[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to secure employee inventions in Ireland

How to Secure Employee and Contractor Inventions in Ireland: Step-by-step for Startups

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to secure employee inventions in Ireland is now a baseline operational requirement for any startup or tech team building products on Irish soil. Under Irish law, patent rights belong to the inventor by default, meaning an employer that fails to put the right contracts, disclosure workflows and assignment mechanisms in place risks losing ownership of the very IP it paid to create. With the rise of remote development teams, contractor-heavy engineering models and AI-assisted code generation, the margin for ambiguity has widened considerably heading into 2026.

This guide sets out the complete, step-by-step process, from invention disclosure through assignment, patent filing, and compensation-risk mitigation, so founders, CTOs and in-house counsel can build an investor-ready IP capture workflow they can implement immediately.

Overview of the Process and Who It Applies To

In Ireland, patent ownership Ireland rules follow a “creator-owns” default. The inventor, whether an employee, contractor or consultant, holds the initial right to a patentable invention unless a valid contractual assignment transfers that right to the employer or commissioning party. This principle is rooted in common law and reinforced by the Patents Act 1964. Where a dispute arises over whether an invention belongs to the employer or the employee, Section 53 of the Patents Act 1964 provides the statutory mechanism for resolution. Separately, Section 40 entitles an employee to seek compensation where a patented invention confers an “outstanding benefit” on the employer.

The process described in this guide applies to every person who creates potentially protectable IP during or in connection with their engagement with your company. That includes:

  • Employees, full-time, part-time, or fixed-term, whether on-site or remote.
  • Contractors and consultants, including freelance developers, design agencies, and offshore teams.
  • Interns and work-placement participants, where they contribute to patentable work or produce protectable code.
  • Advisors with code or data access, technical advisors who contribute to product development or architecture decisions.

In 2026, particular attention is needed for AI-assisted outputs. Where a developer uses generative AI tools to write or refine code, the ownership of the resulting output is not automatically clear. Startups must document assignments covering these scenarios now, before investment diligence exposes the gap.

Eligibility and Prerequisites: How to Secure Employee Inventions in Ireland Before You Start

Before the invention disclosure process can function, an employer must have the contractual and organisational infrastructure in place. Without it, asserting ownership after the fact becomes significantly harder, and more expensive.

Employee vs Contractor: Classification Checklist

The distinction between employee and contractor determines which contractual framework applies and, critically, which default ownership rules govern. Use the following indicators to classify correctly:

  • Control. Does the company direct how, when and where the work is performed? Greater control points toward employment.
  • Integration. Is the individual integrated into the company’s team structure, using company email, attending standups, and reporting to a manager?
  • Remuneration. Is the individual paid a regular salary with PAYE deductions, or invoicing for deliverables?
  • Tools and resources. Does the individual use company-provided hardware, cloud accounts, repositories, or development environments?
  • Exclusivity. Is the individual prohibited from working for other clients during the engagement?

Getting this classification wrong creates a dual risk: misclassification for employment-law purposes and a weak chain of title for IP assignment purposes.

Existing Patents and Prior Art: Onboarding Questionnaires

Every new hire or contractor should complete a background-IP questionnaire at onboarding. This document captures any pre-existing inventions, patents, or IP the individual brings to the engagement. Without it, distinguishing company-owned inventions from the individual’s prior work becomes a matter of disputed evidence rather than documented fact. The questionnaire should list prior patent applications, open-source contributions, and any ongoing obligations to former employers regarding IP.

The employer’s prerequisites before any invention arises include: written employment contracts with express IP assignment clauses; bespoke contractor agreements with IP assignment and deliverables provisions; a published invention disclosure policy; and a designated internal IP contact (typically the CTO, general counsel, or an appointed IP manager).

Step-by-Step Procedure for Securing Employee and Contractor Inventions

The following numbered steps form the operational workflow for the contractor inventions process and employee inventions assignment Ireland startups should adopt. Each step identifies the actor, the deliverable, and the decision point that triggers the next action.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1, Complete Invention Disclosure Form (IDF) Inventor (employee/contractor) → IP manager Within 7 days of discovery (recommended)
2, Internal classification (ownership triage) IP manager + Engineering lead + Legal 3–10 business days
3, Obtain executed IP assignment / contractor assignment Legal + inventor/contractor 1–4 weeks (depends on negotiation)
4, Patentability decision & instruct patent counsel Legal + CTO + Patent attorney 7–21 days
5, File provisional / national patent application (IPOI) Patent attorney / Legal Filing day (provisional); substantive drafting 2–6 weeks
6, Employee compensation review under s.40 Legal + CFO Ongoing; triggers post-grant; statutory process may take months to years

Step 1: Complete the Invention Disclosure Form on Discovery

The invention disclosure process begins the moment an employee or contractor identifies something that may be novel and inventive. The inventor completes an Invention Disclosure Form (IDF) and submits it to the company’s designated IP manager or legal counsel within seven days of discovery, or on reasonable notice where the inventor needs time to document the technical detail.

The IDF must include: a plain-language description of the invention; the date of conception; a list of all contributors; references to relevant source code, commits, design documents, or development logs; and date-stamped evidence such as Git commit hashes or timestamped notebooks. The inventor should sign and date the form.

Decision point: Does the disclosure satisfy a prima facie patentability threshold (novelty, inventive step, industrial application)? If yes, proceed to Step 2. If no, record the disclosure, monitor for future developments, and retain the IDF in company records.

Step 2: Classify the Invention and Assess Ownership

A triage panel, typically the IP manager, engineering lead, and legal counsel, reviews the IDF and classifies the invention into one of three categories:

  1. Employee-in-scope. The invention was created in the course of the employee’s normal duties, using company resources, during working hours, and within the scope of their assigned responsibilities. The employer’s claim to ownership is strongest here.
  2. Contractor deliverable. The invention arose from a contractor’s engagement. Ownership depends entirely on the terms of the contractor agreement, there is no statutory “work-for-hire” default in Ireland for patents.
  3. Outside activity. The invention was created on the individual’s own time, without company resources, and outside the scope of their duties. The employer’s claim is weakest or non-existent.

The classification decision must be documented and logged. Where the outcome is ambiguous, for example, a developer used a personal laptop but company cloud infrastructure, the employer should preserve its rights by obtaining a provisional assignment agreement while the assessment continues. If the inventor contests the classification, escalation under Section 53 of the Patents Act 1964 provides the statutory dispute-resolution mechanism.

Step 3: Secure Ownership by Assignment or Confirmation

Once the employer asserts ownership, the next step is to obtain a signed IP Assignment Agreement or Confirmation of Assignment. For employees, this may be a confirmation that the assignment clause in their employment contract applies to the specific invention. For contractors, a bespoke assignment is almost always required.

Key elements the IP assignment agreement should contain:

  • Scope. All IP created during or related to the engagement and by use of company resources, including modifications, derivative works, and associated documentation.
  • Moral rights waiver. A waiver of the inventor’s moral rights to the extent permitted by law.
  • Confidentiality. Obligations not to disclose the invention before patent filing.
  • Representations regarding prior IP. Confirmation that the invention does not infringe third-party rights and that all background IP has been declared.
  • Right to file patents. Express authorisation for the company to file patent applications in all jurisdictions.
  • Source code delivery. For software inventions, an obligation to deliver all source code, documentation, and build instructions.

For remote or AI-assisted work, the agreement should include an explicit clause assigning rights in outputs generated by AI tools used in the scope of the engagement. Industry observers expect this to become standard practice in 2026 as generative-AI adoption accelerates across Irish tech teams.

Sample short employee assignment clause: “The Employee hereby assigns to the Company all right, title and interest in and to any Invention conceived, developed or reduced to practice by the Employee, alone or jointly, during the term of employment and within the scope of the Employee’s duties or using the Company’s resources, together with all associated intellectual property rights worldwide.”

Sample contractor assignment clause: “The Contractor assigns to the Client, with full title guarantee, all intellectual property rights in the Deliverables and any Inventions created in the performance of this Agreement, including the right to file patent applications in any jurisdiction. The Contractor warrants that the Deliverables do not infringe any third-party rights and that all Background IP has been disclosed in Schedule [X].”

Step 4: Make the Patent Filing and Protection Decision

With ownership secured, legal counsel and the CTO assess whether the invention warrants patent protection. This involves a patentability assessment (novelty, inventive step, industrial application) and a commercial assessment (market value, competitive advantage, licensing potential, and cost of filing versus secrecy).

If the decision is to proceed, instruct a patent attorney to prepare and file a provisional application with the Intellectual Property Office of Ireland (IPOI). The application must include a specification, claims, any necessary drawings, and an abstract, as set out in IPOI guidance. Critical rule: keep the invention confidential until the filing date. Any public disclosure, including a product demo, a conference talk, or even a social media post, before filing may destroy novelty and invalidate the patent.

Deliverables at this step: a written decision memo, budget approval, and filing instructions to the patent attorney.

Step 5: Complete Post-Assignment Operational Steps

After assignment and filing, operational follow-through ensures the IP capture is durable:

  • Code-commit traceability. Tag relevant repositories, commits and CI/CD artefacts to the invention record.
  • HR records. Update the employee or contractor file to reflect the assignment and any compensation awarded.
  • Inventor acknowledgement. Maintain a signed acknowledgement that the assignment has been executed and the inventor understands their ongoing obligations.
  • Compensation checklist. If an inventor reward scheme is in place, process any applicable bonus or recognition payment and record it for Section 40 mitigation purposes.

Required Documents and Information

The following table lists every document needed to complete the employee inventions assignment Ireland process, from disclosure through to patent filing. Maintaining these records in a centralised, version-controlled system is essential for due diligence and any future disputes.

Document Notes
Invention Disclosure Form (IDF) Completed and signed by inventor. Includes description, date, code references, Git commits, design docs. Retain original signed PDF.
Employment contract with IP assignment clause Issued by Employer (HR/Legal). Must expressly assign future IP or require assignment on request.
Contractor/Consultant agreement with IP assignment Issued by Employer (Legal). Include pre-existing IP schedule, representations/warranties, deliverable acceptance criteria.
Confidentiality agreement / NDA Issued by Employer (Legal). Required pre-engagement for contractors and before any third-party disclosure.
Source code delivery & acceptance certificate Engineering/DevOps + Contractor sign-off. Lists repos, commits, hashes and builds delivered.
Patent filing documents Specification, claims, drawings and abstract. Prepared by patent attorney; filed at IPOI. Preserve all drafts and filing receipt.
Evidence of use of company resources Engineering logs, cloud billing records, calendar invites, assigned Jira/task tickets, to support “in-course-of-employment” determinations.
Assignment deed / IP transfer document Legal-prepared executed deed (signed and witnessed where appropriate). Retain electronic and signed originals.
Compensation policy & award records HR/CFO records documenting any inventor reward or bonus paid, relevant to s.40 mitigation strategy.

For a patent application filed with the IPOI, the minimum required documents are: a request to grant a patent, a specification describing the invention, one or more claims defining the scope of protection sought, any drawings referred to in the specification or claims, and an abstract. These must comply with the requirements set out in the IPOI’s published application guidance.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Securing Employee Inventions in Ireland

Timing is critical. Missing a deadline can weaken an employer’s ownership claim, destroy patent novelty, or expose the company to avoidable compensation liability. The table below combines operational best-practice deadlines with statutory and procedural milestones.

Deadline / Milestone Action Required Typical Timing
Invention disclosure submission Inventor completes IDF and submits to IP manager Within 7 days of discovery (recommended SOP)
Employer internal claim (practical window) Employer announces ownership claim and requests assignment Resolve within 1–4 months from disclosure; escalate immediately if contested
Pre-filing confidentiality Maintain strict confidentiality, no public disclosure of the invention Continuous until patent filing date
Provisional patent filing File provisional application with IPOI or instruct patent attorney Within days to weeks of protection decision; must precede any public disclosure
Priority / PCT / EP deadline File international applications claiming priority from provisional 12 months from first (provisional) filing date
Post-grant compensation claim (s.40) Employee may seek compensation if patent confers “outstanding benefit” Post-grant; timescales vary depending on negotiation or litigation

Ireland does not prescribe a rigid statutory deadline within which an employer must claim ownership of an employee’s invention, the position is governed by contract and common law rather than a codified employer-claim window of the kind found in some continental European jurisdictions. The practical effect is that employers should act promptly. Best practice, informed by comparative European approaches, is to resolve the ownership question within one to four months of disclosure. Delay weakens the employer’s position and creates risk of a contested claim under Section 53 of the Patents Act 1964.

What happens if the employer misses the practical claim window? The employer does not automatically forfeit ownership, but delay materially weakens its negotiating position and evidential basis. If the inventor has already published, demonstrated or filed independently, the employer may face a contested chain-of-title dispute. Immediate actions in this scenario: preserve all development logs and communications, freeze any public disclosure, engage legal counsel, and consider whether a negotiated assignment with compensation is the most pragmatic resolution.

Costs, Fees, and Tax Considerations

The cost of securing employee and contractor inventions divides into regulatory fees, professional fees, and internal implementation costs. The table below provides indicative ranges; actual costs vary by invention complexity, number of jurisdictions, and negotiation scope.

Item Typical Amount / Range Notes
IPOI patent filing fee €20 – €300 Varies by filing route; check current IPOI fee schedule. Attorney fees are additional.
Patent attorney drafting + filing (Ireland) €2,000 – €8,000 Covers provisional and national drafting. Complex inventions and extensive claim sets cost more.
PCT / EP / international filing €5,000 – €20,000+ per region Depends on number of jurisdictions, translation costs, and examination fees.
Legal cost for assignment / contract drafting €500 – €2,500 Standard employee clauses at the lower end; bespoke contractor negotiations at the higher end.
HR / admin process implementation €500 – €3,000 Internal templates, SOPs, staff training on disclosure process.
Potential compensation exposure (s.40) Highly variable Case-by-case; can be modest to significant if “outstanding benefit” is established. Budget contingency recommended.

Compensation for employee inventions under Section 40: Where an employee’s patented invention confers an “outstanding benefit” on the employer, the employee may seek compensation under Section 40 of the Patents Act 1964. The claim is typically brought after the patent is granted and is assessed on the facts, including the size of the benefit, the employee’s terms of remuneration, and any ex gratia payments already made. Implementing an inventor reward scheme (bonuses, recognition payments, or equity participation) is a widely recommended mitigation strategy. Any compensation paid to an employee for an invention is generally treated as employment income for tax purposes; consult a tax adviser regarding payroll treatment and the company’s potential eligibility for R&D tax credits.

What Changes in 2026: Practical Risks for Startups

No new primary legislation amending the Patents Act 1964 provisions on employee inventions has been enacted for 2026. However, the practical landscape has shifted in ways that make how to secure employee inventions in Ireland a more complex operational challenge than it was even two years ago.

AI-Assisted Development

Developers increasingly use generative AI tools, code assistants, large language models, and automated testing frameworks, as part of their daily workflow. The ownership of outputs produced with or by these tools is not explicitly addressed in Irish patent law. Early indications suggest that employers will need explicit contractual clauses assigning rights in AI prompts, model outputs, and any derivative works. Contractors and employees should also be required to represent that they have the right to use the AI tools in question and that the outputs do not infringe third-party IP.

Remote and Distributed Teams

Remote work arrangements, now the norm for many Irish tech teams, blur the line between company time/resources and personal activity. The likely practical effect is increased reliance on code provenance evidence: commit logs, CI/CD pipeline records, cloud-usage data, and task-assignment histories. Startups should enforce repository access policies and artefact-retention rules to support future “in-course-of-employment” determinations.

Investor and M&A Readiness

Industry observers expect that, in 2026, institutional investors and acquirers will treat a documented IP capture workflow as table stakes during due diligence. The absence of signed IDFs, executed assignments, and a clear chain of title creates valuation friction, delays closing, and, in the worst case, repricing or deal collapse.

2026 action checklist:

  • Add an AI-output assignment clause to all employment and contractor agreements.
  • Require pre-engagement NDAs for every contractor with access to proprietary code or data.
  • Implement and enforce a code-commit and artefact-retention policy across all repositories.
  • Audit existing agreements for gaps in IP assignment coverage, particularly for remote workers and contractors engaged before your current templates were adopted.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Relying on verbal promises. An oral assurance that “the company owns everything” is unenforceable. Obtain a written, signed assignment before accepting any code, feature, or deliverable.
  • Incomplete contractor clauses. Generic service agreements often omit IP assignment entirely, or use vague language that does not transfer patent rights. Use a tailored contractor IP assignment clause that includes deliverables schedules, warranties on pre-existing IP, and a moral rights waiver.
  • Public disclosure before filing. A single tweet, demo, or conference slide can destroy novelty. Educate all team members that no public disclosure is permitted until after the patent application is filed with the IPOI.
  • Poor evidence trail. If a dispute arises, the employer must prove the invention was created in scope. Enforce repository policies: require meaningful commit messages, tag invention-related branches, and retain cloud-usage and calendar data.
  • Not budgeting for patent counsel. Many startups defer patent protection because of cost, only to discover a competitor has filed first. Allocate a provisional budget at the start of each financial year and define criteria for when to protect.
  • Ignoring Section 40 exposure. Failing to account for potential compensation claims can create an unpleasant surprise post-grant. Implement an inventor reward scheme and document all payments.

Remediation when an employee disputes ownership: Immediately preserve all development logs, communications, and access records. Freeze any planned public disclosure. Engage legal counsel to assess the strength of the employer’s claim under the employment contract and Section 53 of the Patents Act 1964. Consider negotiating a voluntary assignment with fair compensation as the fastest resolution, and escalate to formal dispute proceedings only if negotiation fails. To hire an Irish IT lawyer with experience in invention disputes, use the Ireland lawyer directory.

Conclusion

Knowing how to secure employee inventions in Ireland is no longer optional for startups building technology products, it is a prerequisite for fundraising, M&A readiness, and competitive defence. The process is straightforward when broken into its component steps: require prompt disclosure, classify ownership, execute written assignments, decide on patent protection, and maintain operational traceability. The statutory framework, principally Sections 40 and 53 of the Patents Act 1964, provides both the mechanisms for dispute resolution and the basis for compensation claims that every employer should plan around.

By implementing the workflow, documents, and contractual clauses set out in this guide, founders and in-house counsel can build a durable IP capture system that withstands due diligence scrutiny and protects the innovations their teams create.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dean Cunningham at Cunningham Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Intellectual Property Office of Ireland (IPOI), How to Apply for a Patent
  2. IPOI, Patents for Inventions (Guidance PDF)
  3. Irish Statute Book, Patents Act 1964, Section 53
  4. Irish Statute Book, Patents Act 1964, Section 40
  5. Gov.ie, Intellectual Property Rights
  6. A&L Goodbody, Employee Inventions: Compensation Analysis
  7. Lexology, Employee Inventions Commentary
  8. Beauchamps, Employer IP Protections
  9. Cruickshank Intellectual Property, Who Owns Your Idea?
  10. Practical Law / Thomson Reuters, Employee Inventions Guide
  11. Schoenherr, Statutory Secrecy Obligations (Comparative)
  12. ABG IP, Internal Invention Disclosure Practices

FAQs

Who owns inventions created by employees in Ireland and how is ownership determined?
Ownership is primarily governed by the employment contract and common law. Where the contract includes an express IP assignment clause and the invention was created in the course of the employee’s normal duties, the employer typically owns the invention. In the absence of a clear contractual assignment, the inventor retains ownership. Disputes may be resolved under Section 53 of the Patents Act 1964. The factual assessment considers scope of duties, use of company resources, and whether the work was performed during working hours.
The employer should require completion of an Invention Disclosure Form within seven days of discovery, classify the invention (employee-in-scope, contractor deliverable, or outside activity), obtain an executed IP assignment agreement if the employer asserts ownership, conduct a patentability assessment, and instruct a patent attorney to file with the IPOI if protection is warranted. See the step-by-step procedure above for full detail on each stage.
Start with three foundational documents: an employment contract containing an express IP assignment clause, a bespoke contractor agreement with IP assignment and deliverables provisions, and a standard Invention Disclosure Form. Publish an internal invention disclosure policy, designate an IP manager, and train engineering teams on the disclosure workflow. Use the required documents checklist in this guide as a starting template.
Under Section 40 of the Patents Act 1964, an employee may seek compensation where a patented invention confers an “outstanding benefit” on the employer. The claim is typically brought after the patent is granted. The assessment considers the scale of the benefit, the employee’s existing remuneration, and any payments already made. The process may involve negotiation, mediation, or formal proceedings. Employers can mitigate exposure by implementing inventor reward schemes and documenting all compensation payments.
Yes. Unlike employees, contractors have no implied obligation to assign IP in the absence of a contractual requirement. If a contractor refuses to assign, the startup should not accept the deliverables. The preferred approach is to require assignment up-front in the contractor agreement before any work begins. If assignment is refused mid-engagement, options include negotiating a licence, negotiating an assignment with additional compensation, or terminating the engagement and preserving evidence for potential legal action.
Not automatically. Irish patent law does not explicitly address ownership of AI-generated outputs. The safest approach is to include explicit clauses in employment and contractor agreements assigning all rights in AI prompts, model outputs, and derivative works created within the scope of the engagement. Contractors and employees should also warrant that they hold the necessary rights to use the AI tools involved. See the 2026 changes section above for a practical checklist.
Ireland does not impose a rigid statutory deadline for employer claims, but delay weakens the employer’s position. If the inventor has published or filed independently, the employer faces a contested chain-of-title dispute. Immediate steps: preserve logs, freeze disclosures, engage counsel, and explore negotiated assignment. Prompt action within one to four months of disclosure is the recommended best practice.
Engage a patent lawyer at the patentability decision stage (Step 4 in the process above), or sooner if the invention has high commercial value, a public disclosure is imminent, or protection across multiple jurisdictions is anticipated. Early engagement reduces the risk of filing errors and ensures claims are drafted to maximise the scope of protection. To find a qualified practitioner, consult the Ireland lawyer directory.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to Secure Employee and Contractor Inventions in Ireland: Step-by-step for Startups

Send welcome message

Custom Message