Our Expert in Italy
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Last updated: May 24, 2026
Patent enforcement in Italy offers rights holders one of Europe’s most powerful arsenals of interim and final remedies, ranging from ex parte seizures executed within days to compensatory damages running into the millions. Italy’s specialised intellectual-property sections, housed within designated courts in Milan, Rome, Turin and other major cities, have developed deep expertise in handling complex patent disputes across pharmaceuticals, mechanical engineering, electronics and fashion-tech sectors. For 2026, the continued roll-out of the Unified Patent Court adds a new strategic dimension to forum selection, while Italian courts themselves have refined evidentiary standards and accelerated hearing calendars for preliminary injunctions in Italy.
This guide provides in-house counsel and IP managers with the practical thresholds, timelines and tactical sequences needed to enforce a patent right on Italian territory.
Italy’s patent enforcement framework is principally governed by the Codice della Proprietà Industriale (Italian Code of Industrial Property, Legislative Decree No. 30/2005, “CPI”), supplemented by the Italian Code of Civil Procedure for interim relief and EU-harmonised rules under the Enforcement Directive 2004/48/EC. A patent holder can pursue civil remedies (injunctions, damages, seizure, judicial description and withdrawal from the market), and in certain cases criminal sanctions for wilful counterfeiting. The specialised IP sections (Sezioni Specializzate in materia di Impresa) serve as the exclusive first-instance forum for patent disputes, ensuring that judges possess technical familiarity with the subject matter.
Since the Unified Patent Court commenced operations, holders of European patents (including unitary patents) face a strategic choice between the UPC’s local/central divisions and Italy’s national IP sections. Italian national courts retain jurisdiction over Italian national patents, supplementary protection certificates, and European patents where UPC opt-outs remain in force. The choice of forum affects available remedies, speed of proceedings, language of the case and enforceability across borders, a factor that warrants careful analysis before filing. For a broader perspective on cross-border IP strategy, see our guide on protecting intellectual property across borders.
| Relief type | Stage | Key statutory basis (CPI) |
|---|---|---|
| Preliminary injunction (inibitoria cautelare) | Interim, pre-trial or early litigation | Articles 128–131 CPI; Articles 669-bis ff. Code of Civil Procedure |
| Judicial description (descrizione giudiziale) | Interim, evidence preservation | Article 129 CPI |
| Seizure (sequestro) | Interim, asset/evidence preservation | Article 129 CPI; Articles 670–671 Code of Civil Procedure |
| Final injunction | Merits judgment | Article 124 CPI |
| Damages | Merits judgment | Article 125 CPI |
| Withdrawal from the market / destruction | Merits judgment (or interim in urgent cases) | Article 124(3)–(4) CPI |
The interim relief toolkit is where Italian patent enforcement truly distinguishes itself. Applicants can secure rapid, enforceable orders that halt infringing activity, preserve physical evidence and prevent market harm, often before the defendant has an opportunity to respond. All preliminary measures under the CPI require the applicant to satisfy two cumulative legal thresholds derived from the Italian Code of Civil Procedure:
A preliminary injunction (inibitoria cautelare) is the most frequently sought interim measure in Italian patent enforcement. When a court issues the order, the defendant must immediately cease all infringing activities, manufacturing, importing, offering for sale or using the patented technology.
To establish fumus boni iuris, applicants typically submit:
To establish periculum in mora, applicants should present:
In practice, IP sections in Milan and Rome schedule preliminary injunction hearings within approximately seven to thirty days of the application being filed, depending on the urgency asserted. The court may require the applicant to post a security bond (cauzione) to cover potential damages to the defendant if the injunction is later found to have been wrongly granted.
Where the circumstances are exceptionally urgent, for instance, infringing goods are about to clear customs, a major trade fair is imminent, or evidence is at risk of destruction, the court may grant an ex parte injunction without prior notice to the defendant. Under Articles 669-sexies and 669-septies of the Italian Code of Civil Procedure, the judge evaluates the application on the papers alone and issues a decree (decreto inaudita altera parte).
The ex parte order typically requires the applicant to serve it on the defendant and initiate a return hearing (usually set within fifteen days) at which the defendant can oppose the measure. If the applicant fails to serve or initiate the return hearing within the prescribed deadline, the ex parte order loses effectiveness.
Two additional interim measures, judicial description and seizure, are heavily used in patent enforcement in Italy, particularly where evidence preservation is critical. Article 129 CPI authorises both measures, and courts frequently grant them in combination.
| Procedure | Purpose | Typical timing and order features |
|---|---|---|
| Judicial description (descrizione giudiziale) | Court-authorised technical inspection of allegedly infringing goods, manufacturing processes, machinery or documents. The appointed expert prepares a detailed written description that serves as evidence in subsequent proceedings. | Granted ex parte; a court-appointed expert (CTU) and bailiff attend the defendant’s premises; inspection usually completed within one to three days of execution. The order often specifies the scope of inspection and may include photography, sampling and document copying. |
| Seizure (sequestro) | Physical seizure and removal of infringing products, semi-finished goods, tools, moulds or raw materials to prevent continued infringement and preserve evidence. May also extend to a seizure of financial records or accounting documentation. | Granted ex parte or on notice; executed by bailiffs (and judicial police where necessary); goods are placed under court-appointed custody. The applicant may be ordered to post security. The defendant may request a hearing to challenge the seizure. |
Industry observers expect judicial descriptions to remain the single most important evidence-collection tool in Italian patent disputes, because they allow claimants to enter the infringer’s premises, examine production processes and secure documentation before the defendant can alter or destroy it.
Under Article 124 CPI, courts can order the withdrawal from the market of infringing products, their definitive removal from commercial channels, and, where appropriate, the destruction of infringing goods and the means used to produce them. Non-compliance with an injunction or withdrawal order exposes the defendant to severe consequences. Italian courts routinely impose a penalty payment (penalità di mora) for each day of continued infringement or non-compliance, pursuant to Article 614-bis of the Code of Civil Procedure. In egregious cases, wilful disregard of a court order may trigger criminal proceedings for contempt.
Speed is often the decisive factor in patent enforcement in Italy. A well-prepared application can progress from filing to execution of an ex parte order within days. The following step-by-step sequence outlines the fastest procedural path.
The strength of the application depends overwhelmingly on the quality of the evidence. Courts will scrutinise the claims-comparison chart and the CTP report most closely. The chart should map each element of every asserted claim to a corresponding feature of the accused product or process, using annotated photographs or diagrams. The CTP report should be authored by a recognised technical expert and should address both infringement and the patent’s prima facie validity, including any obvious prior art defences.
Supporting exhibits that materially strengthen the application include customs import data, screenshots of the defendant’s commercial offers, trade fair catalogues, and any cease-and-desist correspondence that demonstrates the defendant’s awareness of the patent. Our international intellectual property guide offers further detail on evidence-gathering strategies across multiple jurisdictions.
Once infringement is established on the merits, Article 125 CPI provides the statutory framework for damages for patent infringement in Italy. The Italian approach follows the compensation principle: the patent holder is entitled to be placed in the economic position it would have occupied had the infringement not occurred. Courts have adopted increasingly sophisticated methods for quantifying quantum, drawing on economic expert evidence and detailed accounting analysis.
Italian courts recognise several bases for calculating compensation:
The claimant is not required to elect a single method at the outset; courts may combine elements, for instance, awarding lost profits on core sales and a reasonable royalty on ancillary markets, to ensure full compensation.
| Evidence type | Purpose | Practical notes |
|---|---|---|
| Claimant’s sales and margin data | Establishes baseline for lost-profit calculation | Audited financial statements and product-level P&L preferred; should cover a period before and during infringement |
| Market-share analysis | Demonstrates diversion of sales | Independent market research reports (e.g., IMS, Euromonitor) carry greater weight than internal estimates |
| Comparable licence agreements | Benchmarks for reasonable royalty | Licences for the patent in suit are strongest; industry comparables are accepted where no direct licence exists |
| Infringer’s financial records | Disgorgement / unjust enrichment calculation | Courts may order disclosure under Article 121-bis CPI; non-compliance can lead to adverse inferences |
| Expert economic report (CTP economica) | Synthesis and modelling of quantum | Court-appointed experts (CTU) are common; each party may also appoint its own CTP |
| Customs and import data | Volume of infringing goods entering Italy | Obtainable through judicial orders or cooperation with the Italian Customs Agency (Agenzia delle Dogane) |
Where interim measures are granted, the court may order the applicant to post security to protect the defendant against loss if the measures are ultimately reversed. The amount of security is at the court’s discretion and typically reflects the estimated impact of the injunction on the defendant’s business during the interim period. For patent holders enforcing across multiple European jurisdictions, an Italian judgment or order may be recognised and enforced under the Brussels I Recast Regulation (Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012), which simplifies cross-border enforcement within the EU.
Effective patent enforcement in Italy depends as much on tactical sequencing as on the strength of the underlying patent. Industry observers note that the most successful enforcement campaigns follow a deliberate, phased approach.
The likely practical effect of this phased approach is that a well-prepared claimant can secure evidence preservation and a preliminary injunction within the first month, placing significant commercial pressure on the infringer before the merits trial even begins.
Costs in Italian patent litigation are governed by a partially shifting system: the losing party is typically ordered to reimburse the prevailing party’s legal costs, subject to statutory fee schedules. In practice, full cost recovery is uncommon; the reimbursed amount often falls below the actual fees incurred. Contingency fee arrangements (patto di quota lite) are permitted in Italy following legislative reforms, although their use in patent cases remains relatively limited.
Courts take non-compliance seriously. A defendant that disregards an injunction or seizure order faces daily penalty payments, which can escalate rapidly. In cases involving deliberate destruction of evidence or concealment of assets, the court may refer the matter for criminal prosecution. Applicants, too, face risk: if interim measures are later revoked or the underlying claim fails, the defendant may seek compensation from the applicant for losses suffered during the enforcement of the wrongly granted order, up to the amount of any posted security and potentially beyond.
The following checklist summarises the essential documents and tactical considerations for filing an enforcement application.
For detailed guidance on IP strategy across jurisdictions, the GLE international intellectual property guide provides a useful comparative framework.
Patent enforcement in Italy provides rights holders with a powerful and flexible combination of interim and final remedies, backed by specialised courts with deep technical expertise. From ex parte seizures that can be executed within days to compensatory damages grounded in rigorous economic analysis, the Italian system rewards early preparation, strong evidence and decisive tactical sequencing. As the enforcement landscape continues to evolve alongside the UPC, in-house teams should evaluate Italian proceedings as a key element of any European patent protection strategy. To explore enforcement options tailored to a specific case, consult the GLE lawyer directory to connect with qualified patent litigation specialists in Italy.
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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