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Understanding how to apply for a UK patent is essential for any life-sciences founder, R&D director or in-house counsel preparing to protect a novel compound, diagnostic method or biotech platform in 2026. The process is governed by the Patents Act 1977 and administered by the UK Intellectual Property Office (UKIPO), with applicants now required to use the new One IPO digital service following the deprecation of eOLF on 1 April 2026. This guide maps every patent application step, from pre-filing searches and route selection (UKIPO direct, European Patent Office or PCT) through to grant and renewal, with particular attention to life-sciences drafting requirements, the updated 2026 fee schedule and the biological-material deposit obligations that regularly catch biotech applicants off guard.
A UK patent grants its owner the exclusive right to make, use, sell or import an invention in the United Kingdom for up to 20 years from the filing date. Any individual, company or institution, whether based in the UK or abroad, may file an application with the UKIPO. Foreign applicants are not required to appoint a UK-resident agent for filing, although professional representation is strongly recommended for prosecution and examination stages.
Life-sciences applicants face additional complexity. While small molecules, medical devices and diagnostic kits are generally patentable, certain categories of biological subject matter are excluded or subject to special rules under sections 1 and 76A of the Patents Act 1977. Methods of treatment or diagnosis practised on the human body are not patentable as such, and plant and animal varieties are excluded, although genetically modified organisms and isolated biological materials often qualify when correctly claimed.
Applicants seeking UK patent protection can file through three principal routes. The choice depends on geographic scope, budget and prosecution strategy.
| Route | When to choose | Primary advantage |
|---|---|---|
| UKIPO direct (national) | UK-only protection needed; cost-sensitive start-ups; early-stage filings to establish a priority date | Lowest initial cost; fastest route to a UK filing date; straightforward One IPO digital process |
| European Patent Office (EPO / EP route) | Protection needed in multiple European states including the UK; strong patent families | Single prosecution covers up to 39 EPC member states; validated in UK post-grant |
| PCT (international application entering UK national phase) | Global portfolio strategy; need to delay national-phase costs while assessing commercial potential | Up to 30/31 months before entering UK national phase; international search report informs strategy |
For most early-stage biotech companies, filing a UK national application first to establish a priority date and then filing a PCT application within the 12-month priority window is the most cost-effective approach. Larger organisations with established European commercial operations may prefer the EPO vs UK patent route comparison and file directly at the EPO.
To qualify for a UK patent, an invention must satisfy three statutory tests: novelty (the invention must not form part of the state of the art), inventive step (it must not be obvious to a person skilled in the art), and industrial applicability (it must be capable of being made or used in any kind of industry). These requirements are set out in sections 1–4 of the Patents Act 1977. Biological materials, including isolated micro-organisms, gene sequences and recombinant proteins, are patentable provided they meet these tests and the claims are drafted with sufficient enabling disclosure.
Before investing in drafting, applicants should confirm that their invention clears each of the statutory hurdles and that no pre-filing disclosure has compromised novelty.
UKIPO examiners assess novelty against all publicly available information worldwide at the priority date. For life-sciences inventions, this includes published patent applications, scientific journal articles, conference posters, pre-prints and clinical trial registry entries. A single prior disclosure of the claimed compound or sequence, even by the applicant, will destroy novelty unless it falls within the very narrow grace period provisions (which the UK applies restrictively compared with the United States). Inventive step is evaluated using the Pozzoli / Windsurfing structured approach, asking whether the differences between the claimed invention and the closest prior art would have been obvious to the skilled person.
Where an invention involves a micro-organism or other biological material that cannot be sufficiently described in writing to enable a skilled person to reproduce it, the applicant must deposit a sample with a recognised International Depositary Authority (IDA) under the Budapest Treaty. The deposit must be made no later than the filing date, and the accession number must be included in the specification within the prescribed period. Failure to deposit is one of the most common reasons life-sciences patent applications fail the enablement requirement.
The right to apply for a UK patent belongs to the inventor or, where the invention was made in the course of employment, the employer (section 7, Patents Act 1977). Universities, spin-outs and multi-party collaborations should resolve entitlement before filing. Signed assignment agreements or declarations of inventorship must be in place, and any funding-body IP obligations (e.g. Innovate UK, Wellcome Trust) should be reviewed to ensure the applicant entity has clear title.
A practical pre-filing checklist for life-sciences applicants includes:
The following numbered procedure covers the full UK patent application process. Where the EPO or PCT route diverges, parallel notes are included.
Before drafting begins, conduct a thorough IP audit. Run a professional patent search UK across Espacenet, the UKIPO journal, PCT databases and relevant scientific literature. Document all experimental evidence in witnessed lab notebooks. Secure confidentiality with NDAs for any external discussions. Confirm inventorship and execute assignments. This step is typically handled by the inventor or in-house counsel working with a patent attorney and takes 1–4 weeks depending on the breadth of the search.
Choose between a UK national filing (UKIPO direct), an EP application at the EPO, or a PCT international application. If an earlier application exists in any jurisdiction, the priority claim must be made within 12 months of the earliest filing date (section 5, Patents Act 1977). For most life-sciences start-ups, filing a UK national application first and then a PCT application before the 12-month priority deadline is the standard strategy, preserving options while managing costs.
The specification comprises the description, claims, abstract and any drawings. Life-sciences drafting requires particular care. The description must enable a skilled person to reproduce the invention across its full scope, for biological inventions this means including sequence listings (in WIPO ST.26 format), deposit accession numbers, and sufficient experimental data to support each claim. Claims should be layered: independent claims of appropriate scope supported by dependent claims that capture specific embodiments (e.g. particular sequences, dosage ranges or formulations). Overbroad claims that lack experimental support are a frequent cause of objection at examination. Industry observers expect UKIPO examiners to apply increasingly rigorous enablement standards to AI-generated biological sequence claims.
Since 1 April 2026, UK patent applications must be filed online through the One IPO digital service (the former eOLF system is no longer accepted). Applicants need a GOV.UK One Login account to access the service. Complete the application form fields, upload the specification, nominate inventors and applicants, and pay the filing fee electronically. The filing date is established on the date the UKIPO receives the application with a description of the invention, this is the applicant’s priority date for the UK filing. Applicants using the EPO or PCT route file through the respective office’s online filing systems (EPO Online Filing or WIPO ePCT) and enter the UK national phase later.
A search request can be filed at the same time as the initial application or separately thereafter. The UKIPO search fee, increased to £200 from 1 April 2026, must accompany the request. The UKIPO typically issues the search report within approximately 6 months of the request. Applicants seeking faster prosecution may request the Green Channel (accelerated examination available where the invention has an environmental benefit) or use the Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) where a corresponding application has been allowed in a participating office.
The application is published automatically 18 months from the priority date. No action is required from the applicant. Publication makes the application publicly available and, in certain circumstances, confers provisional protection. Third parties may file observations on patentability after publication. Life-sciences applicants should monitor published competitor applications in relevant therapeutic areas during this window.
The applicant must request substantive examination by the statutory deadline set by the UKIPO. Once requested, a patent examiner reviews the application against the statutory requirements and issues one or more examination reports identifying any objections. Response deadlines are typically 2–4 months per round. For biotech applications, common objections relate to insufficiency (enablement), added matter, and clarity of sequence-based claims. The prosecution dialogue continues until the examiner is satisfied or the applicant appeals.
Once all objections are resolved, the UKIPO issues a notice of grant and the patent is published. If the applicant filed via the EPO, the granted European patent must be validated in the UK within the prescribed period, this includes filing any required translations and paying the validation fee. Regardless of route, patent holders must pay annual renewal fees to the UKIPO to maintain the patent in force, with the first substantive renewal payable from the fifth year.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration / timing |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-filing search and confidentiality | Applicant / patent attorney | 1–4 weeks |
| File initial application (establish priority date) | Applicant / attorney via One IPO | Priority date established on filing |
| Request UKIPO search | Applicant / attorney | Search report issued within approximately 6 months of request |
| Publication | UKIPO (automatic) | 18 months from priority date |
| Request substantive examination | Applicant / attorney | Examiner report typically within 6–24 months of request |
| Respond to examination reports | Applicant / attorney | 2–4 months per response round |
| Grant | UKIPO / applicant | 2–4 years total from filing to grant (varies by route and acceleration) |
| Validation (EP route only) | Applicant / local representative | Short prescribed window after EPO grant |
| Renewal payments | Applicant / attorney | Annual from year 5 onward |
Assembling the correct documents before filing prevents delays and avoids formal deficiency notices from the UKIPO. The table below consolidates every document required for a UKIPO filing, with additional notes for life-sciences applicants.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Patent specification (description, claims, abstract, drawings) | Upload as PDF or DOC via One IPO. Claims must be numbered sequentially. The description must enable the invention across its full claimed scope. |
| Sequence listings | Required for biotech inventions involving nucleotide or amino acid sequences. Must be in WIPO ST.26 XML format. |
| Biological material deposit details | Budapest Treaty deposit accession number and name of the International Depositary Authority. Include in the description by the prescribed deadline. |
| Priority document | Certified copy of any earlier application from which priority is claimed. Must relate to an application filed within the preceding 12 months. |
| Patent application form | Completed via One IPO digital service fields (GOV.UK One Login required). eOLF forms no longer accepted after 1 April 2026. |
| Power of attorney / agent appointment | Required if filing through a patent attorney. Electronic appointment records are supported in One IPO. |
| Assignment / inventor declaration | Signed assignment from each inventor to the applicant entity. Essential where employees, co-founders or collaborators are involved. |
| Search request and fee payment receipt | UKIPO search request confirmation. Retain the payment receipt for records. |
| Translations (EP route) | If validating a European patent in the UK, check whether post-grant translation obligations apply under the applicable EPC rules. |
Life-sciences applicants should prepare a dedicated filing dossier that combines the above documents with supporting experimental data, inventor assignment chains and any Budapest Treaty deposit certificates. A UK patent application checklist and documents template is a useful resource to track completeness before submission.
Missing a statutory deadline in the patent application process can result in irrevocable loss of rights. The table below consolidates every critical deadline an applicant must track.
| Deadline / event | Action required | Consequence if missed |
|---|---|---|
| Priority claim window, 12 months from earliest filing | File UK, PCT or EP application claiming priority within 12 months | Loss of priority date; intervening disclosures may destroy novelty |
| Publication, 18 months from priority | No action required; monitor for third-party observations | Application becomes publicly available |
| Request UKIPO search | File search request and pay search fee (can be at filing or shortly after) | Delays to examination and prosecution timeline |
| Request substantive examination | File examination request by the statutory deadline set by UKIPO | Application deemed withdrawn if examination not requested in time |
| Response to examination reports | File substantive response within 2–4 months (period set in each report) | Failure to respond leads to refusal or deemed withdrawal |
| One IPO transition, 1 April 2026 | Create GOV.UK One Login account; file via One IPO digital service | eOLF no longer accepted; applicants without a One IPO account cannot file online |
| Annual renewal, from year 5 | Pay renewal fee to UKIPO by the prescribed date each year | Patent lapses if renewal not paid (late payment possible with surcharge within limited window) |
The overall UK patent timeline from filing to grant is typically 2–4 years. Accelerated examination through the Green Channel or Patent Prosecution Highway can reduce this period, in some cases to under 12 months where grounds for acceleration are accepted.
The UKIPO introduced a revised fee schedule on 1 April 2026, increasing filing, search, examination and renewal fees. The table below sets out the principal official fees for a UK national filing, alongside indicative professional costs.
| Item | Amount (from 1 April 2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| UKIPO filing fee | £75–£120 | Varies by filing method and number of claims exceeding 25 |
| UKIPO search fee | £200 | Increased from £150 (pre-April 2026); surcharge of £20 per claim above 25 |
| UKIPO examination fee | £100–£130 | Payable when requesting substantive examination |
| Grant / publication fees | Variable | Check current UKIPO fee schedule for formal grant-stage fees |
| Renewal fee (year 5 example) | £90 | Increased from £70; year 20 renewal increased from £610 to £810 |
| Professional drafting and prosecution | £3,000–£15,000+ | Life-sciences specifications with complex claims and sequence data are at the higher end |
| EP route, additional costs (validation) | £600–£3,000+ | Translation, national validation fees and local agent costs per designated state |
For a straightforward UK national filing, the combined official fees (filing, search and examination) total approximately £370–£450 before professional costs. Applicants should also budget for responses to examination reports, which typically add £1,000–£3,000 in attorney fees per round for life-sciences matters.
Patent prosecution costs are generally deductible as a business expense for corporation tax purposes. R&D tax credits may apply to the underlying research expenditure but do not typically cover patent attorney fees. Applicants should consult their tax adviser on the treatment of IP protection costs in their specific circumstances.
The UKIPO One IPO 2026 transformation is the most significant operational change to UK patent filing in over a decade. The One IPO programme replaces multiple legacy filing systems with a single integrated digital service accessed through a GOV.UK One Login account.
Key operational changes that applicants must prepare for include:
Early indications suggest that the One IPO service has reduced average filing processing times for simple applications, although practitioners across the United Kingdom report that complex biotech filings with large sequence listing uploads may require additional time for system processing.
Where a statutory deadline is missed, the UKIPO offers limited reinstatement options in certain circumstances (e.g. unintentional failure to pay renewal fees), but these are discretionary and should never be relied upon as a filing strategy. Seek urgent professional advice immediately upon discovering a missed deadline.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martin MacLean at Mathys & Squire LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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