Our Expert in Denmark
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Updated: June 29, 2026
Every Danish business sitting on a commercially valuable invention faces the same binary fork: file a patent and disclose the innovation to the world in exchange for a time-limited monopoly, or keep it confidential as a trade secret and rely on internal controls to maintain an indefinite edge. The patent vs trade secret Denmark decision is not academic, it determines how you defend market position, attract investment, and respond when a competitor reverse-engineers your product or a former employee walks out with your know-how. With the 2026 DKPTO fee schedule now in force and Danish courts applying an increasingly rigorous evidence standard under the Trade Secrets Act (Lov om forretningshemmeligheder), getting this choice right has never carried higher stakes.
This guide delivers a Denmark-first comparison, complete with DKPTO cost tables, enforceability analysis, and a concrete decision framework, so founders, CTOs, in-house counsel, and R&D managers can make the call with confidence.
A patent grants its holder an exclusive right to prevent others from commercially making, using, or selling the patented invention for a fixed term. In Denmark, patent protection is governed by the Patentloven (Danish Patent Act) and administered by the Danish Patent and Trademark Office (DKPTO). The exclusivity is powerful but conditional: you must publicly disclose your invention in sufficient detail for a skilled person to reproduce it.
To secure a Danish patent, the invention must satisfy three cumulative requirements: novelty (it has not been publicly disclosed anywhere in the world before the filing date), inventive step (it is not obvious to a person skilled in the relevant technical field), and industrial applicability (it can be manufactured or used in any kind of industry). Methods for treatment of the human body, purely aesthetic creations, and, in the European Patent Office’s practice, software as such without a further technical effect are excluded from patentability.
The practical implication: if your innovation is a manufacturing process, a pharmaceutical compound, a medical device, or a hardware configuration, the patent route is well-trodden. If it is a pure business method or a dataset, patentability is doubtful, and the trade-secret path may be the only realistic option.
Danish businesses have three main filing routes:
Regardless of route, patent enforcement in Denmark is handled through the Danish Maritime and Commercial High Court or ordinary district courts, with injunctive relief and damages available to the patent holder.
Patent protection is front-loaded in cost. Filing fees, attorney prosecution charges, translations, and validation fees must all be budgeted before a single product ships. Annual maintenance fees then escalate over the patent’s life. A detailed cost comparison appears in the dimension-by-dimension analysis below.
A trade secret is any information, a formula, algorithm, customer list, manufacturing process, or dataset, that derives commercial value from being confidential, and that the holder has taken reasonable steps to keep secret. In Denmark, trade secrets are protected under the Lov om forretningshemmeligheder (Danish Trade Secrets Act, LOV nr 309 af 25/04/2018), which implements the EU Trade Secrets Directive (2016/943). The Act prohibits the unlawful acquisition, use, and disclosure of trade secrets and provides civil remedies including injunctions and damages.
The trade-secret route is the stronger choice when any of the following apply:
Trade secret protection is immediate once adequate secrecy measures are in place. There is no registration, no examination backlog, and no mandatory public disclosure. The trade-off is fragility: if secrecy is lost, whether through a leak, independent discovery, or lawful reverse engineering, the protection vanishes and cannot be restored.
Danish courts evaluating trade-secret claims look for documented, proportionate secrecy governance. The following checklist reflects current enforcement expectations:
The table below is the centrepiece of the patent or trade secret Denmark decision. Use it to compare both options across every dimension that matters in 2026.
| Dimension | Patent | Trade Secret |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility | Technical invention meeting novelty, inventive step, industrial applicability (Patentloven) | Any commercially valuable information kept confidential (Lov om forretningshemmeligheder) |
| Cost (initial + ongoing) | Filing + prosecution + validation + annual DKPTO maintenance fees + attorney costs | No registration fee; governance costs (NDAs, IT, training, monitoring) |
| Timing to obtain protection | 2–5+ years from filing to grant (protection backdated to filing date) | Immediate once secrecy measures are in place |
| Duration of protection | Maximum 20 years from filing date | Indefinite, as long as secrecy is maintained |
| Enforceability in Denmark | Strong, injunctive relief and damages via Danish courts; validated EP patents enforceable | Civil remedies under the Trade Secrets Act; evidence of secrecy measures is critical |
| Reverse engineering risk | Disclosure enables design-arounds, but patent prevents copying | Lawful reverse engineering destroys protection entirely |
| Territorial reach | Must file/validate in each jurisdiction (DK, EP, PCT routes available) | Secrecy protects globally; enforcement is national under local trade-secret law |
| Remedies & litigation cost | Clear exclusivity basis; potentially higher damages; costly litigation | Injunctions and damages available; proof of secrecy measures is the litigation battleground |
| Disclosure risk (investors/partners) | Patent published 18 months after filing, disclosure is mandatory | Disclosure only to those under NDA; greater confidentiality but weaker due-diligence comfort for investors |
| Best suited for | High-value inventions where exclusivity and licensing outweigh disclosure cost | Operational processes, algorithms, formulas where secrecy is viable and patentability is weak or cost-prohibitive |
Below, each critical dimension is examined in detail, ending with a one-line verdict to guide your decision.
Patents are available only for technical inventions. Under Danish law and European Patent Convention practice, an invention must demonstrate a technical character to pass the threshold. Pure software, business methods, mathematical algorithms, and aesthetic designs are excluded unless they produce a further technical effect. Trade secrets face no such restriction, any information that is secret, commercially valuable, and subject to reasonable secrecy measures qualifies for protection under the Danish Trade Secrets Act.
The cost difference between the patent route and the trade-secret route is significant. The table below uses DKPTO official fee figures as of January 1, 2025.
| Cost Item | Patent (Denmark / EP Validation) | Trade Secret |
|---|---|---|
| DKPTO publication fee | DKK 2,230 | N/A, no registration required |
| Annual maintenance (years 1–3) | ~DKK 550/year | N/A |
| Annual maintenance (later years) | Escalating (see DKPTO fee schedule) | N/A |
| Attorney & prosecution (estimate) | DKK 50,000–250,000+ (filing through grant, depending on scope and route) | DKK 20,000–150,000 initial governance setup (NDAs, IT, training) |
| Ongoing monitoring | Renewal fees + infringement watch | Access-control systems, periodic IP audits, employee exit procedures |
| Tax treatment | R&D expenditures and amortisation rules may apply; potential R&D tax credits | Governance costs deductible as ordinary business expenses |
Fees as of January 1, 2025. Attorney cost ranges are indicative and vary by technology area and filing route. Always confirm current fees at dkpto.dk and consult a tax adviser for capitalisation and credit eligibility.
A patent application filed at the DKPTO typically takes two to four years from filing to grant. During that period, the applicant receives provisional protection from the filing date, but enforcement generally requires a granted patent. The patent is published 18 months after filing, making the invention publicly available, even before grant. The maximum term is 20 years from the filing date, after which the invention enters the public domain.
Trade secret protection, by contrast, arises the moment adequate secrecy measures are implemented. There is no application process, no examination delay, and no expiration date. The risk is symmetrical: protection can endure for decades, but it can also vanish overnight if confidentiality is breached or a competitor independently develops the same solution.
Trade secrets Denmark enforceability centres on the Danish Trade Secrets Act (Lov om forretningshemmeligheder, LOV nr 309 af 25/04/2018). The Act defines a trade secret by three cumulative criteria: the information is secret, it has commercial value because it is secret, and the holder has taken reasonable steps to keep it secret. Remedies include injunctions, damages, and orders for corrective measures.
The critical litigation battleground is evidence of secrecy measures. Danish courts expect documentary proof, access logs, signed NDAs, classification protocols, and IT security records. Without that paper trail, a claim of misappropriation is unlikely to succeed. Courts may also grant sealed proceedings and redactions to protect the secret during litigation, but the applicant must proactively request these protections.
Patent enforcement Denmark is comparatively straightforward in its evidentiary requirements: the patent is a public document with clearly defined claims. Infringement analysis focuses on claim construction and whether the allegedly infringing product or process falls within claim scope. Injunctive relief and damages are available through the Maritime and Commercial High Court or district courts.
Under Danish and EU law, reverse engineering of a lawfully obtained product is not misappropriation. If a competitor purchases your product on the open market and disassembles it to understand its operation, your trade-secret protection is lost, legally and permanently. This is the single most important variable in the patent vs trade secret Denmark analysis.
Use the following rapid checklist to assess reverse-engineering risk:
Patents offer the advantage of clear territorial rights: a Danish patent (or a European patent validated in Denmark) provides an unambiguous legal basis for suing infringers in Danish courts. Damages may include lost profits, reasonable royalties, or unjust enrichment. Cross-border enforcement requires separate patents or validations in each target jurisdiction, but the right itself is well-defined.
Trade secret remedies under the Danish Trade Secrets Act include injunctions, damages for unlawful acquisition or disclosure, and orders to destroy infringing materials. Cross-border enforcement is more complex, each jurisdiction applies its own trade-secret law, and harmonisation under the EU Trade Secrets Directive is imperfect. Industry observers expect that for AI-related innovations, where model weights, training data, and inference pipelines are difficult to patent but carry enormous competitive value, trade-secret protection will remain the primary defensive tool, supplemented by selective patenting of underlying hardware or data-processing architectures.
Two converging trends are reshaping the patent vs trade secret landscape for Danish businesses in 2026.
Heightened evidence standards for trade secrets. The EUIPO Observatory’s reporting on trade-secret enforcement across EU member states has documented a pattern: courts are demanding stronger proof that holders implemented “reasonable steps” to maintain secrecy. The likely practical effect for Danish litigants is that informal or undocumented measures, verbal instructions, implicit expectations of confidentiality, will no longer suffice. Businesses relying on trade-secret protection must invest in auditable governance or risk having claims dismissed.
DKPTO fee adjustments and procedural improvements. The DKPTO adjusted its patent fee schedule effective January 1, 2025, and has continued to expand access to the Patent Prosecution Highway programme, which can significantly shorten examination times for applicants with corresponding allowances in partner offices. For cost-conscious startups, these developments modestly improve the patent route’s competitiveness relative to earlier years, though the overall cost gap between patenting and trade-secret governance remains substantial.
The combined effect: businesses that previously defaulted to trade-secret protection on cost grounds should re-evaluate whether the rising governance burden and evidence expectations make selective patenting a more defensible strategy, particularly for innovations at high risk of reverse engineering.
The following framework distils the dimension-by-dimension analysis into actionable guidance.
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Defensible exclusive right to commercialise a high-value invention | Patent, file via DK, EP, or PCT and budget for prosecution |
| Indefinite competitive edge without public disclosure | Trade secret, invest heavily in governance and monitoring |
| Fast market launch with limited budget and low patentability | Trade secret (or selective patenting of one core improvement) |
| Protection against easy reverse engineering of a shipped product | Patent, disclosure is the lesser risk |
| Investor confidence and freedom-to-operate assurance | Hybrid, patent the core, document trade-secret governance for know-how |
Choose patent when:
Choose trade secret when:
Choose a hybrid approach when:
Many founders and R&D managers can perform an initial self-assessment using the framework above. However, certain situations require qualified IP lawyers with Denmark-specific expertise:
Qualified counsel in Denmark can assess patentability, structure governance frameworks, draft claims, and represent you in enforcement proceedings, turning this strategic decision into a durable competitive advantage.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kim Larsen, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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