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Can a patent grant be challenged in Romania? The short answer is yes, and in 2026, rights-holders and competitors have more routes available than ever before. Romanian law provides two domestic tracks (an administrative procedure before OSIM and a judicial nullity action before the national courts), while the European patent system adds the EPO opposition window and, since Romania’s accession to the Unified Patent Court on 1 September 2024, the option of UPC central revocation for eligible European patents. This guide maps every available forum, explains the statutory nullity grounds, sets out step-by-step timelines and costs, and offers a strategic framework for choosing the right path.
Yes, a granted patent can be challenged in Romania through multiple proceedings. For Romanian national patents, the challenger may file an administrative cancellation request with OSIM (the Romanian State Office for Inventions and Trademarks) or bring a nullity action before the specialised intellectual-property courts. For European patents (EPs) validated in Romania, the same national routes apply to the Romanian designation, but an EPO opposition may also be filed within nine months of grant.
Since 1 September 2024, Romania is part of the Unified Patent Court system. This means classical EPs that have not been opted out, and European patents with unitary effect, can be attacked through a UPC central revocation action that, if successful, invalidates the patent across all participating member states in a single proceeding.
The critical strategic question is therefore not whether a patent can be challenged, but where to challenge it.
Use the decision triggers below to identify your starting point. The patent type determines which forums are available:
Industry observers expect the choice between UPC central revocation vs national nullity to become the defining tactical decision for patent challengers operating in Romania throughout 2026 and beyond.
Romanian patent law sets out exhaustive grounds on which patent invalidation in Romania may be sought. The principal patent nullity grounds Romania recognises include:
These grounds mirror the invalidity framework used by the EPO for European patents and are broadly consistent with Article 138 of the European Patent Convention.
Successful challenges typically rely on the following categories of evidence:
Example 1, novelty attack: A competitor identifies a published university thesis, publicly accessible before the patent’s priority date, disclosing identical process steps. Filed with a certified translation and archive certificate, this prior art destroys novelty of the independent claim.
Example 2, insufficient disclosure: A pharmaceutical patent fails to include reproducible experimental data for a key dosage range. The challenger commissions independent laboratory tests showing the claimed effect cannot be reproduced based on the patent specification alone.
Example 3, inventive step (combination attack): Two published patent documents, each disclosing different features of the claimed invention, are combined to argue that a person skilled in the art would have arrived at the claimed combination without inventive effort. This is the most common type of invalidity argument in Romania, mirroring EPO problem-solution approach practice.
OSIM handles administrative requests for cancellation or correction of granted Romanian national patents. This route is distinct from the judicial nullity action and is governed by the procedures published on the OSIM official website.
Key features of the OSIM patent cancellation process:
The OSIM route is generally faster and less costly than judicial nullity, making it an attractive first option for straightforward cases, particularly where strong prior art is readily available. However, OSIM’s procedural resources are limited compared to the courts, and complex factual or legal disputes may be better suited to judicial proceedings.
Patent nullity actions in Romania are heard by the Bucharest Tribunal (Tribunalul București) as the court of first instance, which has specialised intellectual-property sections. Appeals are heard by the Bucharest Court of Appeal (Curtea de Apel București). This centralised structure ensures that judges handling patent disputes develop relevant technical and legal expertise.
Under Romanian law, any interested person may file a nullity action. In practice, claimants are typically competitors facing infringement assertions, licensees disputing the scope of a licence, or third parties seeking freedom to operate. The state, through the public prosecutor, may also request nullity in the public interest, although this is rare. There is no time limit for filing a nullity action, it may be brought at any point during the life of the patent.
The claimant must file a statement of claim identifying each ground of nullity and providing supporting evidence. Romanian courts apply a de novo assessment: they are not bound by OSIM’s earlier examination and will independently evaluate novelty, inventive step and other grounds.
Key procedural points for patent invalidation in Romania:
First-instance nullity proceedings before the Bucharest Tribunal typically last between 12 and 24 months, depending on complexity and the need for expert evidence. Appeals before the Bucharest Court of Appeal add a further 6 to 18 months. Total duration from filing to final, non-appealable decision therefore ranges from approximately 18 to 42 months. These estimates are consistent with timelines reported in the Romania country guide published by Stoica & Asociatii for Legal 500.
Any third party may file an opposition against a European patent at the European Patent Office within nine months of the date of grant. An EPO opposition can result in the patent being revoked, maintained in amended form, or maintained as granted, and the outcome applies to all designated states, including Romania. This is a powerful centralised remedy, but the strict nine-month window means it is only available shortly after grant.
If the nine-month opposition period has expired and no opposition was filed (or an opposition was unsuccessful), the only routes to challenge the patent in respect of Romania are national nullity or, for eligible patents, UPC central revocation.
A European patent validated in Romania takes effect as a Romanian national patent for the territory of Romania. This means that EP validation Romania nullity actions follow the same procedural rules as those for purely national patents: they are brought before the Bucharest Tribunal or initiated at OSIM. The grounds mirror those available under the EPC (Article 138) and Romanian patent law. A successful national nullity action removes the patent’s effect in Romania only, it has no impact on other designated states.
Since Romania joined the Unified Patent Court on 1 September 2024, as confirmed by Reddie & Grose, classical European patents that have not been opted out of the UPC system, and European patents with unitary effect, fall within the UPC’s jurisdiction for patent revocation Romania proceedings. A revocation action filed at the UPC Central Division, if successful, invalidates the patent across all UPC member states simultaneously.
The UPC’s own FAQ on jurisdiction confirms that during the transitional period, actions for revocation of classical EPs may be brought either before the UPC or before national courts. However, for European patents with unitary effect, the UPC has exclusive competence, national courts (including Romanian courts) have no jurisdiction over unitary patents.
The practical comparison below summarises the three European-level forums:
| Forum | What It Covers | Strategic Pros, Cons & Tactical Notes |
|---|---|---|
| UPC Central Revocation (Central Division) | Revocation of classical EPs and unitary patents across all UPC member states (exclusive competence for unitary patents; shared competence for classical EPs during transition) | Pro: single action invalidates the patent across many states. Con: may lose the ability to pursue parallel national enforcement strategies. Tactical note: patent holders can opt out classical EPs to prevent UPC revocation, but this also blocks UPC enforcement. |
| Romanian National Nullity (Courts / OSIM) | Nullity or cancellation of Romanian national patents and EP validations in Romania | Pro: targeted, localised attack affecting Romania only. Con: no cross-border effect. Tactical note: faster injunction pathways may be available in Romanian courts, and national proceedings remain available even during UPC transition. |
| EPO Opposition | Opposition to a European patent at the EPO within nine months of grant | Pro: can centrally force amendment or revocation at the EPO, affecting all designations. Con: strict nine-month deadline; does not cover unitary patents (separate mechanism). Tactical note: often used in combination with monitoring services to catch newly granted patents. |
Patent holders may opt out classical EPs from the UPC system to prevent central revocation. However, an opt-out also prevents the patent holder from using the UPC for enforcement. From the challenger’s perspective, an opted-out EP can only be attacked through national nullity or EPO opposition, meaning the challenger must pursue country-by-country litigation if the patent is validated in multiple states. Detailed strategic analysis of opt-out decisions is addressed in the Bardehle Pagenberg unitary patent guide.
A challenger may face the question of whether to file at the UPC, at the Romanian courts, or both. Early indications suggest that the UPC will exercise jurisdiction even where parallel national proceedings exist, as illustrated by cases analysed by Pinsent Masons. This creates a risk of duplicative proceedings and potentially inconsistent outcomes. Careful coordination, including timing of filings and use of the lis pendens rules under the UPC Agreement, is essential.
A common tactical approach is to pursue a nullity action while simultaneously seeking (or defending against) an injunction. In Romania, a defendant accused of patent infringement can raise invalidity as a defence and file a counterclaim for nullity. This two-track approach is particularly effective where the challenger can demonstrate strong prior art: the prospect of patent invalidation may persuade the court to refuse or suspend an interim injunction, or to require the patent holder to post a security bond. Further guidance on injunction standards and security requirements is available in the companion article on patent injunctions Romania 2026.
The table below provides model timelines and indicative cost ranges for each forum. Actual timelines depend on case complexity, evidence requirements and court scheduling.
| Proceeding | Typical Duration | Indicative Cost Level | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| OSIM Administrative Cancellation | 6–18 months | Low | Fastest domestic route; best for clear-cut prior art cases |
| Romanian Courts, First Instance | 12–24 months | Medium | Expert appointment often adds 3–6 months; partial nullity possible |
| Romanian Courts, Appeal | 6–18 months (additional) | Medium–High | Total first instance + appeal: approximately 18–42 months |
| EPO Opposition | 12–24 months (oral proceedings) | Medium | Must be filed within 9 months of grant; affects all designated states |
| UPC Central Revocation | 12–24 months (target) | Medium–High | Cross-border effect; court fees plus representation in Luxembourg or Paris |
| Fast-Track Interim Injunction (Romania) | 1–6 months | Low–Medium | Separate from nullity; security/bond usually required |
Cost estimates are expressed in relative terms because actual fees depend on the complexity of the technology, the number of prior-art documents analysed, expert fees and legal representation costs. OSIM official fees are published on the OSIM website; UPC court fees are set out in the UPC Rules of Procedure and scale with the value of the dispute.
The following anonymised vignettes illustrate how the choice of forum shapes outcomes in practice.
Case A, OSIM cancellation success. A Romanian manufacturer identified a competitor’s national patent covering a commonplace mechanical assembly. A prior-art search revealed a published utility model from a third country, filed three years before the patent’s priority date, disclosing an identical mechanism. An administrative cancellation request to OSIM, supported by the prior-art document and a technical comparison, resulted in full cancellation within ten months.
Case B, UPC central revocation. A multinational company faced infringement assertions under a classical EP validated in twelve UPC member states, including Romania. Rather than defending country-by-country, the company filed a central revocation action at the UPC Central Division. The action targeted the patent’s inventive step, relying on a combination of two published scientific articles. The likely practical effect of this single proceeding was to remove the patent across all twelve states simultaneously, a result that would have required separate national actions in the absence of the UPC.
Case C, national court nullity denied. A competitor challenged an EP validated in Romania on grounds of insufficient disclosure. The Bucharest Tribunal appointed a judicial expert who concluded that, while the patent specification was terse, it contained enough information for a person skilled in the art to reproduce the invention. The nullity action was dismissed. The case underscored the importance of pre-filing assessment: insufficient disclosure is one of the harder grounds to prove, and expert evidence is decisive.
For in-house counsel and IP managers evaluating whether a patent can be challenged in Romania in 2026, the following six-step action plan provides a structured path forward:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Raluca Vasilescu at Cabinet M. Oproiu, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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