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Last updated: 10 May 2026 | Next scheduled review: 1 July 2026
Choosing the right forum for a patent dispute in Italy has never been more consequential, or more complex. The revised Unified Patent Court (UPC) fee schedule that took effect on 1 January 2026, simultaneous EPO fee increases, and Italy’s ongoing judicial-reform programme have collectively redrawn the cost, speed and enforcement calculus that patent litigation lawyers and their clients must navigate. This guide provides general counsel, IP managers and patent owners with a practical, decision-first framework: concrete cost tables, injunction timelines, a forum-selection matrix and step-by-step enforcement checklists built specifically for the Italian landscape in 2026.
Whether you are defending a unitary patent portfolio across the EU or seeking an emergency seizure order in Milan, the sections below translate regulatory change into actionable strategy.
The central question every patentee operating in Italy must answer in 2026 is deceptively simple: UPC or national courts? The answer hinges on three variables, the geographic scope of relief required, the monetary value at stake, and the speed with which interim protection is needed.
For pan-EU injunctive relief on high-value patents (disputes valued above €1 million), the UPC offers unmatched jurisdictional reach, with a single order enforceable across all participating Member States. For Italy-only disputes, particularly where an urgent provisional injunction is the first tactical priority, or where the patent value is moderate, Italian specialised IP sections (Milan, Rome, Turin) remain faster and more cost-efficient, especially after the 2026 judicial-reform measures that tighten case-management timelines. Industry observers expect that mid-value disputes (€250,000–€1 million) will become the most contested forum-selection battleground in 2026, as recalibrated UPC court fees push total costs higher than many in-house teams initially budgeted.
The decision matrix in Section 4 below distils these variables into a checklist. Before reaching it, however, practitioners need to understand the jurisdictional foundations, the precise 2026 fee numbers and the injunction mechanics that make Italy a uniquely powerful enforcement jurisdiction.
The Unified Patent Court has exclusive jurisdiction over European patents with unitary effect (unitary patents) and, subject to transitional rules, over “classical” European patents validated in UPC-participating Member States. Supplementary Protection Certificates (SPCs) based on those European patents also fall within the court’s competence. National patents, Italian patents granted by the UIBM (Ufficio Italiano Brevetti e Marchi), remain outside the UPC’s remit entirely and can only be litigated before Italian courts.
Yes. Italy ratified the Agreement on a Unified Patent Court (UPCA) and is a full participating Member State. The UPC’s Milan local division handles Italian-seated cases. Patent litigation lawyers advising Italian clients must therefore assess UPC competence as a threshold question in every infringement or revocation matter involving a European patent.
During the UPCA’s transitional period, holders of classical European patents may opt out of UPC jurisdiction, preserving exclusive national-court competence. An opt-out can be withdrawn (opted back in) provided no national action has already been commenced. The practical implication is significant: if an opt-out has not been registered, an alleged infringer may file a revocation action at the UPC pre-emptively, so-called “torpedo” revocation, stripping the patentee of national-court control. A recent ruling by the Court of Venice explored whether national courts retain jurisdiction over non-opted-out European patents during the transitional period, adding a layer of complexity that reinforces the need for early forum-selection advice.
Cost is the single most underestimated factor in patent forum selection. The revised UPC fee schedule, effective 1 January 2026, introduced higher court fees across most value bands, while EPO fee increases raised the upstream cost of prosecuting and validating the patents that feed into litigation. Patent litigation lawyers must now present clients with full lifecycle cost projections, not just court fees, but counsel fees, translation expenses and enforcement costs, to make an informed choice.
| Fee type | UPC fee (2026 schedule) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed fee, infringement action | €11,000 | Payable on filing; unchanged from 2024 |
| Fixed fee, revocation action | €11,000 | Same as infringement |
| Fixed fee, counterclaim for revocation | €11,000 | Additional to main action fee |
| Value-based fee, €250k–€500k band | €6,000 | Payable in addition to fixed fee |
| Value-based fee, €500k–€1M band | €9,000 | Significant uplift at this tier |
| Value-based fee, €1M–€2M band | €14,000 | Recalibrated upward for 2026 |
| Value-based fee, €2M–€5M band | €20,000 | Most common band for pharma/tech |
| Value-based fee, €5M–€10M band | €30,000 | High-value portfolio disputes |
| Value-based fee, €10M–€30M band | €50,000 | Major cross-border cases |
| Value-based fee, above €30M | €75,000 | Cap; stepped increase from 2025 |
| Provisional measures application | €11,000 (fixed) | Plus value-based component |
| Appeal, fixed fee | €13,000 | Higher than first instance |
Source: UPC official fee schedule, effective 1 January 2026.
The European Patent Office implemented fee increases effective 1 April 2026 covering European search fees, examination fees, grant fees and renewal fees. While these do not directly affect litigation court fees, they raise the total cost-of-ownership for European patents, making the choice between unitary patent effect and national validation a more consequential budgetary decision. Patentees who previously validated broadly across multiple states may find the unitary patent route more attractive on a per-state-equivalent basis, despite the upward adjustment. However, the likely practical effect will be that some SMEs reduce validation states, which in turn narrows the geographic scope of any future UPC action.
| Scenario | Italian courts (estimated total) | UPC Milan division (estimated total) |
|---|---|---|
| Low value (dispute value < €250k), single patent, Italy only | €40,000–€80,000 (court fees + counsel) | €60,000–€110,000 (court fees + counsel + UPC admin) |
| Medium value (dispute value €500k–€1M), single patent, Italy + 2 states | €80,000–€150,000 (Italy portion only) | €100,000–€200,000 (pan-EU effect) |
| High value (dispute value €2M–€5M), patent portfolio, 4+ states | €200,000–€400,000 (Italy only; parallel actions extra) | €180,000–€350,000 (single UPC action covering all states) |
Estimates include court fees, estimated counsel fees and disbursements. Actual costs vary by complexity, number of patents and expert-witness requirements. UPC figures reflect the 2026 fee schedule.
The crossover point is visible: for disputes valued above approximately €1 million requiring relief in multiple jurisdictions, the UPC typically becomes more cost-efficient than parallel national proceedings. Below that threshold, Italian national courts offer a leaner budget profile, particularly for provisional measures.
| Date | What changed | Practical implication for patentees |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | UPC revised fee schedule and new value-based fee bands took effect | Higher UPC admin costs; recalibrate forum selection for medium-value cases |
| 1 April 2026 | EPO fee increases for search, examination, grant and renewal fees | Higher prosecution and validation costs; reassess unitary patent vs national validation |
| Q1 2026 | Italian judicial reform measures tightening case-management timelines for specialised IP sections | Faster scheduling of hearings and interlocutory relief in Milan, Rome and Turin; enhances attractiveness of national forum for speed-sensitive cases |
Patent forum selection is the single highest-leverage decision in any Italian patent dispute. The matrix below translates case-specific variables into a recommended forum.
| Case facts | Risk / benefit balance | Recommended forum |
|---|---|---|
| Pan-EU relief needed; patent value > €1M; unitary patent or non-opted-out EP | UPC delivers single cross-border order; higher court fees offset by avoiding parallel actions | UPC (Milan local division) |
| Italy-only relief; urgent interim injunction required within days | Italian IP sections (Milan, Rome) routinely grant ex parte orders in 7–14 days; UPC provisional measures slower | Italian national courts |
| Medium-value dispute (€250k–€1M); patent opted out of UPC | Opted-out patent cannot be heard at UPC; national court is the only option | Italian national courts |
| Validity defence anticipated; desire to avoid central revocation | UPC revocation has pan-EU effect; national invalidity limited to Italy | Italian national courts (opt out if not already done) |
| High-value portfolio; multi-state infringement; claimant wants single damages award | UPC consolidates claims; Italian courts limited to Italian territory | UPC |
| Need to coordinate offensive and defensive strategies across jurisdictions | Parallel proceedings create torpedo/estoppel risk; requires careful coordination | Case-by-case analysis, consider parallel filing with stay coordination |
Favour the UPC when the dispute involves multiple participating states, when the patent carries unitary effect, or when the total cost of parallel national actions exceeds the UPC’s value-based fee tiers. Cross-border patent enforcement is the UPC’s primary competitive advantage.
Favour Italian national courts when speed is paramount (emergency provisional injunction Italy applications), when the dispute is geographically confined to Italy, when the patentee wishes to shield the patent from pan-EU revocation exposure, or when the patent has been opted out.
In some cases, patent litigation lawyers advise filing in both forums simultaneously, for example, initiating a provisional injunction in Italy for immediate relief while commencing a UPC infringement action for broader EU damages. This approach carries coordination risks (discussed in Section 7) but can be strategically powerful when timing and geography diverge.
Italy remains one of Europe’s most effective jurisdictions for obtaining rapid provisional injunctions in patent cases. The specialised IP sections of the Tribunale di Milano, Roma and Torino have deep experience with complex technical evidence and can move from application to order in a matter of days. For patent litigation lawyers advising rights-holders, understanding the precise procedural mechanics is essential.
A provisional injunction Italy application under Articles 669-bis to 669-terdecies of the Italian Code of Civil Procedure and Article 131 of the Italian Industrial Property Code requires the applicant to demonstrate two elements:
Applications may be filed ex parte (inaudita altera parte) where particular urgency exists, for example, where giving notice would enable the infringer to move goods or destroy moulds. In such cases, the court may issue an order within 5–10 days of filing. In inter partes proceedings, the respondent is heard and the timeline extends to approximately 3–6 weeks.
The following documents should be assembled before filing:
| Stage | Typical timeline | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Filing of ex parte application | Day 0 | Filed before the specialised IP section (Milan, Rome, Turin) |
| Ex parte order issued | Days 5–10 | If court finds sufficient urgency; respondent not heard |
| Service on respondent + confirmation hearing | Days 10–25 | Respondent may contest; court reconsiders in inter partes setting |
| Inter partes preliminary injunction (where no ex parte order sought) | Weeks 3–6 | Both parties heard; technical experts may be consulted |
| Enforcement of order (bailiff execution, seizure) | Days 1–5 post-order | Immediate execution via ufficiale giudiziario |
| Appeal (reclamo) | Weeks 6–12 | Does not automatically suspend the injunction |
Early indications suggest that Italy’s 2026 judicial-reform measures, which tighten scheduling requirements for interlocutory hearings in specialised sections, may compress these timelines further, reinforcing Italy’s reputation as a fast-injunction jurisdiction.
Italy offers patent holders a broad arsenal of enforcement remedies, many of which are available before or alongside the main infringement trial:
A key advantage of UPC proceedings is that orders, including provisional measures, injunctions and damages awards, are automatically enforceable across all participating Member States without the need for a separate exequatur procedure. In Italy, a UPC order is enforced through the standard Italian execution framework, meaning that a bailiff can execute a UPC-issued seizure or injunction in the same manner as a national order. However, practical coordination is required: Italian enforcement agents must be briefed on the UPC order’s scope, and local counsel typically facilitate execution to ensure compliance with domestic procedural requirements.
For both national and UPC-origin orders, enforcement in Italy follows a consistent path: the order is served on the respondent, a bailiff (ufficiale giudiziario) is instructed, and penalties for non-compliance (astreintes) may be imposed by the court. Where goods are in transit, coordination with customs authorities is essential, and patent owners should consider filing parallel customs-action applications to create a double-lock enforcement mechanism.
The coexistence of UPC and national jurisdiction has not eliminated parallel litigation, industry observers note that it has, in some respects, weaponised it. The UPCA’s transitional provisions mean that, for non-opted-out European patents, both UPC and national courts may have concurrent jurisdiction, creating tactical opportunities and significant risks.
Where proceedings are pending before both the UPC and an Italian court concerning the same patent and the same parties, the later-seized court will generally stay its proceedings under the lis pendens rules. However, the determination of which court was “first seized” can be contested, and the Italian Court of Venice has explored whether the UPCA transitional period genuinely requires an opt-out to preserve national-court access, a question that remains the subject of active judicial development. Patent litigation lawyers must monitor both dockets closely and be prepared to file applications for stays or transfers at short notice.
Divergent outcomes, a finding of validity at the UPC and invalidity in Italy, or vice versa, can create estoppel complications in downstream enforcement or licensing negotiations. To mitigate this risk:
| Week | Action |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Assemble evidence package; instruct technical expert; draft perizia tecnica |
| Week 2 | Finalise application; review proposed order language; prepare bond budget |
| Week 3 | File ex parte application at Tribunale di Milano, specialised IP section |
| Week 4 | Court reviews file; issues ex parte order (if urgency met) or schedules hearing |
| Week 5–6 | Service on respondent; confirmation hearing; inter partes arguments |
| Week 6–7 | Order confirmed or varied; enforcement begins (bailiff execution, seizure) |
| Complexity tier | Court fees | Estimated counsel fees | Estimated total (Italy) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low (single patent, provisional measures only) | €1,500–€3,500 | €25,000–€50,000 | €30,000–€55,000 |
| Medium (single patent, full first-instance trial) | €3,500–€8,000 | €80,000–€150,000 | €90,000–€160,000 |
| High (patent portfolio, provisional measures + trial + appeal) | €8,000–€20,000 | €200,000–€400,000 | €220,000–€420,000 |
Figures represent estimated ranges for Italian national proceedings; UPC cost scenarios are detailed in Section 3 above.
Italy’s ongoing judicial-reform programme, implemented through a series of legislative decrees under the broader Riforma Cartabia framework, continues to reshape civil procedure. The 2026 measures specifically relevant to international intellectual property disputes include tighter case-management deadlines for specialised sections and enhanced powers for judges to manage discovery-phase timelines proactively. Early indications suggest that these reforms are compressing the average first-instance patent-trial duration in Milan and Rome, already among the fastest in Europe, potentially bringing it closer to 18–24 months for straightforward infringement actions.
For patent litigation lawyers, the practical takeaway is twofold. First, Italian courts are becoming more competitive on speed, which strengthens the case for national proceedings where Italy-only relief is sought. Second, tighter deadlines mean that parties must front-load preparation: technical-expert reports, documentary evidence and claim-construction arguments should be substantially complete before filing, not developed piecemeal during proceedings.
The 2026 changes to UPC fees, EPO prosecution costs and Italian court procedures demand a disciplined, data-driven approach to patent forum selection. The decision rule is clear: for pan-EU relief on high-value patents, the UPC offers jurisdictional reach that no single national court can match; for urgent, Italy-only injunctions or moderate-value disputes, Italian national courts, particularly the specialised IP sections in Milan and Rome, remain the faster and more cost-efficient forum. Patent litigation lawyers advising clients in 2026 should audit their patent portfolio’s opt-out status, model litigation costs under the revised fee schedule, and prepare injunction-ready evidence packages well before a dispute crystallises.
The checklists, cost tables and timelines in this guide are designed to support that preparation. Forum-selection strategy is not static, it must be revisited as UPC case law develops, Italian reform measures take effect, and fee structures evolve. Engaging experienced patent litigation counsel early remains the single most effective way to protect enforcement options and control costs.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Francesco Misuraca at SMAF & Associates, SAS, S.T.A., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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