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Last updated: 3 May 2026
With the Intellectual Property Office of Singapore (IPOS) suspending new requests under SG Patents Fast with effect from 4 January 2026, patent applicants across Singapore need to identify workable alternatives to SG Patents Fast immediately. The suspension, announced while IPOS reviews the programme, removes the most popular domestic acceleration route that had offered a first office action within four or eight months of request. For startups racing to secure funding, multinationals coordinating global portfolio filings, and SMEs defending market positions, the practical effect is a material lengthening of examination timelines unless other expedited pathways are engaged promptly.
TL;DR, Three fastest alternatives to SG Patents Fast right now:
SG Patents Fast launched on 20 May 2025 as the successor to the SG IP FAST pilot programme, which concluded on 31 December 2024. The new programme offered two tiers of acceleration, a four‑month track and an eight‑month track to first office action, with simplified eligibility criteria and transparent fee structures. It replaced the earlier pilot with broader applicant access and was part of Singapore’s IP Strategy 2030 (SIPS 2030) push to reinforce the city‑state’s position as an intellectual property hub.
However, IPOS announced that it is reviewing the SG Patents Fast and SG Trade Marks Fast acceleration programmes and, with effect from 4 January 2026, will not accept new requests under either programme. Existing requests that were already accepted before that date continue to be processed under the original programme timelines. The review period has no announced end date, leaving applicants in an indefinite holding pattern for domestic acceleration.
The critical timeline for practitioners is as follows. The SG IP FAST pilot ended on 31 December 2024. SG Patents Fast launched on 20 May 2025. Suspension of new requests took effect on 4 January 2026. Requests filed and accepted before 4 January 2026 remain in the queue and should proceed under original service standards. No reinstatement date has been published. Industry observers expect the review to last at least several months, making it essential for applicants with pending or planned filings to evaluate patent filing alternatives in Singapore without delay.
The SG Patents Fast suspension affects any patent applicant who had planned to request accelerated examination through the domestic IPOS programme. This includes Singapore‑based startups preparing to file national‑phase applications, overseas companies entering Singapore via PCT national phase, and patent attorneys advising clients who relied on the four‑ or eight‑month acceleration window. Any applicant who has not yet filed a formal acceleration request with IPOS must now pivot to one of the alternative routes outlined below.
Time is critical. Use this six‑step checklist to determine your best patent prosecution strategy for Singapore in 2026:
Tailored guidance by applicant type:
With SG Patents Fast suspended, five principal routes remain available to accelerate patent grant in Singapore. The choice depends on your patent family history, budget, commercial urgency, and enforcement priorities. Below is a route‑by‑route breakdown, followed by a comparison table summarising estimated patent timelines in Singapore for each option.
The PPH is now the single most powerful alternative to SG Patents Fast for applicants with international patent families. Under the PPH framework administered through WIPO and bilateral agreements, an applicant who has received a favourable determination (an allowance, grant, or indication of allowable claims) from a partner patent office can request expedited examination at IPOS based on that work product.
IPOS participates in PPH arrangements with major offices including the USPTO, EPO, JPO, KIPO, CNIPA, and IP Australia, among others. The PCT‑PPH variant allows applicants to rely on a favourable Written Opinion or International Preliminary Report on Patentability (IPRP) from a PCT International Authority.
Eligibility requires that the Singapore claims sufficiently correspond to those found allowable or patentable by the partner office. Applicants must submit the partner‑office work product, a claims correspondence table (mapping Singapore claims to allowed foreign claims), and any required translations. Once accepted, industry observers expect a first office action within approximately 3–6 months, broadly comparable to the faster tiers that SG Patents Fast previously offered.
Action steps: Identify any family member with a favourable determination; prepare a claims correspondence table; file the PPH request with IPOS along with supporting documentation.
ASPEC enables work‑sharing among ASEAN patent offices. If a search or examination report has been issued by any participating ASEAN member, including Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam, the applicant can request that IPOS consider those results when examining the corresponding Singapore application.
The programme is free of charge (no IPOS surcharge for ASPEC requests), making it one of the most cost‑effective alternatives to SG Patents Fast. Early indications suggest that ASPEC requests can yield a first office action within approximately 4–9 months, depending on the partner office and the quality of the cited work product. ASPEC is particularly useful for applicants filing across multiple ASEAN jurisdictions simultaneously.
Applicants entering Singapore via PCT national phase can leverage their international work products to expedite examination. A positive ISR or favourable WO can be submitted alongside the national‑phase entry to help focus the examiner’s review and reduce the number of examination cycles required. Timing the national‑phase entry strategically, for instance, entering closer to the 30‑month deadline after accumulating favourable international reports, can give the IPOS examiner a stronger evidentiary foundation, potentially reducing prosecution time to 6–12 months for a first office action. Coordinating PCT chapter II (demanding an IPRP) before national entry is another tactic that can accelerate the Singapore phase.
Proactive engagement with IPOS examiners remains available regardless of programme suspensions. Requesting an examiner interview, either by telephone or in person, to discuss prior art, claim scope, and potential amendments before a formal office action can resolve objections faster than sequential written exchanges. Filing focused claim sets that closely track allowable subject matter identified in partner‑office actions, and submitting voluntary amendments early, are proven prosecution tactics that can compress examination timelines to 2–8 months. These strategies are especially effective when combined with a PPH or ASPEC request.
Where grant timelines remain too long, applicants should consider provisional filings to secure priority dates, divisional applications to protect specific claim sets, and, where appropriate, trade‑secret protection or defensive publication to preserve freedom to operate while patent prosecution continues.
| Route | Typical Time to First Office Action (Estimate) | Pros & Cons |
|---|---|---|
| PPH (from favourable partner office) | 3–6 months after acceptance | + Fastest available route if prior allowance exists. − Requires favourable determination and claims correspondence work. |
| PCT‑based national phase (with positive ISR/WO) | 6–12 months (varies) | + Leverages existing international work product. − Dependent on PCT international timeline and report quality. |
| ASPEC (regional co‑operation) | 4–9 months (varies by partner) | + Free of charge; regional acceleration. − Limited to ASEAN member offices with existing results. |
| Examiner interview & focused amendments | 2–8 months (varies) | + Can speed allowance at any prosecution stage. − Requires strong claim strategy and responsive counsel. |
| Trade secrets / defensive publication | Immediate (non‑patent) | + Low cost; immediate effect. − No patent exclusivity; limited enforceability. |
Understanding how these alternatives to SG Patents Fast play out in practice requires scenario modelling. Below are three worked examples illustrating typical timelines for different applicant profiles.
A Singapore‑based biotech startup filed a provisional application in March 2025, followed by a PCT application in March 2026. The PCT International Search Report, received around September 2026, is broadly favourable. The startup enters Singapore national phase in October 2026 and simultaneously files a US national‑phase application. If the USPTO issues a notice of allowance by approximately April 2027, the startup files a PPH request at IPOS the same month. Under this trajectory, a first IPOS office action could arrive by roughly July–October 2027, approximately 3–6 months after PPH acceptance. Total timeline from provisional filing to Singapore first office action: roughly 28–31 months.
While not as compressed as the old four‑month domestic track, this is significantly faster than the standard IPOS examination queue.
An electronics SME has an allowed US patent (granted December 2025) for a sensor technology and a pending Singapore national application filed in May 2025. Upon learning of the SG Patents Fast suspension, the SME’s counsel files a PPH request at IPOS in January 2026, accompanied by the US grant certificate, claims correspondence table, and all relevant prior‑art references. IPOS accepts the PPH request and issues a first office action by approximately April–July 2026. Assuming responsive prosecution (one round of amendments), grant could follow by late 2026 or early 2027. Total incremental delay versus what SG Patents Fast would have delivered: likely 2–4 months at most, a manageable variance for most commercial timelines.
A multinational pharmaceutical company has a parent Singapore application with broad claims under examination and needs to carve out a divisional application for a specific formulation claim set. The company files the divisional in February 2026, voluntarily submits focused claims aligned with claims allowed by the EPO, and requests an examiner interview with IPOS in March 2026. The examiner interview resolves prior‑art objections in April 2026, and a favourable first office action issues in May–June 2026. Grant of the divisional may follow within 4–8 months of filing. Meanwhile, the parent application continues through standard prosecution. This dual‑track approach, divisional for speed, parent for breadth, mitigates the enforcement risk of relying on a single narrowed claim set.
Each alternative route to accelerate patent protection in Singapore carries its own documentation and fee requirements. Planning these in advance avoids unnecessary delays once you commit to a pathway.
General cost bands (counsel fees excluded):
A well‑prepared PPH request dramatically increases the likelihood of acceptance and fast processing. Compile the following before filing:
Guidance on PPH documentation requirements is published by WIPO and by IPOS on its acceleration programmes page. Practitioners should check for updates, as requirements may evolve during the SG Patents Fast review period.
Speed in prosecution must be balanced against enforceability. Accelerated routes, particularly PPH, typically require narrowing Singapore claims to correspond with those allowed abroad. While this can be acceptable for many commercial purposes, it may create vulnerabilities in subsequent infringement proceedings if competitors design around the narrower claim scope.
Key risks to manage include the following. Claim amendments made during accelerated prosecution may generate prosecution history estoppel, limiting the scope of equivalents available in litigation. Rapid prosecution may leave less time to identify and address prior art, potentially weakening the patent’s validity position. Coordinating claim scope across jurisdictions is essential, a claim that is commercially valuable in Singapore may need to be broader or differently framed than the claim allowed by a foreign partner office.
The likely practical effect is that applicants should treat accelerated prosecution as a strategic choice, not merely a procedural one. Counsel experienced in both prosecution and enforcement should review claim amendments before they are filed, ensuring that speed does not come at the cost of rights that matter in litigation. Where a patent is likely to be asserted, industry observers recommend maintaining a parallel application with broader claims under standard prosecution timelines as a hedge.
The SG Patents Fast suspension demands an active response, not a wait‑and‑see approach. Each month of inaction is a month added to your examination queue. To take the right next step, prepare the following for your initial consultation:
Armed with this information, experienced intellectual property counsel can map the optimal combination of alternatives to SG Patents Fast for your specific portfolio and commercial situation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Timothy Wu at LP LAW CORPORATION, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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