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Intellectual Property Denmark 2026: DKPTO Fee Increases, Patent Renewal Deadlines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The landscape of intellectual property Denmark has shifted materially in 2026, driven by two developments every rights-holder must address: the Danish Patent and Trademark Office (DKPTO) fee increases that took effect on 1 January 2026, and the WIPO PCT procedural amendments that became operative on 26 March 2026. Together, these changes alter the cost calculus for patent and trademark renewals, reshape filing timelines for international applications designating Denmark, and demand immediate budget and calendar adjustments from in-house counsel, IP managers and founders alike. This guide delivers the practical detail, fee tables, worked cost-modelling examples, a 90-day action checklist and an FAQ, that short firm alerts typically omit.

Executive Summary: What Danish Rights-Holders Must Do in 2026

Before diving into the detail, here are the three headline changes and corresponding actions that every portfolio owner should act on this quarter.

  • DKPTO fee increase (effective 1 January 2026). Patent filing, renewal and opposition fees, as well as trademark filing and renewal fees, have increased. Budgets set in late 2025 may already be understated. Confirm exact shortfalls against the updated DKPTO fee schedule.
  • WIPO PCT procedural amendments (effective 26 March 2026). Changes to time limits, formality requirements and agent-authorisation rules under the PCT Applicant Guide affect any international filing that enters the national phase in Denmark after that date. Review all pending PCT applications now.
  • Emerging EU/Denmark AI-rights discussions (January–March 2026). The European Parliament and Commission have intensified debate on AI-generated works and personality rights. While no binding legislation has been adopted, industry observers expect draft proposals to surface by late 2026, making early monitoring essential.

Three-point action checklist:

  1. Re-forecast your 2026 IP budget to reflect updated DKPTO fees (see fee table below).
  2. Audit every PCT application with a national-phase deadline falling on or after 26 March 2026.
  3. Add a standing agenda item for AI/personality-rights regulatory tracking at your next IP committee meeting.

DKPTO Fee Increases: Overview, Effective Dates and Scope

The DKPTO confirmed in late 2025 that a broad fee adjustment would take effect on 1 January 2026, covering patents, trademarks, utility models and design registrations. The increase applies to filing fees, examination fees, opposition fees and, most significantly for portfolio owners, annual renewal fees. All fees are payable in Danish kroner (DKK) directly to the DKPTO or through an authorised representative.

The table below summarises representative fee movements across the most frequently used categories. Rights-holders should consult the official DKPTO fee schedule for the full list, as certain niche categories (e.g., supplementary protection certificates) carry separate adjustments.

Selected DKPTO Fee Changes, Before and After 1 January 2026 (DKK)
Fee category Pre-2026 fee (DKK) 2026 fee (DKK) Change
Patent application (filing) 3,000 3,300 +10 %
Patent examination request 4,200 4,600 +~10 %
Patent renewal, year 4 1,500 1,700 +13 %
Patent renewal, year 10 3,800 4,200 +11 %
Patent renewal, year 20 6,400 7,100 +11 %
Trademark application (1 class, electronic) 2,000 2,200 +10 %
Trademark renewal (10-year, 1 class) 2,500 2,750 +10 %
Opposition fee 2,500 2,750 +10 %

How Fees Are Calculated

Patent renewal fees in Denmark follow an escalating annual scale: the fee increases with each year of protection, starting from year 3 (the first renewal date after grant) and rising steeply through years 15–20. Each renewal payment covers one calendar year and must be paid before the anniversary of the filing date. Additional class fees apply for trademarks covering more than one Nice classification class.

Transitional Rules and Payment Windows

The DKPTO has confirmed that the new fee levels apply to any payment made on or after 1 January 2026, regardless of when the underlying right was filed. Payments already received before that date are honoured at the former rate. A six-month grace period remains available for late patent renewals, subject to the applicable surcharge. For trademark renewals, the DKPTO accepts early payment up to six months before the renewal date, which means rights-holders whose renewals fall in Q1 2026 may have already locked in the lower rate if they paid in late 2025.

Patent Renewal Deadlines and Cost Impact (Intellectual Property Denmark 2026)

Understanding patent renewal fees Denmark 2026 is essential for any entity managing a Danish patent portfolio. Renewal fees are payable annually from the third year after the filing date. Failure to pay, even inadvertently, can result in lapse of the patent, with reinstatement possible only within the six-month grace period and at additional cost.

Indicative Patent Renewal Fee Timeline, Denmark 2026 (DKK)
Renewal year 2026 fee (DKK) Cumulative cost years 3–10 (DKK) Cumulative cost years 3–20 (DKK)
Year 3 1,200 ~20,800 ~72,500
Year 4 1,700
Year 5 2,000
Year 6 2,300
Year 7 2,600
Year 8 2,900
Year 9 3,400
Year 10 4,200
Years 11–15 4,600–5,800 per year
Years 16–20 6,200–7,100 per year

Cost-Modelling Example: Three SME Scenarios

The worked examples below illustrate how the 2026 DKPTO fee increase affects a hypothetical Danish SME holding a five-patent family with varying commercial horizons. Figures are rounded to the nearest hundred DKK.

Patent Maintenance Strategy Denmark, SME Scenario Comparison (DKK)
Scenario Portfolio action Annual renewal cost (approx.) 5-year projected saving vs. maintain-all
A, Maintain all 5 patents (years 6–10) No changes ~15,500 Baseline
B, Abandon 2 low-value patents at year 7 Reduce to 3 core patents ~9,300 (from year 7) ~24,000
C, Abandon all; rely on trade-secret protection Let all 5 lapse at year 6 0 (from year 7) ~77,500 (but loss of exclusivity)

Scenario B is the path most early-stage SMEs find optimal: retaining patents that directly protect revenue-generating products while trimming continuations or divisional patents whose commercial case has weakened. The likely practical effect of the 2026 fee increases is to accelerate these portfolio-pruning decisions by roughly one to two years compared with pre-2026 cost levels.

Trademark Renewals and Special Rules (Denmark)

Trademark renewal Denmark operates on a 10-year cycle. A Danish trademark registration is valid for 10 years from the filing date and may be renewed indefinitely for successive 10-year periods upon payment of the renewal fee. The 2026 fee for a single-class electronic renewal is DKK 2,750.

  • Proof of use. Denmark does not require proof of use at the renewal stage, but a registered mark that has not been genuinely used for five consecutive years is vulnerable to cancellation on grounds of non-use under the Danish Trademark Act (Varemærkeloven).
  • Late renewal. The DKPTO permits late trademark renewal within six months after the expiry date, subject to a surcharge. After the six-month window, the registration lapses and a fresh application is required.
  • No exemptions for 2026 deadline holders. There is no transitional exemption for marks whose renewal falls in 2026. The new fee rate applies to any renewal payment processed on or after 1 January 2026.

Practical Checklist: Trademark Renewals Due in the Next 6–12 Months

  1. Run a portfolio report filtering for all Danish trademark registrations with renewal dates between now and April 2027.
  2. Confirm genuine use for each mark, collect invoices, marketing materials and sales data covering the last five years.
  3. Calculate the updated renewal cost per mark (base fee + additional class fees) using the 2026 DKPTO fee schedule.
  4. Identify any marks that may be better protected through an EU trade mark (EUTM) filing instead of a standalone Danish registration, and evaluate cost efficiency.
  5. Set calendar reminders at six months, three months and one month before each renewal date.

PCT / WIPO Procedural Updates (Effective 26 March 2026) and Impact on Denmark Applicants

The WIPO PCT procedural amendments that took effect on 26 March 2026 introduce several changes relevant to applicants who file international applications designating Denmark. While the core 30-month national-phase deadline remains unchanged, the updated PCT Applicant Guide modifies formality requirements, agent-authorisation procedures and certain time-limit calculations.

  • Agent-authorisation simplification. The revised rules streamline how a power of attorney is filed for PCT applications, reducing the documentary burden at the international phase. Industry observers expect this to shorten average processing times for Danish national-phase entries by several weeks.
  • Updated formality checks. Receiving Offices, including the DKPTO acting as an RO, now apply revised minimum requirements for drawings and sequence listings, aligning more closely with WIPO Standard ST.26.
  • Time-limit recalculation. Certain procedural time limits are now computed differently where mail delivery is involved. Applicants relying on postal filings should verify that their deadlines have been correctly recalculated.

If You Have Pending International Filings: Recommended Steps

  1. Identify every PCT application in your portfolio with a national-phase entry deadline falling on or after 26 March 2026.
  2. Confirm with your Danish patent agent that powers of attorney comply with the updated requirements.
  3. Verify that all drawings and sequence listings meet the revised formality standards before entering the Danish national phase.
  4. Recalculate any postal-filing deadlines using the new WIPO time-limit rules, and update your docketing system accordingly.
  5. If you are a biotech or pharma applicant, confirm ST.26-compliant sequence listings are prepared, non-compliance may trigger a formality objection at the DKPTO.

Patent Maintenance Strategy: Decision Rules for 2026

The combined effect of the DKPTO fee increase and the broader economic environment makes a structured patent maintenance strategy Denmark essential for 2026. The following three-step decision framework helps IP teams determine whether to maintain, license or abandon individual patents.

  1. Commercial value review. Map each patent to the product or revenue stream it protects. If the patent does not underpin active sales, a licensing programme or a competitive-exclusion strategy, it is a candidate for abandonment or sale.
  2. Cost and prosecution horizon. Calculate total remaining renewal costs through the expected useful life of the patent. Compare this figure against the discounted revenue the patent is expected to protect. Where cost exceeds value, abandon early.
  3. Enforcement posture. A patent you would never enforce is a patent you should not pay to maintain. Evaluate your willingness and financial capacity to litigate infringement in Denmark or the Unified Patent Court.
Recommended Patent Maintenance Actions by Entity Type
Entity type Typical patent horizon (years) Recommended action under fee increases
Early-stage SME 3–7 Prioritise core families; abandon lower-value continuations; consolidate via divisional strategy
Mid-size commercial R&D 5–12 Maintain core markets; evaluate cost-sharing or licensing to offset renewals
Large corporates 10–20+ Maintain defensive portfolios; consider targeted enforcement budgets and periodic portfolio audits

When to Consider SPCs or Design Protection

For pharmaceutical and agrochemical companies, supplementary protection certificates (SPCs) can extend patent protection by up to five years beyond patent expiry. In 2026, with rising renewal fees, the marginal cost of maintaining an SPC versus the revenue it protects should be recalculated. Design protection, particularly registered Community designs at the EUIPO, may offer a cost-effective complement or alternative to patent protection for functional-aesthetic products.

Emerging Issues: AI Personality Rights and Other EU/Denmark Developments

Between January and March 2026, the European Parliament and European Commission intensified discussions around AI-generated works and personality rights in the digital context. While no binding directive has yet emerged, early indications suggest that a legislative proposal addressing the IP status of AI-generated outputs, and the related question of whether natural-person personality rights extend to AI-assisted creations, could surface by Q4 2026.

For Danish rights-holders, the practical consequence is two-fold. First, businesses that rely on AI tools to generate creative content, designs or technical solutions should begin documenting the human contribution to each output, as future legislation may condition IP protection on demonstrable human authorship. Second, companies using AI-generated likenesses, voices or personal data in marketing should monitor EU developments on personality rights to avoid retrospective compliance gaps. Industry observers expect Denmark, traditionally proactive in implementing EU digital-market rules, to be among the first member states to transpose any forthcoming directive.

Practical Checklist and 90-Day Action Plan for Rights-Holders

Use the following checklist to ensure your organisation addresses every 2026 compliance requirement within the next 90 days.

  • Week 1–2: Pull a full portfolio report of all Danish patents, trademarks and design registrations with renewal dates in 2026–2027. Cross-reference against the updated DKPTO fee schedule.
  • Week 3: Re-forecast your IP budget to reflect the DKPTO fee increase. Present the delta to finance and executive leadership.
  • Week 4: Audit all pending PCT applications for national-phase deadlines falling on or after 26 March 2026. Confirm agent authorisations and formality compliance under the revised rules.
  • Week 5–6: Apply the three-step patent maintenance decision framework (above) to every patent in the portfolio. Flag candidates for abandonment, licensing or sale.
  • Week 7–8: Review trademark proof-of-use documentation for every registered mark. Prepare renewal files for marks due in the next 12 months.
  • Week 9–10: Brief your IP committee on the EU AI/personality-rights developments and assign a monitoring owner.
  • Week 11–12: Set docketing system alerts for all upcoming DKPTO deadlines at six-month, three-month and one-month intervals. Archive this checklist with a follow-up review date in 90 days.

For a deeper exploration of intellectual property in Denmark, or to find a Danish IP lawyer through our directory, visit the linked practice-area pages.

Conclusion

The 2026 changes to intellectual property Denmark rules are incremental in scope but material in budget impact, particularly for SMEs and mid-size companies managing multi-patent portfolios. The DKPTO fee increases effective 1 January 2026 raise the cost of every filing, renewal and opposition, while the WIPO PCT amendments operative from 26 March 2026 require procedural adjustments for international applicants. Rights-holders who act now, re-forecasting budgets, pruning low-value patents, confirming PCT compliance and preparing trademark renewals, will avoid the cost surprises and deadline risks that catch less prepared competitors. Those who also begin tracking the EU’s AI and personality-rights discussions will be positioned to respond quickly when legislation crystallises.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Danish Patent and Trademark Office (DKPTO), Official Site
  2. DKPTO, About IP Rights (PDF Brochure)
  3. WIPO, PCT and Official Notices
  4. Retsinformation, Danish Legislation Portal
  5. NJORD Law, Intellectual Property in Denmark
  6. European Parliament, Legislative Developments

FAQs

Q1: Will DKPTO increase patent and trademark fees in 2026, and when do changes take effect?
Yes. The DKPTO confirmed a broad fee adjustment effective 1 January 2026, covering patent filing, examination and renewal fees as well as trademark application, renewal and opposition fees. The increases range from approximately 10–13 % depending on the fee category.
Apply a three-step decision rule: review commercial value, calculate remaining renewal costs against projected revenue, and assess your enforcement posture. Patents that do not protect active revenue or that you would not enforce are candidates for abandonment. See the cost-modelling section above for worked SME examples.
Yes, trademark renewal fees increased to DKK 2,750 for a single-class electronic renewal. There are no transitional exemptions, any renewal payment processed on or after 1 January 2026 is subject to the new rate. Late renewal remains possible within six months of expiry, with a surcharge.
The updates simplify agent-authorisation requirements, revise formality checks (including ST.26 sequence-listing alignment) and change certain time-limit calculations for postal filings. Applicants should verify compliance for any PCT application with a national-phase deadline on or after 26 March 2026.
Start with the DKPTO’s published fee schedule and map each patent’s remaining term against the annual escalating fee scale. Multiply by the number of patents, then compare cumulative costs to projected revenue per patent. The three-scenario SME example in this article provides a replicable template.
The primary source is the DKPTO’s official website at dkpto.org, which publishes fee schedules, procedural guidelines and regulatory notices. For underlying legislation, consult Retsinformation.dk, Denmark’s official legal-information portal.
Yes. At a minimum, update your docketing system to reflect revised fees and new PCT formality requirements. Additionally, add a monitoring brief for EU AI/personality-rights legislative developments, as these could affect IP strategies for AI-generated outputs in Denmark within the next 12–18 months.

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Intellectual Property Denmark 2026: DKPTO Fee Increases, Patent Renewal Deadlines

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