, pays materially higher official fees under the First Schedule)
Where the applicant is a startup or small entity relying on the reduced fee, supporting registration documents (DPIIT certificate or Udyam certificate) must be valid and annexed as required by the e-filing system
Fee payment confirmation and Patent Office e-filing portal transaction receipt, retained as part of the client's IPR compliance file
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC IPR Advisory Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Filing (before Day 1) | Invention conceived or reduced to a working form | Invention disclosure documentation, prior-art screening, Section 3 exclusion check, and patent agent selection — all before any external conversation about the invention takes place. | Public disclosure without an NDA before filing can permanently destroy novelty under Section 29, with only narrow statutory exceptions (such as disclosure at specified exhibitions under Section 31) that do not apply to most commercial disclosures like investor pitches or product demos. |
| Provisional Filing (Day 1) | Invention ready to describe, even if not fully finalised | Form 1, Form 2 (provisional), Form 5, and Form 26 prepared and filed through the registered patent agent; correct applicant fee category confirmed; official filing receipt and priority date secured and filed in the client's compliance record. | An overly vague or thin provisional description weakens the priority claim for anything the complete specification later relies on that was not actually disclosed in the provisional. |
| 12-Month Window (Month 1–12) | Provisional filing date | Continued R&D documented; decision review with the patent agent at month 9–10 on whether to proceed to complete specification, let the application lapse, or file a fresh provisional for new developments; complete specification prepared with finalised claims well before the deadline. | Missing the 12-month deadline under Section 9(1) causes the application to be deemed abandoned under Section 9(4) — this is not correctable; there is no extension, condonation application, or restoration route available under the Act for this specific deadline. |
| Complete Specification Filed (by Month 12) | Decision to proceed | Complete specification with claims, abstract, drawings, and best method of performing the invention filed within the 12-month window, retaining the original provisional priority date for matter properly supported by the provisional disclosure. | New subject matter introduced in the complete specification beyond what the provisional disclosed does not get the benefit of the earlier priority date for that added matter — it is effectively assessed as of the complete specification's own filing date. |
| Publication (~18 months from priority date) | Automatic, under Section 11A | Application ordinarily published in the Patent Office Journal around 18 months from the earliest priority date; early publication can be requested via Form 9 if commercially advantageous (for example, to establish 'patent pending' notice to competitors sooner). | Publication also opens the application to pre-grant opposition under Section 25(1) by any person — PNPC coordinates monitoring so clients are aware if an opposition is filed. |
| Request for Examination (within 48 months of priority date) | Applicant decision to pursue substantive examination | Form 18 (or Form 18A for expedited examination in categories eligible under the Patents (Amendment) Rules, such as startups, small entities, and specified other categories) filed within 48 months of the priority date — a separate and distinct deadline from the provisional-to-complete conversion. | If the Request for Examination is not filed within 48 months of the priority date, the application is treated as withdrawn under the Patents Rules — the entire prosecution effort and priority date advantage is lost at that point. |
| Examination & Prosecution (post-Request for Examination) | Form 18/18A filed | First Examination Report (FER) is issued by the Patent Office; response to objections (novelty, inventive step, Section 3 exclusions, clarity of claims) must be filed within the statutory response period; PNPC coordinates with the patent agent on business-context input (commercial positioning, competitor products) that strengthens the technical response. | Failure to respond to the FER within the prescribed period results in the application being treated as abandoned under Section 21 of the Act. |
| Grant & Post-Grant (if patent is granted) | Successful prosecution | Patent granted for a term of 20 years from the date of filing of the complete specification, under Section 53; renewal fees must be paid annually from the end of the second year to keep the patent in force, and post-grant opposition under Section 25(2) can be filed by any interested person within one year of grant. | Non-payment of annual renewal fees causes the patent to cease to have effect; a patent can be restored within a limited window under Section 60 on a proper application showing the non-payment was unintentional, but restoration is not automatic and involves additional fees and a formal application. |
What exactly is a provisional patent application under Indian law?
It is a filing under Section 9(1) of the Patents Act, 1970 that describes an invention in reasonably sufficient detail — without formal claims — solely to establish a priority date. It is never examined on its own and does not itself become a granted patent. Its only function is to lock in the date from which novelty and prior art will later be assessed, while giving the applicant 12 months to prepare the complete specification with finalised claims.
What happens if we do not file the complete specification within 12 months?
The provisional application is deemed abandoned under Section 9(4) of the Patents Act. The priority date is lost permanently. There is no extension, condonation application, or grace period available for this specific deadline under the Act — unlike some other patent prosecution deadlines that do have restoration routes. If you still want patent protection after missing the deadline, you would need to file an entirely fresh application with a new (later) priority date, assuming the invention has not already been publicly disclosed in a way that destroys novelty in the interim.
Can PNPC draft and file the patent specification for us?
PNPC's role is IPR advisory and coordination — invention documentation, prior-art screening support, applicant/inventor documentation, fee category verification, deadline tracking, and coordination with a registered patent agent. Only a person registered with the Patent Office under Section 126 of the Patents Act, or a patent attorney, is legally authorised to draft the technical specification and represent the applicant before the Patent Office. We work alongside our network of registered patent agents to ensure the CA-side documentation, entity/fee category classification, and compliance calendar are handled correctly, while the agent handles the technical drafting and prosecution.
Does filing a provisional application let us use the word 'Patented' or 'Patent Pending'?
You may reasonably describe the status as 'patent pending' or 'patent application filed' once a provisional (or complete) application is on file with the Patent Office and has not lapsed or been withdrawn. You should not describe the invention as 'Patented' until an actual patent has been granted — using 'Patented' before grant, or in relation to an abandoned application, can be misleading and, depending on circumstances, may attract liability for a false representation.
We are still improving the invention after filing the provisional. Can we add the improvements later?
Improvements can be incorporated into the complete specification only to the extent they were reasonably disclosed, or reasonably inferable, from the original provisional description. Genuinely new subject matter beyond what the provisional disclosed does not get the benefit of the original priority date — it is effectively treated as of the later filing date for that added matter. If the improvements are substantial, filing a fresh, separate provisional application for the new development (with its own, later priority date) is often the cleaner strategy, followed by a complete specification that properly claims priority from each relevant provisional.
What is the difference between a provisional application and a complete specification filed directly?
A provisional application secures a priority date quickly with only a description of the invention — no claims required. A complete specification, whether filed after a provisional or filed directly without one, requires claims, an abstract, drawings, and the best method of performing the invention, and only a complete specification can eventually be examined and granted. Filing directly with a complete specification skips the provisional step entirely — appropriate when the invention and claims are already fully settled and there is no urgency to lock in a priority date before the specification is ready.
How much does it cost to file a provisional patent application in India?
The official government fee depends on the applicant's category under the First Schedule to the Patents Rules — natural persons, DPIIT-recognised startups, and small entities (broadly aligned to MSME classification) pay meaningfully lower official fees than 'other' applicants such as larger companies, with e-filing carrying a further fee discount over physical filing. Professional fees for the registered patent agent's drafting work, and PNPC's advisory and coordination fee, are separate and are confirmed in writing before any engagement begins, since they depend on the invention's technical complexity.
Do we need a working prototype before filing a provisional application?
No. The Act requires the provisional specification to describe the invention in reasonably sufficient detail — it does not require a working prototype or reduction to practice at the provisional stage. That said, the more developed and well-documented the invention is at filing, the stronger the provisional description, and the more defensible the eventual complete specification's claim to the original priority date.
Is our invention idea safe once we have filed the provisional application?
The priority date is secured from the filing date, meaning any later-filed identical or overlapping application (by anyone) will generally be junior to yours for the subject matter properly disclosed in your provisional. However, the provisional application itself confers no enforceable exclusivity — you cannot sue anyone for infringement based on a pending provisional application. Enforceable rights arise only when a patent is eventually granted from the complete specification, and even then, generally from the grant date onward (with limited retrospective compensation available in specific circumstances once the application is published, subject to the patent later being granted).
Can multiple inventors or co-founders be listed on the same application?
Yes. All genuine contributors to the inventive concept should be named as inventors on Form 5 (Declaration as to Inventorship). The applicant (the person or entity that will own the patent) can be different from the inventor(s) — for example, a company can be the applicant while individual employees or founders are named as inventors, provided the invention rights have been properly assigned from the inventor(s) to the company.
What is Section 3 of the Patents Act and why does it matter for a software or business-process invention?
Section 3 lists categories of subject matter that are not considered inventions for patentability purposes under Indian law — including, among others, a mere discovery of a scientific principle, a mere business method, a mere algorithm, and a computer program per se. An invention involving software is patentable in India when it demonstrates a technical effect or technical contribution beyond a mere algorithm or business method — this is a nuanced, fact-specific assessment that a registered patent agent with relevant technical and legal experience should evaluate before filing.
How does a provisional filing interact with filing a patent application in the UAE or other countries?
An Indian provisional application creates rights only in relation to Indian patent prosecution. If you want protection in other countries, you can claim Paris Convention priority from your Indian provisional filing date, provided the corresponding foreign application is filed within 12 months of the Indian filing date — the same 12-month window that also governs your Indian complete specification deadline, running in parallel. Alternatively, a PCT (Patent Cooperation Treaty) international application can be filed within the same 12-month window, designating multiple countries, and later entering the national phase in each country of interest. If any inventor is a resident of India or the invention was made in India, a foreign filing licence under Section 39 may be required before filing abroad first, unless the Indian application is filed first.
What is the difference between Form 1, Form 2, Form 5, and Form 26?
Form 1 is the application for grant of patent — the core cover form identifying the applicant and invention title. Form 2 is the specification itself — filed as 'provisional' at this stage, and later refiled as 'complete' with claims within 12 months. Form 5 is the Declaration as to Inventorship, naming the actual inventor(s) and, where relevant, confirming the chain of assignment to the applicant. Form 26 is the Power of Attorney authorising the registered patent agent to act on the applicant's behalf before the Patent Office. Each has its own execution and, in some cases, filing-timing requirements.
Who can be listed as the 'applicant' — does it have to be the inventor personally?
No. The applicant can be the inventor, an assignee of the inventor's rights (such as an employer company), or a legal representative in specific circumstances. Where the applicant is different from the inventor, an assignment establishing the transfer of invention rights from the inventor to the applicant should be in place and documented, and Form 5 should reflect the correct inventor names regardless of who the applicant is.
How long does the provisional filing itself take, from decision to actual filing?
Once the invention disclosure, prior-art screening, and documentation (Form 1, Form 2 provisional, Form 5, Form 26) are ready, the actual e-filing on the IP India portal happens within a day. The variable factor is how quickly the invention description, drawings, and documentation can be finalised with the registered patent agent — this can range from a few days for a well-documented, straightforward invention to a couple of weeks for a more complex one requiring detailed technical write-up.
What is the 18-month publication and can it be delayed or expedited?
Under Section 11A, a patent application is ordinarily published in the Patent Office Journal after 18 months from the earliest priority date. Early publication can be requested via Form 9, which can be commercially useful if the applicant wants to put competitors on notice of a pending application sooner, or needs published status for a specific commercial or licensing purpose. There is no mechanism to delay publication beyond the 18-month mark for a provisional-linked application once the complete specification has been filed and is proceeding normally.
What is the Request for Examination and is it the same as the complete specification deadline?
No — these are two separate deadlines. The complete specification must be filed within 12 months of the provisional filing date under Section 9(1). Separately, a Request for Examination (Form 18, or Form 18A for expedited examination where the applicant qualifies) must be filed within 48 months of the priority date to bring the application up for substantive examination by the Patent Office. Missing the 48-month examination-request deadline results in the application being treated as withdrawn under the Patents Rules.
What is the patent term once granted, and does it run from the provisional filing date?
Under Section 53 of the Patents Act, a granted patent has a term of 20 years from the date of filing of the complete specification — not from the earlier provisional filing date. So while the provisional filing secures the priority date used for assessing novelty and prior art, the 20-year term clock itself starts running from the complete specification's filing date.
Can a provisional application be withdrawn or abandoned deliberately, and is there any cost consequence?
Yes. An applicant can simply choose not to file the complete specification within the 12-month window, allowing the application to be deemed abandoned under Section 9(4) at no further cost beyond the original provisional filing fee and any professional fees already incurred. This is a legitimate outcome where, after further R&D or market validation, the applicant decides the invention is not commercially worth pursuing to a granted patent, or decides trade-secret protection is a better fit.
Does a provisional filing protect against a competitor copying the product once it is on the market?
A provisional filing by itself does not give you the right to stop a competitor from copying or selling a similar product — that enforcement right only arises once a patent is actually granted (following the complete specification and examination process), and even then only within the scope of the granted claims. A provisional filing secures your priority date and supports a 'patent pending' commercial position, but it is not itself an enforcement mechanism.
What happens if two people file for a very similar invention around the same time?
India follows a first-to-file system, not first-to-invent, under the structure of Section 6 and related provisions. Priority generally goes to whoever has the earlier valid filing date for the overlapping subject matter, regardless of who conceived the invention first — subject to certain specific provisions dealing with obtaining an invention from the true and first inventor without their consent. This is precisely why speed to file — even via a lean provisional application — is often more valuable than a delay to perfect the description.
Can we file a provisional application for a design (the shape or ornamentation of a product) rather than a functional invention?
No. Provisional applications under Section 9 apply to patents, which protect functional inventions — a new product, process, method, or apparatus that solves a technical problem. Protection for the visual appearance, shape, configuration, or ornamentation of an article is a separate right under the Designs Act, 2000, administered by the same Patent Office but under an entirely different registration process with its own forms, fees, and timelines, and there is no 'provisional' equivalent under the Designs Act.
Is there a difference in provisional filing fees for a startup versus an established company?
Yes. The First Schedule to the Patents Rules sets different official fee slabs for natural persons, DPIIT-recognised startups, small entities (broadly aligned to applicable MSME thresholds), educational institutions, and 'others' (typically larger companies not qualifying under the reduced categories) — with the reduced categories paying meaningfully less than the 'others' rate, and e-filing carrying a further discount over physical filing across all categories. The exact current fee amounts should be confirmed against the Patent Office's live First Schedule fee table at the time of filing, since these amounts are periodically revised.
What if our invention was demonstrated at a government-recognised exhibition before filing?
Section 31 of the Patents Act provides narrow, specific exceptions where disclosure at certain government-recognised exhibitions, before certain learned societies, or in certain other limited circumstances does not destroy novelty — provided the complete specification (following any provisional, or filed directly) is made within 12 months of that disclosure and specific procedural conditions are met. These exceptions are narrowly construed and fact-specific — they do not cover a general investor pitch, product launch, or ordinary trade show that is not a recognised exhibition under the Act.
Do we need an NDA before discussing the invention with a potential investor or manufacturing partner?
Yes, strongly recommended — and ideally in addition to, not instead of, filing a provisional application before the discussion happens. A properly signed NDA can support an argument that a disclosure was confidential and therefore not a public disclosure destroying novelty, but relying on an NDA alone (without an underlying provisional filing) is a weaker position than securing the priority date first. PNPC's IPR advisory practice routinely coordinates NDA templates as a complement to, not a substitute for, timely provisional filing.
Can the same invention be covered by more than one provisional application over time?
Yes, and this is common in fast-moving R&D. As an invention develops — new embodiments, improvements, or variants emerge — applicants sometimes file successive provisional applications capturing each new development, each with its own priority date. The eventual complete specification (or specifications) can then claim priority from multiple provisional applications for the respective portions of subject matter each one supports, provided all are filed within their respective 12-month windows and the complete specification is filed within 12 months of the earliest provisional it relies on for that subject matter.
What if the invention was created by an employee — does the company automatically own the patent rights?
Not automatically in every case — ownership depends on the terms of the employment contract, any specific IP assignment clause, and the circumstances of the invention (for example, whether it was created within the scope of employment and using company resources). A well-drafted employment agreement with a clear IP assignment clause is the standard way companies secure ownership of employee inventions; without one, disputes over ownership can arise, particularly if the employee later leaves the company.
How does PNPC coordinate the IPR work with our company incorporation, GST, and other CA-side compliance?
For clients already engaged with PNPC on incorporation, accounting, or annual compliance, we integrate the IPR advisory work into the same relationship — ensuring the patent applicant entity matches the correct legal entity, that assignment documentation aligns with employment and founder agreements we may already be reviewing, and that DPIIT/Udyam recognition status (relevant both for patent fee category and for other benefits) is tracked centrally rather than in separate silos across different advisors.
What happens to our provisional application if the company later changes its name or converts from one entity type to another (for example, LLP to Pvt Ltd)?
The patent application itself is not automatically affected by an entity name change or conversion, but the Patent Office records need to be updated to reflect the new applicant name or entity, typically through a request supported by documentary evidence of the name change or conversion (such as an updated Certificate of Incorporation). Failing to update Patent Office records can create administrative friction later — for example, at renewal fee payment or at assignment/licensing stages — when the registered applicant name no longer matches the current legal entity name.
Is a provisional patent application public information once filed?
Not immediately. The provisional application itself, together with the complete specification once filed, is ordinarily published by the Patent Office around 18 months from the earliest priority date under Section 11A — unless early publication is requested. Before that publication, the contents of the application are not publicly available through the Patent Office, though this is separate from any disclosure the applicant may have made independently (through a pitch, demo, or marketing) that is not related to the Patent Office filing itself.
What is the realistic overall timeline from provisional filing to an actual granted patent?
This varies significantly by technology area, complexity, and how quickly the applicant and patent agent respond to Patent Office queries, but a broad realistic range for the full journey — provisional filing, complete specification within 12 months, publication around 18 months, examination request, First Examination Report, response, and eventual grant — commonly spans two to five years or more from the original provisional filing date, depending on the field, the Patent Office's queue, and whether expedited examination (available to specific applicant categories such as startups) is used.
Can expedited examination shorten this timeline, and who is eligible?
Yes. Form 18A allows a request for expedited examination, available to specific eligible categories under the Patents (Amendment) Rules — which have historically included startups, small entities, applicants who chose India as the International Searching Authority or International Preliminary Examining Authority in a corresponding PCT application, and certain other specified categories, subject to the rules in force at the time of the request. Eligibility criteria and the categories covered have been expanded over time through rule amendments, so current eligibility should be confirmed with the patent agent at the time the Request for Examination is due.
What if we want to keep the invention as a trade secret instead of pursuing the patent after filing the provisional?
This is a legitimate choice. Since a granted patent requires public disclosure of the invention in exchange for the time-limited exclusive right, some applicants — particularly for formulations, processes, or know-how that are difficult to reverse-engineer — decide, sometimes only after the provisional filing prompts a fuller strategic review, that trade secret protection through confidentiality agreements and internal controls is commercially preferable. In that case, the provisional application is simply allowed to lapse under Section 9(4) without filing the complete specification, and the underlying invention details are never published by the Patent Office (since the provisional-only filing generally does not proceed to the publication stage tied to the complete specification).
Does PNPC handle patent filings outside India, such as in the UAE, US, or Europe?
PNPC's direct advisory and coordination role is centred on Indian patent filings and the broader CA/compliance context around them. For clients needing corresponding foreign filings — whether through the Paris Convention route, the PCT national-phase route, or direct filing in a specific jurisdiction like the UAE, US, or EU — we coordinate with foreign patent counsel and, for UAE-specific matters, work through PNPC's Dubai office to ensure the Indian and foreign filing strategies (and their respective 12-month priority windows) are aligned rather than managed as disconnected, uncoordinated efforts.
Why should we route patent filing coordination through PNPC rather than going directly to a patent agent or an online IP filing portal?
A patent agent or attorney is legally required for drafting and Patent Office representation, and we work with, not instead of, registered agents. Where PNPC adds value is in the surrounding compliance and business context that a filing-only portal or a purely technical patent agent may not track: applicant entity and fee-category verification tied to your DPIIT/Udyam status, assignment documentation aligned with your employment and founder agreements, the unforgiving 12-month complete-specification deadline sitting inside the same compliance calendar as your MCA, GST, and tax deadlines, and coordination with any parallel UAE or cross-border business structuring. Patent-only portals and agents typically do not carry this broader compliance context — which is precisely where filings go wrong for busy founders.
PNPC IPR Advisory Coordination vs Filing-Only Portals vs Standalone Patent Agent Engagement
| Aspect | PNPC IPR Advisory (with registered patent agent network) | Online Filing-Only Portal | Standalone Patent Agent Engagement (no CA coordination) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Invention disclosure documentation before filing | Structured invention disclosure and inventorship timeline captured before any external conversation | Rarely offered — portals typically start once you already have a draft ready | Varies by individual agent's practice; not standardised with your broader compliance needs |
| Applicant/entity and fee-category verification | Cross-checked against your DPIIT/Udyam status and correct legal entity as part of the same compliance relationship | Applicant self-declares category; verification is the applicant's own responsibility | Agent typically relies on applicant's self-declared category without cross-checking DPIIT/Udyam status separately |
| 12-month complete specification deadline tracking | Added to the client's integrated compliance calendar alongside MCA, GST, and tax deadlines, with reminders from early in the window | Deadline is the applicant's sole responsibility to track | Tracked by the individual agent, but not integrated with the client's other business compliance deadlines |
| Assignment / employment IP documentation review | Reviewed alongside employment agreements and founder agreements PNPC may already be handling | Not offered | Not typically reviewed unless separately engaged for this |
| Cross-border (UAE) coordination | Direct coordination through PNPC's Dubai office for UAE-linked commercial or filing considerations | Not offered | Requires separately engaging a foreign counsel with no guaranteed coordination |
| Ongoing business milestone advisory | Available for investor due diligence, IP valuation context, and licensing considerations as the business grows | Not offered beyond the initial filing transaction | Available if separately engaged and requested, but not proactively integrated |
| Fee transparency | Written scope and fee confirmation before work begins, covering both PNPC's coordination fee and the patent agent's professional fee | Often bundled or opaque, with upsells for drafting quality or amendments | Typically transparent for the agent's own fee, but does not include CA-side coordination |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Invention disclosure documentation and inventor timeline capture before any external disclosure
- 02
Preliminary prior-art and Section 3 patentability screening support ahead of formal filing
- 03
Coordination with a registered patent agent from PNPC's network for provisional specification drafting and Patent Office filing
- 04
Applicant and inventor documentation — Form 1, Form 5 (declaration of inventorship), and Form 26 (Power of Attorney) preparation support
- 05
Applicant fee-category verification against current DPIIT startup or Udyam/MSME recognition status
- 06
Assignment and employment IP-ownership documentation review for company applicants
- 07
Integrated compliance calendar tracking the unforgiving 12-month complete specification deadline under Section 9(1)
- 08
Month 9–10 strategic review coordination with the patent agent — proceed to complete specification, let the application lapse, or file a fresh provisional for new developments
- 09
Post-filing roadmap tracking for publication (~18 months), Request for Examination (within 48 months), and prosecution milestones
- 10
Cross-border filing strategy coordination through PNPC's Dubai office for clients with UAE or GCC commercial interests
A provisional patent filing is one of the few compliance steps in business where a single missed date — the 12-month complete specification deadline — cannot be fixed after the fact. Talk to PNPC before your next investor pitch, product demo, or trade show, not after.