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how do you enforce a patent

How Do You Enforce a Patent in the Netherlands in 2026, UPC, EPO & National Steps for Owners

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Patent owners targeting the Dutch market now face a more complex, and more powerful, set of enforcement options than at any previous point in European patent history. Understanding how do you enforce a patent in the Netherlands requires navigating three distinct forums: the Unified Patent Court (UPC), the Dutch national courts, and the European Patent Office (EPO) opposition system. Each carries different remedies, territorial reach, timelines and risks. This guide delivers the step-by-step patent enforcement steps every patent owner and in-house counsel needs, covering jurisdiction choice, interim relief, evidence strategy, costs and post-judgment execution as of 2026.

Quick Answer: How Do You Enforce a Patent in the Netherlands

European patent enforcement in the Netherlands begins with confirming your rights and ends with compelling the infringer to stop. The process can move remarkably fast, a Dutch preliminary injunction can be obtained within days, or it can span years if validity is contested across multiple forums. In every case, the core workflow follows the same logic: confirm your patent, gather evidence of infringement, choose the right forum, pursue interim and final relief, and enforce the resulting order.

Five-point quick checklist:

  1. Confirm your rights. Verify grant status, validation in the Netherlands (or unitary patent registration), and that renewal fees are current.
  2. Map the infringement. Prepare claim charts comparing each asserted claim element to the accused product or process.
  3. Choose your forum. Decide between the UPC (pan-EU reach), Dutch national courts (speed, NL-only), or coordinate with an EPO opposition.
  4. Secure interim relief. Apply for a preliminary injunction or preservation of evidence before the infringer can destroy proof or shift inventory.
  5. Pursue final remedies and enforce. Obtain a permanent injunction, damages or an account of profits, and execute the judgment.

Decision tree, which forum?

  • Need pan-EU injunction for a unitary patent or non-opted-out EP? → UPC
  • Need the fastest possible injunction for NL-only enforcement? → Dutch national court
  • Need to challenge or defend validity centrally before or during litigation? → EPO opposition

At a Glance: UPC vs Netherlands National Court vs EPO Opposition

Choosing the right forum is the single most consequential strategic decision in European patent enforcement. The comparison table below summarises the key differences for patent owners weighing the UPC Netherlands route against domestic litigation or EPO proceedings.

Forum Main Remedies & Territorial Scope Typical Timeline & Cost (Estimate)
UPC (local/regional/central divisions) Preliminary and permanent injunctions, damages, recall and destruction orders. Pan-EU effect for unitary patents; multi-state effect for validated EPs (in participating states). Central revocation possible as a counterclaim. Interim relief: weeks to months. Full trial on the merits: approximately 12–24 months. Costs: medium to high (court fees scale with value of the dispute; legal costs are typically higher than single-state national proceedings).
Netherlands national courts (District Court The Hague, patent chamber) Preliminary injunctions (kort geding), seizure orders (conservatoir beslag), permanent injunctions, damages, account of profits, recall and destruction. Effect limited to the Netherlands. Interim relief: days to weeks (kort geding hearings can be scheduled within one to two weeks in urgent cases). Full trial: approximately 6–18 months. Costs: lower than UPC for NL-only matters.
EPO opposition Central revocation or amendment of the European patent (affects all validated designations). No injunctive relief; no damages. Opposition period: nine months from publication of the grant in the European Patent Bulletin. Proceedings: typically 9–36+ months to a first-instance decision. Cost: moderate (official fees plus representative costs).

When UPC Is Mandatory or the Opt-Out Applies

The UPC has jurisdiction over European patents validated in participating member states unless the patent holder has registered an opt-out. If no opt-out is in place, any third party can bring a revocation action at the UPC, meaning patent owners who have not opted out must be prepared to defend validity there. For unitary patents, the UPC has exclusive jurisdiction from the outset; there is no opt-out possibility. Industry observers note that as UPC case volumes continue rising through 2026, procedural developments, including the court’s use of its Patent Mediation and Arbitration Centre (PMAC) and case-management conference orders, are making UPC proceedings more predictable for litigants.

When National Court Is Preferable

Dutch national courts remain the faster option for Netherlands-only relief. The District Court of The Hague has exclusive jurisdiction for patent litigation in the Netherlands and has a well-established, specialist patent chamber. For a patent owner whose infringement concern is limited to the Dutch market, or who needs an injunction within days rather than weeks, the kort geding (summary proceedings for interim relief) at The Hague is difficult to beat on speed. National proceedings also avoid the risk of a UPC-wide central revocation counterclaim that could invalidate the patent across all participating states.

Step-by-Step: How Do You Enforce a Patent in the Netherlands

Below is the practical patent enforcement steps checklist that every patent owner should follow. The sequence applies whether you ultimately litigate at the UPC or the Dutch national court.

Step 0: Confirm Your Rights

Before any enforcement action, verify the following:

  • The European patent has been granted by the EPO and published.
  • The patent has been validated in the Netherlands (translation requirements met, national fees paid), or you hold a unitary patent covering NL.
  • All renewal fees are current; a lapsed patent cannot be enforced.
  • Check whether an opt-out from the UPC has been registered, and decide whether to withdraw it.

Step 1: Evidence Gathering and Product Mapping

Enforcement succeeds or fails on the strength of evidence. Patent owners should prepare detailed claim charts that map each element of the asserted patent claims to the corresponding feature of the accused product or process. Collect product samples (purchase in the Netherlands to establish local infringement), marketing materials, technical datasheets, import and customs records, and any available manufacturing information. In the Netherlands, the patent holder can also apply for a pre-action inspection order (beschrijvend beslag) through the court, allowing a bailiff and a technical expert to inspect and document infringing goods or processes before formal proceedings begin.

Step 2: Demand Letter and Cease-and-Desist

A well-drafted demand letter serves multiple purposes: it puts the infringer on notice (which can affect damages calculations), it creates an opportunity for early resolution, and it establishes the patent holder’s seriousness. A Dutch-practice demand letter should typically include:

  • Identification of the patent, relevant claims and the accused product or process.
  • A summary of the infringement analysis (without disclosing full litigation strategy).
  • A demand to cease infringing activities and to provide an account of sales.
  • A reasonable deadline for response, typically 7–14 business days.
  • A statement that legal proceedings will follow if no satisfactory response is received.

Step 3: Preservation Measures

If there is a risk that the infringer will destroy evidence, move inventory or alter processes, apply to the Dutch court for preservation of evidence. The beschrijvend beslag (descriptive seizure) is a powerful ex parte tool: a bailiff accompanied by a technical expert inspects and catalogues the allegedly infringing goods or process, creating a factual record that can be used in subsequent proceedings. This order can be obtained rapidly, often within days of application.

Step 4: Interim Relief, Patent Injunction Netherlands

The Dutch kort geding is one of the most effective interim relief mechanisms in Europe for patent injunction Netherlands practice. A patent holder can obtain a preliminary injunction prohibiting further infringement, typically reinforced by penalty payments (dwangsommen) for non-compliance. The threshold is a showing that the patent is likely valid and likely infringed, and that the balance of interests favours relief. Hearings can be convened within one to two weeks in urgent cases.

At the UPC, provisional measures follow similar logic under the UPC Agreement and Rules of Procedure, with the added advantage of potential multi-state effect. The UPC can grant ex parte injunctions in cases of exceptional urgency.

Step 5: Full Trial and Final Remedies

If the dispute is not resolved through interim measures or settlement, the case proceeds to a full trial. In the Netherlands, the District Court of The Hague handles the merits hearing. Remedies at trial include permanent injunctions, damages (calculated based on lost profits, a reasonable royalty or the infringer’s profits), recall and destruction of infringing goods, and publication of the judgment. At the UPC, the same range of remedies is available, with the territorial scope matching the patent coverage across participating member states.

Step 6: Enforcement of Judgment

A Dutch court judgment is enforceable domestically through standard execution mechanisms, bailiff-led seizure, garnishment of bank accounts, and penalty enforcement for injunction violations. For cross-border enforcement within the EU, the Brussels I Regulation (recast) provides for recognition and enforcement of Dutch judgments in other member states. UPC judgments are enforceable in all participating member states under the UPC Agreement.

Practical Red Flags: When Not to Sue

Not every infringement warrants litigation. Consider holding off if:

  • The patent’s validity is uncertain and a revocation counterclaim could destroy the right entirely.
  • The infringer is judgment-proof or located in a jurisdiction where enforcement is impractical.
  • The commercial impact is minimal and litigation costs would exceed any realistic recovery.
  • An EPO opposition is pending that could narrow or revoke the patent before trial.

EPO Opposition and How It Affects Enforcement Choices

An EPO opposition is a centralised administrative proceeding that can result in the revocation, amendment or maintenance of a European patent. Any third party may file an opposition within nine months of the publication of the grant in the European Patent Bulletin. The grounds for opposition are limited: lack of novelty, lack of inventive step, insufficient disclosure, or added subject matter, among others specified in the European Patent Convention (EPC).

The outcome of an EPO opposition affects every national validation of the patent. If the patent is revoked, it is treated as never having had effect in any designated state, including the Netherlands. If it is maintained in amended form, the amended claims become the enforceable scope across all validations. This centralised effect makes opposition proceedings a powerful strategic tool, both for patent owners defending their rights and for alleged infringers seeking to clear the field.

Tactical Timing: Opposition Before or During Litigation

Patent owners enforcing their rights must anticipate that an accused infringer may file or have already filed an EPO opposition. The key question is whether to commence national or UPC litigation before, during, or after opposition proceedings:

  • Litigate first, opposition pending. Dutch courts and the UPC are not bound to stay proceedings because an EPO opposition is pending. In practice, however, Dutch courts may consider the status of opposition proceedings when assessing the likelihood of validity for interim relief. The UPC has discretion to stay proceedings pending an EPO opposition but is not required to do so.
  • Wait for opposition outcome. If validity is genuinely uncertain, waiting for the EPO opposition result can strengthen or clarify the enforcement position, but delays enforcement by months or years.
  • Coordinate both tracks. Experienced practitioners often run both tracks in parallel, using the EPO opposition to strengthen validity arguments while pursuing injunctive relief nationally or at the UPC. Early indications suggest that UPC judges are increasingly comfortable managing cases where EPO oppositions are running concurrently, using case management conference orders and the PMAC framework to coordinate timetables.

When EPO Opposition Is the Preferred Route

EPO opposition is most effective when the primary objective is to invalidate a competitor’s patent across all validated states in a single proceeding, rather than to obtain injunctive relief. It is also the preferred route when the alleged infringer wants to clear validity before investing in a market, or when the patent owner wants to proactively tighten claims to improve enforceability. Costs are moderate compared to multi-jurisdiction litigation, and the EPO’s technical expertise in examining prior art is widely regarded as thorough.

Remedies Available in the Netherlands and at the UPC

Understanding what remedies are available, and on what timeline, is essential for any patent owner asking how to enforce a European patent effectively. The term “enforcement” encompasses far more than simply obtaining a court order: it includes injunctions, financial remedies, and practical measures to stop the flow of infringing goods.

Remedy Typical Threshold Estimated Timeline
Preliminary injunction (kort geding / UPC provisional measures) Likelihood of validity and infringement; balance of interests; urgency Netherlands: days to weeks. UPC: weeks to months.
Descriptive seizure (beschrijvend beslag) Reasonable suspicion of infringement; risk of evidence loss Ex parte; typically granted within days.
Permanent injunction Established infringement and validity after full trial Netherlands: 6–18 months. UPC: 12–24 months.
Damages (lost profits / reasonable royalty / account of profits) Proven infringement; quantified loss Assessed at or after trial; may require separate quantum proceedings.
Recall and destruction of infringing goods Established infringement; proportionality assessment Ordered at trial; enforced post-judgment.
Publication of judgment Court discretion; proportionality Ordered at trial.

In Dutch patent litigation Netherlands practice, damages may be calculated on any of three bases: the patent holder’s lost profits, a reasonable royalty that a willing licensee would have paid, or the infringer’s profits attributable to the infringement. The court selects the method most appropriate to the facts. At the UPC, the same three approaches are available under the UPC Agreement, and the court may order disclosure of financial records to support the damages calculation.

Costs, Timelines and Risks, Realistic Practical Estimates

Patent enforcement costs vary significantly with the complexity of the technology, the number of patents and claims asserted, and the chosen forum. The following ranges provide a general orientation based on practitioner experience; actual figures depend on fact-specific circumstances.

  • Dutch kort geding (preliminary injunction only): Legal and court costs typically range from tens of thousands of euros for a straightforward case to well over €100,000 for complex technology disputes.
  • Dutch full trial (merits): Total costs, including attorney fees, expert fees and court fees, commonly range from approximately €100,000 to €500,000+, depending on case complexity.
  • UPC proceedings (full trial): Court fees are value-based and can be substantial for high-value disputes. Combined with legal representation costs, total spend for a UPC case through trial is generally estimated in the range of €200,000 to €1,000,000+ for medium to large matters.
  • EPO opposition: Official fees plus representative costs typically fall in the range of €20,000 to €80,000, though complex oppositions with oral proceedings can exceed this.

Key risk factors: Counterclaims for revocation (especially at the UPC, where central revocation can destroy the patent across all participating states); cost shifting (the losing party may be ordered to pay the prevailing party’s legal costs in the Netherlands); and the possibility that an adverse EPO opposition decision could undermine pending litigation.

Limitation and Prescription Periods

Under Dutch law, the general limitation period for patent infringement claims is five years from the date the patent holder became aware (or should reasonably have become aware) of the infringement and the identity of the infringer. Damages claims are subject to the same limitation framework. Patent owners should monitor the market actively, because delayed enforcement can result in the loss of the right to claim damages for earlier periods of infringement.

Evidence, Expert Witnesses and Technical Proof

The strength of a patent enforcement case rests on the quality of evidence. Patent owners should systematically assemble the following before commencing proceedings:

  • Claim charts. Element-by-element mapping of each asserted claim to the accused product or process.
  • Product samples. Purchased in the Netherlands to establish territorial infringement.
  • Sales and import data. Customs records, invoices, shipping manifests and online sales evidence.
  • Manufacturing documentation. Process descriptions, technical datasheets and marketing materials from the accused infringer.
  • Expert reports. Technical expert opinions on claim construction and infringement analysis, tailored to the relevant technology field.

In Dutch proceedings, the court may appoint its own technical expert or rely on party-appointed experts. Expert evidence plays a particularly important role in complex technology matters such as chemical, biotech and pharmaceutical patents. Claim construction in the Netherlands follows the Protocol on the Interpretation of Article 69 EPC, balancing the literal wording of claims with the description and drawings to determine a fair scope of protection. At the UPC, the same interpretive approach applies.

For practical guidance on protecting intellectual property across borders, including evidence preservation strategies, patent owners should consider cross-jurisdictional coordination early in the enforcement process.

Enforcement After Judgment: Execution, Cross-Border Recognition and Injunction Compliance

Obtaining a judgment is only part of the process, the patent owner must then ensure compliance. In the Netherlands, a bailiff (deurwaarder) serves the judgment and enforces injunctions. Penalty payments (dwangsommen) imposed for non-compliance with injunctions create a powerful financial incentive for the infringer to comply promptly. If the infringer fails to pay damages, the patent holder may pursue garnishment of bank accounts and seizure of assets.

For cross-border enforcement, Dutch judgments circulate within the EU under the Brussels I Regulation (recast). UPC judgments are enforceable in all participating member states under the UPC Agreement, without the need for separate exequatur proceedings. Patent owners should note that enforcement mechanisms and bailiff procedures vary by member state, and local counsel may be required to execute a judgment outside the Netherlands.

Enforcement Bonds and Recalls

In some cases, particularly where the infringer alleges that the patent is invalid and an appeal is pending, the court may require the enforcing party to post a bond as security against potential damages if the judgment is later overturned. Recall orders, requiring the infringer to retrieve infringing goods from the distribution chain, are enforceable in the same manner as injunctions, typically reinforced by penalty payments. More information on international enforcement mechanisms is available in the international litigation guide.

Practical Enforcement Checklist for Patent Owners

The following checklist condenses the enforcement workflow into actionable items. Patent owners can use this as a starting framework and adapt it to their specific technology, patent portfolio and commercial objectives.

  • Pre-action: Confirm patent validity and NL validation/unitary patent status. Review opt-out position (UPC). Prepare claim charts and assemble evidence.
  • Demand phase: Send a cease-and-desist letter with a 7–14 day response deadline. Document delivery and any response.
  • Interim phase: Apply for beschrijvend beslag if evidence is at risk. File for kort geding or UPC provisional measures if urgency requires.
  • Litigation phase: File main proceedings (NL District Court The Hague or UPC). Coordinate with any pending EPO opposition. Exchange evidence and expert reports. Attend oral hearing.
  • Post-judgment phase: Serve judgment via bailiff. Enforce penalty payments. Pursue damages recovery or account of profits. Monitor compliance.

Patent owners seeking a tailored enforcement plan should consult an experienced European patent litigator, particularly one authorised to represent before the UPC, to ensure that the strategy is optimised for their specific patent rights, markets and commercial goals. For broader context, the international intellectual property guide offers additional perspective on multi-jurisdictional IP strategy.

Conclusion: Taking the Right First Steps to Enforce a Patent

For patent owners in 2026, understanding how do you enforce a patent in the Netherlands means mastering a three-forum landscape, the UPC for pan-EU effect, Dutch national courts for speed and targeted relief, and EPO opposition for centralised validity management. The right strategy depends on the patent type, territorial scope of the infringement, urgency, and appetite for risk. Start by confirming your rights, preparing thorough claim charts and evidence, and selecting the forum that best matches your enforcement objectives. Early engagement with an experienced patent litigator, particularly one authorised to practise before the UPC, can make the difference between a swift, successful enforcement outcome and a protracted, costly dispute.

To find a qualified intellectual property specialist, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marco Molling at V.O. Patents and Trademarks, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Unified Patent Court (UPC), Official Site
  2. European Patent Office, Patent Enforcement in Europe
  3. Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO), Disputes & Advice
  4. WIPO, IP Enforcement Overview
  5. Rechtspraak.nl, Dutch Judiciary

FAQs

How do you enforce a patent?
You enforce a patent by confirming your rights, gathering evidence of infringement, sending a demand letter, choosing the appropriate court (UPC or national), obtaining interim relief such as a preliminary injunction, proceeding to a full trial for permanent remedies, and enforcing the resulting judgment through bailiff-led execution and, if needed, cross-border recognition mechanisms.
A European patent can be invalidated centrally through an EPO opposition filed within nine months of grant publication. After the opposition window closes, validity can be challenged through national nullity proceedings in each country of validation or through a revocation action at the UPC (for non-opted-out patents). Each route has different costs, timelines and territorial effects.
A European patent can be validated in any EPC contracting state designated in the application. To validate a European patent in the Netherlands, the patent holder must file a Dutch translation (where required) and pay the applicable national fees within the prescribed time limit after grant. Alternatively, patent holders can request unitary patent protection covering participating EU member states.
EPO opposition is an administrative procedure allowing any third party to challenge a granted European patent within nine months of the grant publication date. Grounds include lack of novelty, lack of inventive step, and insufficient disclosure. The Opposition Division may revoke, amend or maintain the patent. The outcome affects all national validations of the patent.
Generally, no. The lis pendens rules prevent parallel proceedings between the UPC and a national court of a participating member state concerning the same patent and the same parties. If an action is already pending in one forum, the other must decline jurisdiction or stay proceedings. Strategic choice of forum at the outset is therefore critical.
The general limitation period for patent infringement claims under Dutch law is five years. The period runs from the date the patent holder became aware, or should reasonably have become aware, of the infringement and the identity of the infringer. Timely market monitoring is essential to preserve the right to claim damages.
Costs vary by complexity. A preliminary injunction (kort geding) may cost from tens of thousands of euros to over €100,000. A full trial at the Dutch courts typically ranges from approximately €100,000 to €500,000+. UPC proceedings tend to be more expensive, with estimated total costs for a full trial ranging from €200,000 to over €1,000,000 for complex matters. These are practitioner estimates and vary by case.
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How Do You Enforce a Patent in the Netherlands in 2026, UPC, EPO & National Steps for Owners

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