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Post‑grant patent opposition in Malaysia became a live strategic tool on 31 December 2025, when the relevant provisions of the Patents (Amendment) Act and their accompanying regulations entered into force. For the first time, any person may now challenge a granted Malaysian patent through an administrative proceeding before the Registrar of Patents at MyIPO, without needing to demonstrate that they are directly affected by the patent in question. The reform aligns Malaysia with the broader ASEAN IP Rights Action Plan 2026–2030 objective of providing faster, lower‑cost validity mechanisms across the region.
For in‑house counsel, IP managers and M&A teams, the immediate implication is clear: every Malaysian patent granted on or after that date now carries a six‑month vulnerability window that must be factored into portfolio strategy, licensing negotiations and transaction timelines.
TL;DR: If you manage Malaysian patents, whether as owner, licensee, challenger or acquirer, begin a focused portfolio audit now. The sections below walk through exactly how to oppose a patent in Malaysia, how to defend one, and how to price opposition risk into deals.
Before diving into procedure, the threshold question for any stakeholder is whether active engagement with the new post grant opposition Malaysia regime is warranted, or whether a watching‑brief approach makes more commercial sense. The decision matrix below distils the key triggers.
Key takeaway: Opposition is not automatic, it should follow a structured cost‑benefit assessment. Industry observers expect that the most frequent early filers will be generic pharmaceutical manufacturers, electronics competitors and licensees seeking to renegotiate royalty terms.
The patent opposition procedure Malaysia now follows is set out in the Patents (Amendment) Act read together with MyIPO Practice Notice No. 1/2025, published on 10 October 2025. This section provides the step‑by‑step procedural detail that challengers and rights‑holders need.
A MyIPO patent opposition may be filed by any person. Unlike some jurisdictions that require standing or proof of adverse effect, the Malaysian regime imposes no such threshold. This means competitors, licensees, academic institutions, industry associations and even individuals with no commercial interest may initiate proceedings. The practical effect is to create a broad‑access administrative validity mechanism, one that industry observers expect will be used strategically by competitors as well as by parties conducting patent due diligence Malaysia transactions.
The Notice of Opposition (NOO) must be filed within six months from the date of publication of the grant of the patent. This is a hard deadline: MyIPO Practice Notice No. 1/2025 confirms that late filings will not be accepted. Because the window runs from the publication date, not the grant date itself, practitioners must monitor the MyIPO Patent Gazette closely. Any delay in setting up publication alerts could result in the window closing before an opposition can be prepared.
The NOO is filed with the Patent Registration Office at MyIPO. Practice Notice No. 1/2025 specifies the procedure for filing applications or requests related to opposition proceedings. The following checklist captures the core requirements:
Filing may be made via MyIPO’s e‑filing portal or by postal submission to the Patent Registration Office. Given strict deadline enforcement, electronic filing with a confirmation receipt is the recommended channel.
Once the Registrar serves the NOO on the patent owner, the respondent typically has the following options:
| Document / Step | Deadline | Who Signs |
|---|---|---|
| Notice of Opposition (NOO) | Within 6 months from publication of grant | Opponent or registered patent agent |
| Service of NOO on patent owner | Per Registrar’s direction after filing | Registrar / MyIPO |
| Answering statement by patent owner | As prescribed in the Practice Notice | Patent owner or registered agent |
| Evidence rounds (opponent → owner → reply) | Sequential deadlines set by Registrar | Respective parties / agents |
| Oral hearing (if requested) | Scheduled by Registrar | Parties / agents / counsel |
| Registrar’s decision | After completion of proceedings | Registrar of Patents |
Key takeaway: The six‑month window is absolute. Challengers should begin prior‑art searches and evidence preparation the moment a potentially problematic patent is published. Rights‑holders should have claim charts and response templates ready before any NOO is filed.
The statutory grounds for opposing a patent under the Malaysian regime mirror the substantive patentability requirements of the Patents Act. An opponent may rely on any of the following grounds, and should pair each with the appropriate evidence type.
Effective evidence presentation can be decisive. The following practical guidance reflects best practice for MyIPO patent opposition proceedings:
A structured claim‑attack plan increases efficiency and persuasive impact:
Key takeaway: The quality of evidence, not the quantity, determines outcomes. Begin with a professional prior‑art search, invest in properly drafted expert reports and present exhibits in a clean, cross‑referenced format that the Registrar can follow efficiently.
Understanding the patent opposition timeline MyIPO applies is essential for both challengers timing a filing and rights‑holders preparing defences. The table below maps the key legislative milestones that brought the system into existence.
| Date | Event | Practical Implication |
|---|---|---|
| 10 October 2025 | MyIPO Practice Notice No. 1/2025 published | Filing procedure, required forms and procedural rules clarified for the first time |
| 31 December 2025 | Post‑grant patent opposition provisions enter into force | Six‑month opposition window applies to patents whose grant is published on or after this date |
| Q1 2026 onwards | First opposition filings expected | Early indications suggest pharmaceutical and electronics patents will be the initial targets |
The following sample calendar illustrates a plausible opposition timeline from NOO filing through to the Registrar’s decision. Actual deadlines will be set by the Registrar on a case‑by‑case basis.
| Event | Indicative Timing | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Patent grant published | Day 0 | Start the six‑month clock, set a calendar alert immediately |
| Opponent files NOO | Month 1–6 | File early to allow maximum time for evidence preparation |
| Registrar serves NOO on patent owner | Month 6–7 | Patent owner should have a rapid‑response template ready |
| Patent owner files answering statement | Month 7–9 | Deadline per Registrar’s direction, typically a fixed period |
| Evidence rounds | Month 9–14 | Sequential exchange, opponent’s evidence, owner’s evidence, reply evidence |
| Oral hearing (if requested) | Month 14–16 | Not automatic; either party may request |
| Registrar’s decision | Month 16–18 | Written decision; grounds for appeal begin to run |
| Appeal (if any) | Per statutory time limit | Statutory appeal or judicial review to the High Court |
Industry observers expect that well‑prepared cases with limited evidence may conclude more quickly, while complex multi‑ground oppositions could extend beyond 18 months. Practitioners should factor possible extension requests into project planning.
Key takeaway: Diarise the publication date of every patent you are monitoring. File the NOO early within the six‑month window to preserve maximum tactical flexibility for evidence preparation and procedural steps.
The introduction of post‑grant patent opposition in Malaysia fundamentally changes the risk calculus for any transaction involving Malaysian patent rights. Every patent granted on or after 31 December 2025 now carries an inherent window of vulnerability that buyers, licensees and investors must price into deal structures. Understanding and mitigating patent portfolio risk Malaysia is now a core component of intellectual property protection strategy.
| Patent Status | Transaction Impact | Recommended Mitigations |
|---|---|---|
| Recently granted (within 6‑month opposition window) | High risk. Patent may be opposed, narrowed or revoked before deal closes. | Delay closing until window expires; escrow a portion of consideration; obtain seller warranties on validity and absence of known prior art; include indemnity for opposition costs. |
| Granted patent, window expired, no opposition filed | Lower risk. Administrative opposition route exhausted (though court invalidation remains possible). | Standard IP representations and warranties; confirm no pending proceedings via MyIPO search. |
| Patent with existing licence | Medium risk. Licensee may file opposition to renegotiate royalties or escape obligations. | Review licence termination triggers; include anti‑opposition covenants where commercially negotiable; consider sublicensing carve‑outs. |
| Patent subject to pending opposition | High risk. Outcome uncertain; potential for claim narrowing, partial revocation or full revocation. | Obtain detailed legal opinion on merits; adjust valuation; structure consideration as milestone payments contingent on opposition outcome; require seller to prosecute defence at own cost. |
| Patent portfolio with multiple recent grants | Aggregate risk. Multiple patents simultaneously within opposition windows multiplies exposure. | Commission a portfolio‑wide opposition risk audit; stagger closing or use holdback/escrow for the most vulnerable assets. |
When conducting patent due diligence Malaysia, the following red flags should be investigated for every Malaysian patent in a target portfolio:
Deal documentation for transactions involving recently granted Malaysian patents should now routinely address opposition risk. Recommended provisions include:
For guidance on cross‑border IP portfolio structuring, see our international intellectual property guide. Teams working on Malaysian M&A transactions may also wish to review Malaysia merger control and M&A 2026 for complementary regulatory context.
Key takeaway: No Malaysian patent acquisition or licensing deal should close without checking whether the target patent is still within its opposition window. Adjust deal mechanics, escrows, representations and indemnities, accordingly.
The MyIPO opposition is an administrative proceeding. The Registrar does not have jurisdiction to grant injunctions or interim relief. If an opponent or rights‑holder needs urgent relief, such as an injunction to prevent market entry or to restrain infringement during opposition proceedings, a separate application to the Malaysian High Court is required. Industry observers expect that parallel court proceedings may become more common as parties use opposition strategically alongside enforcement actions.
Key takeaway: Preparation is the single greatest advantage in opposition proceedings. Both challengers and rights‑holders should invest in pre‑opposition groundwork, claim charts, prior‑art searches, evidence banks and procedural templates, well before the six‑month window opens or an NOO arrives.
At the conclusion of the opposition, the Registrar may deliver one of several outcomes:
A party dissatisfied with the Registrar’s decision may pursue a statutory appeal or judicial review before the Malaysian High Court. The appeal must be filed within the time limit prescribed by the Patents Act. Given the novelty of the regime, early indications suggest that the courts will approach appeals on opposition decisions with care, likely applying a deferential standard to the Registrar’s findings of fact while reviewing questions of law de novo.
Post‑grant patent opposition in Malaysia is now operational and reshaping the strategic landscape for patent owners, challengers and deal teams alike. Whether you need to challenge a competitor’s patent, defend a core asset or price opposition risk into a transaction, proactive preparation is essential. To discuss your position with a qualified IP practitioner, find an expert in Malaysia through our global lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jyeshta Mahendran at Shearn Delamore & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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