Understanding how to file a patent in Israel 2026 has become more urgent than ever, as updated ILPO fee schedules took effect on 1 March 2026 and ongoing wartime office-closure measures continue to affect critical deadline calculations. Israel remains one of the world’s most innovation-dense economies, home to thousands of deep-tech startups, a thriving medtech corridor and a mature patent enforcement regime, making national-phase entry a high-priority decision for foreign filers and domestic inventors alike. This guide consolidates every procedural step, deadline, fee and contingency plan into a single actionable resource, designed for startup founders, in-house IP managers and foreign patent counsel preparing PCT national-phase entry or direct filing in Israel during 2026.
Israel punches well above its weight in global innovation. The country consistently ranks among the top nations for R&D spending as a share of GDP, and its patent system provides strong enforcement tools, including injunctive relief, damages and border measures, that make Israeli patents commercially valuable. For international companies in medtech, cybersecurity, agritech, water technology, software and energy, securing patent protection in Israel is a strategic necessity rather than a formality.
The patent filing process in Israel is administered by the Israel Patent Office (ILPO), a division of the Ministry of Justice. Applications may be filed directly with the ILPO or, more commonly for foreign applicants, by entering the national phase of an existing PCT (Patent Cooperation Treaty) international application. Both routes lead to the same substantive examination, but timing, cost and procedural requirements differ significantly. For a broader perspective on cross-border IP strategy, see our international intellectual property guide.
Under the Israel Patents Law, 5727-1967, an invention is patentable if it satisfies three core criteria:
Methods of medical treatment are generally excluded from patentability, although pharmaceutical compositions and medical devices are patentable. Software-related inventions may be patentable where they produce a technical effect beyond ordinary computer operation, a nuance that experienced Israel patent counsel can navigate. Understanding why IPR protection matters is essential before committing prosecution resources.
For the vast majority of foreign applicants, the PCT route is the gateway to Israeli patent protection. The single most important compliance decision is whether, and when, to enter the PCT national phase in Israel. Get this wrong and the application is irretrievably lost.
Israel imposes a strict 30-month deadline from the earliest priority date for national-phase entry. Unlike some jurisdictions that allow 31 months, Israel adheres to the 30-month limit set out in PCT Article 22. The WIPO PCT Applicant’s Guide for Israel, valid as from 1 March 2026, confirms this deadline. There is no automatic grace period beyond the 30th month, and late entry is permitted only through a formal restoration-of-rights request, a remedy that is discretionary and narrowly applied.
The decision tree is straightforward. If the invention has commercial relevance in Israel, whether for market entry, licensing, defensive positioning or investor due diligence, national-phase entry should be calendared early and filed well ahead of the 30-month mark. If the commercial case is uncertain, industry observers expect many filers to use the full 30 months of PCT deferral to reduce cost before committing, but the deadline itself is non-negotiable.
The 30-month clock starts from the earliest priority date, not the PCT international filing date. Three examples illustrate the arithmetic:
To validly enter the national phase in Israel, the following documents and actions are required by the 30-month deadline:
This chronological checklist covers the patent filing process in Israel from initial date verification through to receipt of the ILPO file number. Treat it as a project timeline and assign responsible owners for each step.
Pull the priority date directly from the PCT international application (Form PCT/IB/301 or the published international application front page). Count exactly 30 months forward. If the resulting date falls on a Saturday, Friday (Shabbat), Israeli public holiday or a day the ILPO is closed due to wartime measures, the deadline extends to the next business day the office is open under PCT Rule 80.5. Calendar the deadline with at least a 60-day advance warning to allow time for translations and local counsel engagement.
Foreign applicants must appoint a patent attorney registered with the ILPO. The attorney will file on the applicant’s behalf, manage correspondence with the examiner and handle all procedural requirements. Engage counsel early, ideally at least three months before the 30-month deadline, to avoid last-minute translation bottlenecks. To explore options, visit our IP lawyer directory.
Assemble the complete filing package:
Filing may be completed through the ILPO’s online patent portal or in person at the ILPO offices. Electronic filing is strongly recommended for speed and confirmation tracking.
Pay the national-phase filing fee and any additional-claim surcharges at the time of entry. The ILPO accepts payment by bank transfer and, for online filings, by credit card. Retain the payment receipt, the ILPO will not assign a file number until fees are cleared. Refer to the 2026 Israel patent office fees table in Section 4 for exact amounts.
Once the ILPO processes the entry, the applicant receives a national application number and filing receipt. From this point the application enters the ILPO examination queue. The first substantive office action typically issues within 12 to 24 months of national-phase entry, depending on the technology field and examiner workload.
If the 30-month deadline is fewer than 60 days away and no local counsel has been engaged, take these steps immediately:
The ILPO revised its official fee schedule effective 1 March 2026. The table below summarises the key fees relevant to PCT national-phase entry and early prosecution. All amounts are in Israeli New Shekels (ILS) as published in the ILPO’s 2026 fee schedule.
| Fee type | 2026 official amount (ILS) | Notes / when due |
|---|---|---|
| National-phase entry (filing fee) | 1,538 | Due at time of national-phase entry; reduced fee may apply for individual inventors, confirm with ILPO |
| Additional-claim surcharge (per claim above 20) | 168 per claim | Due at filing; trim claims to 20 or fewer to avoid surcharges |
| Request for examination | 1,538 | Due upon request for examination (can be deferred but must be filed to advance prosecution) |
| Grant / acceptance fee | 1,538 | Due upon acceptance of the application for grant |
| Annual renewal fees (years 3–5) | 920–1,200 per year (graduated) | First renewal payable after grant; consult the full ILPO renewal schedule for exact year-by-year amounts |
| Restoration of rights (late national-phase entry) | 1,538 | Filed with supporting declaration and evidence; discretionary, no guarantee of acceptance |
Fees as of 1 March 2026. ILS-to-USD approximate conversion: 1 ILS ≈ 0.28 USD as of April 2026. Exchange rates fluctuate, verify at time of payment.
These estimates are indicative. Actual costs depend on claim complexity, translation length, the number of office actions and whether opposition proceedings arise. For cross-border budgeting strategies, see our guide on how to protect your intellectual property across borders.
Israel’s ongoing security situation has led to intermittent ILPO office closures that directly affect the patent filing process in Israel. Applicants approaching a national-phase entry deadline or any prosecution deadline must monitor ILPO wartime notices closely.
The primary safeguard is PCT Rule 80.5: where a time limit for performing an act before the ILPO expires on a day the office is not open to the public, the time limit is automatically extended to the next day on which the office is open. This rule applies to the 30-month national-phase deadline as well as to subsequent prosecution deadlines. The ILPO PCT department publishes closure notices on its official pages, and practitioners should verify these before assuming a deadline has shifted.
In addition to Rule 80.5, the ILPO has issued special wartime notices granting blanket deadline extensions during periods of prolonged closure. The scope and duration of these extensions vary by notice, some have applied only to deadlines falling within specific date windows, while others have extended all pending deadlines by a fixed number of days. The likely practical effect is that applicants with deadlines during closure periods receive automatic relief, but the burden of confirming the applicable extension lies with the applicant and their counsel.
If the 30-month national-phase deadline has been missed, applicants may file a request for restoration of rights under the Israel Patents Law. The request must demonstrate that the failure to meet the deadline occurred despite all due care or was unintentional, depending on the applicable standard. The request is accompanied by the restoration fee (ILS 1,538 under the 2026 schedule), the full national-phase entry package and a supporting declaration explaining the circumstances of the delay. Industry observers expect the ILPO to apply a relatively strict standard; restoration is not guaranteed.
After national-phase entry, the application enters the ILPO examination queue. Understanding the prosecution lifecycle helps applicants budget time and resources for the months and years ahead.
The first substantive office action typically issues 12 to 24 months after national-phase entry. Responses must be filed within the time limit specified in the office action, usually three to four months, with extensions available upon request and payment of additional fees. Office actions commonly address claim clarity, novelty objections (based on prior art identified during international search or supplementary Israeli search) and inventive-step arguments.
Once all objections are resolved, the ILPO issues a notice of acceptance. The applicant pays the grant fee, and the patent is published in the Patents Gazette. From the date of publication, any third party may file a patent opposition in Israel within three months. Oppositions are heard by the ILPO Registrar and may challenge the patent on any ground of invalidity, including lack of novelty, obviousness or insufficient disclosure.
A standard Israeli patent has a term of 20 years from the filing date (or, for PCT applications, from the international filing date). For pharmaceutical and medical-device patents, a patent term extension of up to five years may be available to compensate for regulatory delays in obtaining marketing approval. The extension must be applied for within 90 days of receiving the first marketing authorisation in Israel, and the combined patent term plus extension cannot exceed a total effective protection period set by law.
Patent renewal fees in Israel are payable annually starting from the year of grant. No renewal fees are due while the application is still pending, a significant cash-flow advantage for applicants facing lengthy prosecution.
| Action | Deadline / timing | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| PCT national-phase entry (Israel) | 30 months from earliest priority date | Strict; restoration possible in limited circumstances, file as early as feasible |
| First office action | 12–24 months after national-phase entry | Varies by technology field and examiner workload |
| Response to office action | 3–4 months (extendable) | Extensions available upon request and fee payment |
| Opposition to grant | 3 months from grant publication | Any third party may oppose, monitor competitors’ grants proactively |
| First renewal fee | Payable after grant (no renewals during pendency) | Renewal fees escalate annually, budget accordingly |
Cost control and timing are the two levers that matter most when navigating how to file a patent in Israel 2026. The following tactics can materially reduce spend and risk:
Knowing how to file a patent in Israel 2026 means mastering one critical deadline, 30 months from the earliest priority date, and assembling the right documents, fees and local counsel well in advance. The updated ILPO fee schedule effective 1 March 2026 and ongoing wartime deadline measures add layers of complexity that reward early preparation. Whether entering the national phase of a PCT application or filing directly, the steps outlined in this guide provide a clear, actionable roadmap. For further reading on building a global IP portfolio, explore our international intellectual property resource centre.
Last reviewed: 23 April 2026. This article provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified Israel patent attorney for guidance specific to your situation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jeremy Ben David at JMB Davis Ben David, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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