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Last updated: 10 May 2026
Singapore’s Intellectual Property Office (IPOS) has introduced a series of operational changes in 2026 that demand immediate attention from every rights‑holder filing or prosecuting patents and trademarks in the city‑state. The suspension of new requests under the SG Patents Fast and SG Trade Marks Fast programmes, combined with revised fee schedules for excess claims and amendments that took effect in April 2026, has reshaped the cost‑benefit calculus for both portfolio prosecution and enforcement. For general counsel, in‑house IP teams and the growing pool of intellectual property lawyers Singapore practitioners advise, the window for transitional action is narrow.
This guide translates the IPOS notices into a practitioner playbook, covering compliance checklists, fee‑modelling worked examples, prosecution tactics and deadline tables, so that rights‑holders can protect budgets and priority dates without delay.
IPOS announced two categories of change that together alter the operational landscape for patent and trademark prosecution in Singapore. First, IPOS suspended the acceptance of new requests under its accelerated examination programmes, SG Patents Fast and SG Trade Marks Fast, citing capacity constraints and a backlog of pending requests. Second, IPOS published a revised fee schedule effective 1 April 2026, increasing charges for excess patent claims, post‑filing amendments and several miscellaneous prosecution actions.
SG Patents Fast, launched to accelerate patent grants within defined timeframes, had become the preferred route for applicants in the technology, biotech and fintech sectors seeking rapid protection in Singapore. The SG Patents Fast suspension means IPOS is no longer accepting new requests to join the programme. Applications already accepted into the Fast track before the suspension notice are expected to continue processing under transitional arrangements, though rights‑holders should confirm their application’s status directly with IPOS.
The practical effect is significant: new patent filings submitted after the suspension date cannot rely on accelerated timelines. Industry observers expect prosecution timelines for standard‑track applications to extend, given the additional volume now entering the ordinary examination queue.
The suspension extends to SG Trade Marks Fast as well. Brand owners accustomed to the expedited registration pathway for straightforward trademark applications must now factor in standard processing periods when planning product launches, licensing deals and enforcement actions that depend on registered rights.
Alongside the programme suspensions, IPOS’s revised fee schedule introduced increases across several prosecution fee lines. The patent fee increase 2026 targets excess claim fees, amendment fees filed after the request‑for‑examination stage and certain renewal surcharges. These fee changes apply to all applications regardless of whether they were filed before or after 1 April 2026, the trigger is the date on which the fee‑generating action (filing excess claims, requesting an amendment) occurs.
| IPOS Notice | Effective Date | Immediate Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Suspension of new SG Patents Fast requests | 2026 (confirm exact date per IPOS notice) | No new applications accepted into accelerated patent examination |
| Suspension of new SG Trade Marks Fast requests | 2026 (confirm exact date per IPOS notice) | No new applications accepted into accelerated trademark registration |
| Revised fee schedule, patents | 1 April 2026 | Increased fees for excess claims, amendments and miscellaneous prosecution actions |
| Revised fee schedule, trademarks | 1 April 2026 | Adjusted fees for certain trademark prosecution and opposition actions |
Source: IPOS, Notices & News page at ipos.gov.sg and IPOS fee schedule. Rights‑holders should verify exact notice dates directly with IPOS.
The convergence of the SG Patents Fast suspension and the patent fee increase 2026 creates a compliance triage exercise that in‑house counsel and external IP advisers should complete within the next 30 days. The following checklist converts IPOS’s notices into prioritised action items.
Consider a Singapore‑based medtech SME with 30 pending patent applications, 8 of which were filed under SG Patents Fast and 22 on the standard track. Of the 22 standard‑track applications, 14 contain more than 20 claims each.
Under the old fee structure, the excess claim fees for those 14 applications might have totalled a manageable line item. After the patent fee increase 2026, the same portfolio could see a cost uplift in the range of 15–25 per cent on prosecution fees alone, depending on how many claims exceed the threshold. A decision matrix for this SME would involve: (a) confirming the 8 Fast‑track applications are accepted and grandfathered; (b) running claim counts on the 14 high‑claim applications; (c) identifying 4–6 applications where divisional filings would be more cost‑effective than paying excess claim fees; and (d) updating the board’s IP budget forecast before the next quarterly review.
This kind of triage exercise is precisely where experienced cross‑border IP counsel add immediate value, converting regulatory notices into portfolio‑specific dollar figures and actionable prosecution calendars.
The April 2026 fee revisions touch several fee lines that cumulatively affect prosecution economics. The following table summarises the key fee categories affected. All figures should be verified against the current IPOS fee schedule before use in client budgets.
| Fee Category | Prior Fee (Pre‑April 2026) | New Fee (From 1 April 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Excess claim fee (per claim above threshold) | Refer to IPOS fee schedule | Increased, verify current amount at IPOS |
| Amendment of specification (post‑examination request) | Refer to IPOS fee schedule | Increased, verify current amount at IPOS |
| Request for re‑examination | Refer to IPOS fee schedule | Increased, verify current amount at IPOS |
| Late renewal surcharge | Refer to IPOS fee schedule | Increased, verify current amount at IPOS |
| Trademark opposition filing fee | Refer to IPOS fee schedule | Adjusted, verify current amount at IPOS |
Note: IPOS publishes its fee schedule at ipos.gov.sg/resources/fees. The table above identifies affected categories; readers should confirm exact SGD amounts on the IPOS site before making filing decisions.
A patent application with 30 claims where 10 exceed the statutory threshold now attracts 10 units of the revised excess claim fee. If the per‑claim fee has increased even modestly, say by SGD 20–40 per claim, the marginal cost for this single application rises by SGD 200–400. Across a portfolio of 50 similar applications, the annual uplift could reach SGD 10,000–20,000 in excess claim fees alone. The cost‑benefit question becomes: is it cheaper to pay the excess claim fees Singapore applicants now face, or to invest practitioner time in trimming claims and, where necessary, filing divisionals?
A mid‑size portfolio of 20 pending patents where 12 require at least one post‑examination amendment now faces the revised amendment fee on each. If each amendment fee rises by SGD 50–100, the total incremental cost is SGD 600–1,200 for this cohort alone. Factor in the excess claim fees applicable to 8 of those 20 applications, and the combined cost pressure can justify a dedicated prosecution review sprint by experienced intellectual property lawyers in Singapore who can model claim‑trimming savings against the fee outlay.
The decision between paying excess claim fees and investing in claim reduction depends on three variables: (1) the per‑claim fee differential, (2) the practitioner cost of re‑drafting claims, and (3) the strategic value of maintaining broad claim scope. As a rule of thumb, if the excess claim fee for a single application exceeds the cost of one to two hours of patent attorney time, claim trimming is economically rational, provided the trimmed claims do not sacrifice commercially valuable protection. Where they do, a divisional filing preserves scope and reduces the parent’s fee burden simultaneously.
The operational changes at IPOS call for a recalibrated patent prosecution strategy Singapore practitioners should integrate into every new filing and pending application review. Three tactical areas deserve attention.
The most effective way to reduce exposure to excess claim fees is upstream: disciplined claim drafting before filing. This means establishing internal claim‑count guidelines, for example, capping initial filings at the threshold number of claims unless a business case justifies the excess fee. Patent committees and invention disclosure reviews should now include a standing agenda item: “claim count vs fee impact.”
For technology companies with prolific invention pipelines, implementing a claim‑scoring matrix can help triage: assign each claim a commercial value score (based on product relevance, licensing potential and freedom‑to‑operate considerations) and retain only claims above a minimum score threshold in the initial filing.
Once an examination report issues, prosecution teams face a choice: respond with targeted amendments that narrow claims sufficiently to overcome objections, or elect claims strategically and pursue the remainder through divisionals. Under the new fee regime, the cost of each amendment iteration is higher, which tilts the calculus toward getting amendments right the first time. Investing more in pre‑response prior art analysis and examiner interview requests (where IPOS permits) can reduce the number of amendment rounds and therefore the cumulative fee exposure.
Divisional applications become a more important tool in the IP transitional arrangements 2026 environment. By splitting broad applications into focused divisionals, rights‑holders can manage excess claim fees on each application while preserving the priority date across the full invention scope.
For applicants using the PCT route, national phase timing also matters. Entering the Singapore national phase closer to the 30‑month deadline, rather than early, gives applicants time to assess the IPOS fee landscape and tailor claim sets accordingly. The likely practical effect of this approach is a slight delay in obtaining Singapore patent rights, offset by material cost savings and prosecution efficiency.
Decision flowchart, pay excess fees vs file divisional:
The SG Trade Marks Fast suspension removes the expedited registration pathway that brand owners relied on for rapid trademark protection in Singapore. Standard trademark prosecution timelines are now the default, which means brand teams should expect longer periods between filing and registration.
The enforcement implications are immediate. Where a brand owner needed a registered mark to initiate infringement proceedings or customs enforcement, the delay in obtaining registration could create a vulnerability window during which infringing goods circulate in the market. Practical steps for brand protection teams include:
The IP transitional arrangements 2026 environment requires careful calendar management. The following table maps application statuses to recommended actions and counsel involvement.
| Application Status | Action Required by Rights‑Holder | Recommended Counsel Step |
|---|---|---|
| Pending SG Patents Fast request (filed before suspension notice) | Confirm IPOS acknowledgement of acceptance; verify transitional eligibility | Send written enquiry to IPOS; prepare expedited amendment or divisional if status uncertain |
| New patent filing (post‑suspension) | File on standard track; do not rely on accelerated processing | Recalibrate prosecution timeline; advise client on expected grant date range |
| Application with excess claims (any filing date) | Re‑count claims against revised fee thresholds; decide on trimming vs paying | Run cost‑benefit analysis; prepare claim amendments or divisional strategy |
| Pending SG Trade Marks Fast request (filed before suspension notice) | Confirm IPOS receipt and transitional processing status | Assess infringement risk during extended timeline; prepare interim enforcement plan |
| Amendment or re‑examination pending (action date after 1 April 2026) | Note that revised fees apply to the action date, not the original filing date | Update cost estimate; seek client sign‑off on revised prosecution budget |
Critical deadline note: Rights‑holders should not assume that applications filed under the old fee schedule are automatically exempt from the revised fees. The operative trigger under the April 2026 changes is the date of the fee‑generating action, not the application filing date. Miss this distinction and budget overruns are inevitable.
Early indications suggest that IPOS may issue further guidance on transitional provisions for Fast‑track applications already in the queue. Counsel should monitor the IPOS website and subscribe to official notifications to capture any updates in real time.
The combined effect of the Fast‑track suspensions and fee increases has downstream consequences for IP enforcement in Singapore. Slower patent and trademark prosecution timelines mean that rights‑holders may wait longer to secure the granted rights they need to bring infringement claims. For SMEs with limited budgets, this creates a strategic dilemma: invest in costly interim relief (such as interlocutory injunctions based on pending applications and common‑law rights) or wait for grant and risk ongoing market damage.
Larger corporate portfolio holders may be better placed to absorb the timing delays, but should reassess their enforcement calendars to account for longer prosecution windows. Priority date preservation becomes especially important in fast‑moving technology sectors where competitors can design around published applications during extended prosecution periods.
Industry observers expect an uptick in demand for expedited hearing requests at IPOS and potentially at the Singapore courts, as rights‑holders seek to compress timelines through procedural mechanisms rather than the now‑unavailable Fast programmes. Planning for this possibility, including securing evidence early and preparing preliminary injunction applications in parallel with prosecution, is a prudent step for rights‑holders with active infringement concerns. For a broader view of how international intellectual property strategies interact with local enforcement, a multi‑jurisdictional approach is increasingly necessary.
Distilling the above into five immediate actions, rights‑holders and their counsel should execute the following within the next 30 days:
For in‑house teams preparing client‑facing communications, a sample notification email might read: “We are writing to advise that IPOS has suspended its Fast‑track programmes for patents and trademarks, and revised its prosecution fee schedule effective 1 April 2026. Our team has completed an initial portfolio audit and identified [X] applications requiring immediate action. We recommend scheduling a portfolio triage call within the next two weeks to align on prosecution priorities and updated budgets.”
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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