Our Expert in Australia
No results available
IP Australia’s March–April 2026 consultation on licensing and enforcement reform represents the most significant proposed shift in patent-holder and licensee standing in over a decade, and intellectual property lawyers Australia-wide are already advising clients to act. The consultation proposes explicit statutory standing for exclusive licensees and, for the first time, a defined framework for “partial exclusive” licensees to initiate or join infringement proceedings. These changes intersect directly with patent enforcement strategy, pharmaceutical patent term extension (PTE) decisions, and the commercial architecture of licence agreements across every sector, but especially life sciences.
For in-house counsel, patent managers and R&D legal leads, the practical question is immediate: which licences need amending, which enforcement protocols require updating, and how should PTE filing strategy adapt before any final legislation takes effect?
This article delivers a practitioner-level analysis of the key proposals, their likely legal effect, and a tactical playbook, including sample clauses, comparison tables and compliance checklists, to help rightsholders and licensees prepare now.
Five tactical takeaways for immediate action:
The IP Australia consultation 2026, released for public comment in March 2026 with submissions closing in April 2026, addresses long-standing uncertainty around who, beyond the registered patent owner, may initiate or participate in infringement proceedings under the Patents Act 1990 (Cth). The consultation paper identifies three primary reform objectives: clarifying the standing of exclusive licensees, creating a new statutory category for partial exclusive licensees, and streamlining procedural rules that govern multi-party enforcement actions.
Industry observers expect the consultation outcomes to feed into a formal exposure draft later in 2026. The key proposals are:
Under the current Patents Act 1990, the standing of licensees in infringement proceedings has been determined largely by judicial interpretation, particularly the distinction between “exclusive” and “sole” licences and the extent to which a licensee holds rights equivalent to an assignment. The consultation proposes moving these definitions into the statute itself, creating two tiers. The first tier, the exclusive licensee, would encompass a licensee holding all rights under the patent to the exclusion of the patentee. The second tier, the partial exclusive licensee, would apply where exclusivity is limited by field, territory, or type of exploitation, such as manufacturing versus commercialisation rights.
Early indications from practitioner commentary suggest that the proposed definitions will require licence agreements to be far more precise in their exclusivity language than has historically been the case.
Under the current law, sections 120 and 121 of the Patents Act 1990 provide that an “exclusive licensee” has standing to bring infringement proceedings, but the statutory text does not exhaustively define when a licence qualifies as exclusive. Courts have assessed the totality of the licence terms, looking at whether the licensee enjoys rights “to the exclusion of all other persons, including the patentee.” In practice, this has generated satellite litigation over standing, particularly where the patentee retains manufacturing rights, audit rights, or the ability to grant sub-licences.
The 2026 consultation proposes to resolve this ambiguity by embedding a clearer statutory test. If enacted, an exclusive licensee whose licence satisfies the statutory definition would have standing to seek the full suite of remedies: injunctive relief, damages or an account of profits, and delivery-up orders. The likely practical effect will be that standing challenges become narrower and more predictable, but only if licence agreements are drafted to match the statutory language precisely.
The partial exclusive licensee category is entirely new. The consultation recognises a commercial reality that Australian IP lawyers have navigated for years: many licence agreements grant exclusivity within a defined field (for example, oncology therapeutics) or a defined territory (Australia and New Zealand) while the patentee retains rights outside that scope. Under current law, such licensees have uncertain standing, often requiring the patentee to be joined as a party or to assign enforcement rights contractually.
The proposed reform would grant these partial exclusives standing to enforce the patent, but only within the scope of their exclusivity. This creates both opportunity and risk. On the opportunity side, a pharmaceutical licensee with exclusive Australian commercialisation rights could enforce against a generic competitor directly. On the risk side, a partial exclusive licensee who over-reaches, asserting standing beyond their defined field, could face a standing challenge, costs exposure and strategic delay.
Expanded licensee standing has a mirror effect: it also increases the pool of parties against whom a potential infringer might seek declaratory relief of non-infringement or invalidity. Industry observers expect that generic pharmaceutical companies, in particular, will need to reassess their clearance and freedom-to-operate strategies to account for the possibility that they face enforcement not just from the patentee but also from one or more exclusive or partial exclusive licensees.
| Current position (pre-2026) | Proposed 2026 rule (IP Australia consultation) | Practical consequence for practitioners |
|---|---|---|
| Exclusive licensees have limited, sometimes unclear standing, courts assess actual rights and control on a case-by-case basis. | Consultation proposes explicit statutory standing for “exclusive” licensees; also recognises “partial exclusive” categories with tailored standing. | Easier for qualifying licensees to initiate enforcement, licensors must revisit control clauses and litigation allocation mechanisms. |
| Partial or field-limited exclusives often lack clear enforcement rights and depend on patentee cooperation or contractual assignment. | Proposal creates a clearer definition and potential standing for partial exclusives within the scope of their exclusivity. | Licence drafting must define fields and rights with precision; joint enforcement mechanisms become commercially decisive. |
| Enforcement control defaults uncertain, disputes arise over who prosecutes the action, cost allocation and indemnity exposure. | Procedural proposals to clarify who leads enforcement and evidence-sharing protocols between patentee and licensee. | Faster enforcement pathway or streamlined dispute resolution, but increased negotiation pressure on enforcement-control clauses at the licence-drafting stage. |
Even before any reforms are enacted, patent enforcement in Australia will increasingly require patentees to plan for multi-party coordination. The consultation signals a clear policy preference for transparency and cooperation between patentees and licensees during enforcement. Patentees should take the following preparatory steps now:
Licensees who wish to rely on the proposed standing framework will need to demonstrate, at the threshold stage of proceedings, that their licence satisfies the statutory definition. The likely practical effect will be that courts require licensees to produce evidence early, potentially at an interlocutory stage, showing:
Where both patentee and licensee have standing, coordination becomes critical. The consultation’s procedural streamlining proposals aim to address this, but licence agreements should not rely on statutory defaults alone. Australian IP lawyers are already recommending that enforcement-control clauses address at minimum: who has first right to enforce, notice and consultation periods before proceedings are issued, cost-sharing and indemnity arrangements, settlement-approval rights, and information barriers (especially where multiple licensees in different fields hold competing commercial interests).
A practical “who files when” framework for patent enforcement Australia disputes might follow this sequence:
The proposed enforcement and standing reforms do not directly amend Part 3 of Chapter 6 of the Patents Act 1990, which governs patent term extension in Australia. However, the intersection between enforcement standing and PTE strategy is substantial, particularly for pharmaceutical patent strategy where the commercial value of the extended term depends on the ability to enforce during that period.
Under the current PTE framework, a pharmaceutical patent may be extended by up to five years beyond the standard 20-year term where regulatory approval for the pharmaceutical substance was delayed. The extension compensates for the time between the patent filing date and the date of first inclusion on the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG). During the extended term, the patent’s claims are narrowed to the pharmaceutical substance per se as disclosed in the relevant regulatory approval.
The practical interaction with the 2026 enforcement proposals is threefold:
| Event | Timeframe / deadline | Strategic consideration |
|---|---|---|
| Patent filing date | Year 0 | Claim drafting should anticipate both standard-term and PTE enforcement scenarios. |
| First inclusion on ARTG | Variable (typically Year 8–12) | Triggers PTE application window; confirm licence exclusivity covers the approved substance. |
| PTE application deadline | Within 6 months of ARTG inclusion | Critical filing deadline, missed deadlines are not recoverable. Confirm licensee cooperation obligations. |
| PTE grant (if approved) | Up to 5 years beyond standard 20-year term | Claims narrow to pharmaceutical substance per se; ensure licence scope matches narrowed claims. |
| Enforcement during PTE period | Years 20–25 | Under proposed reforms, exclusive or partial exclusive licensees may enforce narrowed claims directly. Align enforcement-control clauses with PTE claim scope. |
For pharmaceutical patent strategy, the recommendation is clear: PTE prosecution and licence drafting should be treated as a single integrated exercise, not two separate workstreams. Claim amendments, PTE applications and licence exclusivity definitions should all be reviewed as a coordinated package whenever IP Australia’s reforms progress.
If the proposed reforms are enacted, the statutory definition of a partial exclusive licensee will require the licence to specify, with precision, the scope of exclusivity. Licence drafting in Australia will need to move beyond general language such as “exclusive rights in the field of oncology” and instead define the field, territory and permitted modes of exploitation in granular terms. The following sample clause illustrates the level of specificity that is likely to be required:
Sample clause 1, Partial exclusive grant (non-binding example):
“The Licensor hereby grants to the Licensee the exclusive right, to the exclusion of all other persons including the Licensor, to manufacture, use, sell and import the Licensed Product in the Field [defined as: pharmaceutical compositions comprising Compound X for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer] in the Territory [defined as: Australia and New Zealand] for the Term.”
Sample clause 2, Enforcement control (non-binding example):
“The Licensee shall have the first right, but not the obligation, to enforce the Licensed Patent against any infringement falling within the scope of the Partial Exclusive Licence. The Licensee shall notify the Licensor in writing within 14 days of becoming aware of any such infringement and shall consult with the Licensor before commencing proceedings.”
Sample clause 3, Indemnity and cooperation (non-binding example):
“The enforcing party shall bear its own costs of enforcement and shall indemnify the non-enforcing party against any adverse costs order made against the non-enforcing party in connection with such proceedings. Each party shall cooperate in good faith, including by providing access to documents, witnesses and technical information reasonably required for the conduct of enforcement proceedings.”
Sample clause 4, PTE cooperation (non-binding example):
“The Licensee shall provide all reasonable assistance to the Licensor in connection with any application for patent term extension under Part 3 of Chapter 6 of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth), including by providing regulatory data and ARTG inclusion documentation within 30 days of any request by the Licensor.”
These sample clauses are illustrative only and should be adapted to each transaction’s commercial context. All sample language should be reviewed by qualified patent counsel before incorporation into any binding agreement.
IP Australia’s 2026 consultation marks a pivotal moment for patent owners, licensees and intellectual property lawyers Australia-wide. The proposed reforms to exclusive and partial exclusive licensee standing, procedural enforcement rules and their downstream effects on pharmaceutical patent strategy and PTE demand immediate, coordinated action. Licence agreements negotiated before these reforms were contemplated are unlikely to meet the precision the new framework will require. The window to audit, amend and prepare is now, before any exposure draft narrows the options available to rightsholders and their commercial partners. Organisations that act early will secure stronger enforcement positions and clearer commercial certainty under whatever final legislation emerges.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Neil Ireland at Phillips Ormonde Fitzpatrick, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 22 minutes ago
posted 51 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
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.
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 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.
Send welcome message