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Deciding when to hire an IP litigation lawyer in Canada is one of the highest-stakes timing calls a pharma or biotech company will make. If you are in-house counsel, a general counsel, an R&D lead, or a founder at a life-sciences company that has just received a Notice of Allegation (NOA), is planning a product launch against a competitor’s patent, or faces an infringement threat, you have two principal routes: a PM(NOC) linkage proceeding under the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations (SOR/93-133) or a full Federal Court patent action seeking injunctions and damages. Federal Court practice guidance updates issued since late 2024 have increased early-stage procedural complexity in PM(NOC) proceedings, making specialist counsel retention more time-critical than ever.
A quick distinction before going further: patent prosecution is the process of obtaining and maintaining patent rights at the Canadian Intellectual Property Office, while patent litigation is the enforcement or challenge of those rights in court or through the PM(NOC) linkage regime. For launch decisions and NOA responses, you need litigation counsel, and ideally counsel with deep science literacy in pharma patent litigation in Canada, not prosecution counsel alone.
This guide provides a dimension-by-dimension comparison of both routes, a cost table with indicative ranges, a first-7-days NOA checklist, and an explicit decision framework so you can act within the narrow windows the law demands.
The PM(NOC) linkage regime is Canada’s purpose-built mechanism connecting pharmaceutical patent rights to drug regulatory approval. Governed by the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations (SOR/93-133), it creates a direct link between Health Canada’s drug approval process and the patents listed on the Patent Register. When a second-entry manufacturer (typically a generic or biosimilar applicant) files a drug submission referencing an innovator’s product, and patents are listed against that product, the applicant must either accept a delay until patent expiry or serve a Notice of Allegation (NOA) on the first person (the patent holder or its licensee) alleging that the listed patents are invalid or would not be infringed.
On receipt of the NOA, the first person has 45 days to commence an action in the Federal Court. If the action is commenced within that window, an automatic regulatory stay applies, Health Canada will not issue a Notice of Compliance (market authorisation) to the second-entry applicant until the proceeding is resolved or the stay expires. This stay is the core commercial lever: it blocks market entry without requiring the innovator to separately obtain an injunction.
PM(NOC) proceedings suit innovators whose primary business risk is a competitor entering the market through Health Canada. They are also critical for generic and biosimilar applicants who must understand the litigation exposure their NOA creates. The regime demands specialised PM(NOC) counsel because it operates on compressed timelines with regulatory interplay that general commercial litigators rarely encounter.
The first 90 days after an NOA is served are the most consequential. Missing even one deadline can extinguish a party’s rights or eliminate the regulatory stay entirely. Below are the key milestones and the biotech patent litigation triggers that should prompt immediate counsel retention.
Full Federal Court patent litigation operates outside the PM(NOC) linkage framework. Any patent owner can commence an action for infringement under the Patent Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. P-4), seeking remedies that include permanent injunctions, damages (or an accounting of profits), delivery up of infringing goods, and declaratory relief on patent validity. This route is not limited to drugs listed on the Patent Register and is available against any infringer, manufacturers, importers, distributors, or even users, in any technology sector.
Companies choose Federal Court litigation over PM(NOC) when they need monetary recovery, when the dispute involves multiple infringers or products, when the infringement does not involve a Health Canada regulatory filing (and therefore no NOA exists), or when they seek relief across cross-border jurisdictions where PM(NOC) cannot reach. It is also the appropriate venue when seeking an interim or interlocutory injunction to halt infringing activity before trial, although the applicant bears the burden of satisfying the well-known three-part test: serious issue to be tried, irreparable harm, and balance of convenience.
Federal Court actions are generally more expensive and longer than PM(NOC) proceedings. Discovery obligations are broader, covering electronic documents, custodial reviews, interrogatories, and depositions, and trial timelines extend from months to years. However, the range of remedies is correspondingly wider, making this route essential when damages accounting or broad injunctive relief is the strategic objective.
Federal Court patent litigation unfolds through distinct stages. Knowing when to retain patent counsel at each phase prevents costly procedural errors and preserves strategic options.
The table below compares the two routes across every dimension that matters to a pharma or biotech decision-maker. Use it as a quick-reference tool before reading the deeper analysis that follows.
| Dimension | PM(NOC) (Linkage Proceeding) | Federal Court Patent Litigation |
|---|---|---|
| Trigger / when available | NOA served against a NOC applicant under PM(NOC) Regulations (SOR/93-133); tied to Health Canada regulatory filing | Direct infringement suit by patent owner under the Patent Act; no regulatory stay mechanism |
| Primary remedy | Automatic regulatory stay blocking NOC issuance, immediate commercial effect | Injunctions, damages, accounting of profits, delivery up, broader monetary remedies |
| Speed / timing | Compressed schedule tied to drug-approval timelines; 45-day filing window is non-negotiable | Longer timelines (18–36+ months to trial); fuller discovery and trial process |
| Procedural complexity | Specialised linkage rules requiring coordination with Health Canada timelines and Patent Register records | Broader discovery burden, extensive fact and expert evidence, potentially longer appeals |
| Evidence focus | Regulatory record, expert scientific evidence on patent claims and product formulation, clinical/regulatory data interplay | Extensive technical expert evidence, commercial-use discovery, and damages calculation |
| Cost profile | Intensive early spend to meet compressed deadlines; may be lower total cost if resolved before trial | Potentially higher total cost due to discovery length, multiple experts, and trial duration |
| Enforceability / outcome | Blocks regulatory approval and market entry until disposition, immediate and automatic | Injunctions can block sales; damages require later collection; more options for monetary recovery |
| Best for | Originators protecting market exclusivity where the risk is competitor market entry via Health Canada | Cases requiring permanent injunctive relief, damages, or involving multiple infringers or cross-border claims |
| When to hire counsel | Immediately on receipt of NOA or when freedom-to-operate analysis reveals a blocking patent | When infringement risk is identified, or when injunction/damages is the primary strategic objective |
Key takeaways from the comparison: PM(NOC) is the faster, more targeted route when the business risk is market entry through Health Canada, but it limits remedies to regulatory blocking. Federal Court litigation delivers broader relief, including monetary damages, but at higher cost and longer timelines. Many sophisticated parties pursue both tracks in parallel. The critical variable is timing: in PM(NOC), missing the 45-day window is fatal.
Cost is often the first question in-house counsel asks when deciding whether and when to hire an IP litigation lawyer in Canada. The answer depends on the route chosen, the number of patents in dispute, the volume of expert evidence required, and whether the case settles or proceeds to trial. Common fee models include retainer plus hourly rates, capped-phase billing (useful for the compressed PM(NOC) triage), and, in limited Federal Court damages cases, partial contingency or success-based arrangements.
| Cost Item | PM(NOC) (Typical Ranges) | Federal Court (Typical Ranges) |
|---|---|---|
| Initial triage + NOA response (first 7–14 days) | CAD 15,000–60,000 | CAD 15,000–75,000 |
| Full action to close (including expert evidence) | CAD 200,000–1,000,000+ | CAD 500,000–3,000,000+ |
| Interim injunction application | CAD 50,000–300,000 | CAD 75,000–400,000 |
| Expert witness fees (per expert) | CAD 15,000–75,000 | CAD 20,000–150,000 |
| Document discovery / eDiscovery | Lower if regulatory record is primary; eDiscovery may be limited | Higher, eDiscovery platforms and custodial reviews increase costs substantially |
Ranges are indicative. Exact cost depends on case complexity, number of defendants, cross-border elements, expert witness count, and whether settlement or trial is the end point. Companies should also consider CRA tax implications for settlements and royalty payments, lump-sum settlements may be treated differently than ongoing royalties for income-tax purposes.
PM(NOC) proceedings operate on a compressed timeline anchored by the 45-day filing deadline. The automatic regulatory stay, which blocks Health Canada from issuing a Notice of Compliance, provides an immediate commercial shield. The typical PM(NOC) proceeding resolves within 24 months of commencement. By contrast, Federal Court patent litigation routinely takes 18–36 months to reach trial, with appeals adding another 12–24 months. For an innovator facing imminent generic launch, the PM(NOC) stay is often the only mechanism fast enough to preserve market position while the dispute is resolved.
In PM(NOC) proceedings, the remedy is structural: the regulatory stay prevents market entry. There is no separate injunction to apply for, the stay arises automatically on commencement of the action. In Federal Court litigation, a patent owner may seek an interlocutory injunction before trial and a permanent injunction after trial. The interlocutory injunction standard requires the applicant to demonstrate a serious issue to be tried, irreparable harm, and that the balance of convenience favours granting the injunction. Industry observers expect that courts will continue to scrutinise irreparable harm carefully in pharma cases, particularly where damages are calculable.
Damages and accounting of profits are only available in Federal Court, not through PM(NOC), making the Federal Court route essential when monetary recovery is a priority.
Both routes depend heavily on expert scientific evidence. In PM(NOC), expert reports focus on claim construction, infringement analysis (does the generic product fall within the patent claims?), and validity challenges (anticipation, obviousness, insufficiency). In Federal Court, the scope expands to include damages experts, market-share economists, and potentially regulatory scientists. For biotech patent disputes, involving complex biologics, monoclonal antibodies, or gene therapies, early engagement of a scientific expert with relevant bench experience is essential. Lead times for expert reports typically run 8–16 weeks; failure to scope experts early can delay the entire proceeding.
Federal Court practice guidance updates issued in late 2024 introduced new procedural requirements for PM(NOC) case management, including tighter scheduling, enhanced disclosure obligations, and revised expert-evidence protocols. Early indications suggest these changes front-load more work into the first 90 days of a PM(NOC) proceeding, increasing the cost and complexity of the initial triage phase. Additionally, evolving case law on patentable subject matter in the biotech space, particularly around diagnostic methods and personalised medicine, has created uncertainty that benefits parties who retain specialised IP litigation counsel early. These 2026 risk factors reinforce the recommendation to engage counsel at the earliest possible trigger, not after internal deliberation has consumed critical days.
The Federal Court issued updated practice guidance for PM(NOC) proceedings in late 2024, building on earlier procedural reforms. These updates affect scheduling conferences, the sequencing of expert evidence, and the timing of regulatory-record disclosure. The likely practical effect is that parties who appear at the first case management conference without experienced PM(NOC) counsel risk conceding procedural advantages, on expert sequencing, protective orders, or document-production scope, that are difficult to recover later.
In parallel, the Federal Court has continued to refine its approach to patentable subject matter in biotech, with decisions addressing the boundary between patentable inventions and unpatentable abstract ideas or methods of medical treatment. For companies holding or challenging biotech patents, this evolving landscape makes freedom-to-operate hiring decisions more complex and more consequential. The combination of tighter procedural rules and shifting substantive law means that 2026 is not the year to delay retaining specialised counsel.
Use the table below to match your commercial priority to the right litigation route. This is the core decision framework for determining when to hire an IP litigation lawyer in Canada.
| If Your Priority Is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Blocking a competitor from obtaining regulatory approval and entering the market | PM(NOC), retain PM(NOC) counsel immediately |
| Obtaining broad monetary damages or pursuing multiple infringers across jurisdictions | Federal Court litigation (or parallel Federal Court + international actions) |
| Resolving quickly before launch with the least discovery burden | PM(NOC), provided an NOA or regulatory trigger is present |
| Requiring deep scientific experts and extensive discovery on commercial use or damages | Federal Court litigation |
| You received a NOA today | Retain specialised PM(NOC) counsel within 48–72 hours |
Choose PM(NOC) when:
Choose Federal Court litigation when:
Knowing when to retain patent counsel is as important as choosing the right route. The following situations should trigger immediate engagement of specialised IP litigation counsel:
Lawyer selection checklist, what to look for:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marian Wolanski at BELMORE NEIDRAUER LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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