The Bolar exemption is a statutory patent-law defence that permits the use of a patented invention, without the patent holder’s consent, for the specific purpose of generating data required to obtain a marketing authorisation (MA) for a generic or biosimilar medicine. In Germany, this exemption is codified in Section 11 of the Patent Act (Patentgesetz, PatG), and the 2026 EU Pharma Package has brought renewed attention to its scope, particularly for third-party actors in the pharmaceutical supply chain.
For in-house counsel at generics companies, contract manufacturers (CMOs), contract research organisations (CROs) and active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) suppliers, understanding the Bolar provisions in Germany is no longer optional, it is a front-line compliance obligation that directly affects operational freedom, contracting strategy and litigation exposure.
At its core, the Bolar exemption answers a practical problem: generic and biosimilar applicants need to conduct studies and manufacture test batches before a patent or supplementary protection certificate (SPC) expires so that they can file for regulatory approval and launch promptly once exclusivity ends. Without a Bolar-type defence, these preparatory activities would constitute patent infringement.
The exemption takes its name from the landmark 1984 US case Roche Products v. Bolar Pharmaceutical and its subsequent codification in the Hatch-Waxman Act. In the European Union, the legal basis sits in Article 10(6) of Directive 2001/83/EC, which was transposed into German law through Section 11 PatG. The 2026 EU Pharma Package, formally adopted to modernise the pharmaceutical regulatory framework, has clarified and, in important respects, harmonised Bolar provisions across Member States, particularly regarding third-party involvement in MA-related activities.
Industry observers expect the practical effect of the EU Pharma Package Bolar changes to be a more uniform interpretation of which supply-chain participants can rely on the exemption, though the German courts will ultimately shape the boundaries of that interpretation under Section 11 PatG.
Section 11 PatG sets out the exceptions to the effects of a patent. The provision most relevant to pharmaceutical manufacturers and their contractors is Section 11(2) PatG, which stipulates that the effects of a patent shall not extend to studies and trials, and the practical requirements thereof, that are necessary for obtaining a marketing authorisation for medicinal products.
The statutory text is deliberately broad in its reference to “studies and trials, and the practical requirements thereof” (Studien und Versuche und die hierfür erforderlichen praktischen Anforderungen). German courts, and the Düsseldorf Regional Court (Landgericht Düsseldorf) in particular, as Germany’s most active patent litigation forum, have interpreted this language to encompass a range of preparatory activities: bioequivalence studies, stability testing, process validation and the manufacture of clinical trial batches, provided they serve the sole purpose of regulatory approval.
The critical link to EU law is Article 10(6) of Directive 2001/83/EC, which provides the harmonised baseline for the Bolar exemption across all Member States. The 2026 EU Pharma Package builds on this by seeking to ensure that the exemption is interpreted consistently, including in situations where multiple parties (such as CMOs, CROs or API suppliers) participate in the MA-related supply chain on behalf of the applicant. For Germany, this means that the established interpretation under Section 11 PatG must now be read in light of the EU-level clarifications, a development that is particularly significant for the German pharmaceutical market, where generics account for a substantial share of prescription volumes.
A key nuance in the German legal landscape is the distinction between the Bolar exemption and the broader research exception in Germany (also found in Section 11 PatG). The research exception covers purely experimental or scientific activities aimed at investigating the patented subject matter itself. The Bolar provision, by contrast, is narrower in purpose, it protects activities undertaken specifically “for” obtaining regulatory approval, but broader in the type of work it shields (manufacturing, import of samples, clinical trials). Practitioners must not conflate the two, as relying on the wrong exception can defeat a defence entirely.
The most contested question in German Bolar practice is whether the exemption extends beyond the MA applicant to third parties acting on its behalf. The 2026 EU Pharma Package has brought this issue into sharper focus, but significant ambiguity remains under domestic case law.
The generic or biosimilar company that is itself applying for, or intends to apply for, a marketing authorisation is the undisputed primary beneficiary of the Bolar exemption. This entity may conduct bioanalytical studies, regulatory testing, process development, stability studies and clinical trials using the patented compound without incurring patent infringement liability, provided the activities are genuinely and exclusively linked to the MA application. Documentary proof of the MA-related purpose (project timelines, regulatory submissions, correspondence with authorities) is essential.
Whether a contract manufacturer, producing test batches, validation lots or clinical trial material on behalf of the MA applicant, can independently invoke the Bolar exemption is an area of active legal debate in Germany. Some German courts have indicated that the exemption is personal to the entity with a direct interest in obtaining the MA, which would leave CMOs exposed to infringement claims even when their manufacturing activity is functionally identical to work the applicant could perform in-house. Other jurisdictions within the EU, and academic commentary in GRUR International, have adopted a more functional reading: if the activity is carried out “for” the purpose of regulatory approval, the identity of the actor performing it should not matter.
The EU Pharma Package Bolar clarifications are expected to support this functional interpretation, though German courts have not yet fully aligned their case law with the updated EU position.
The position of third-party API suppliers is even more uncertain. Scholarly analysis, notably from the Max-Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition, has explored whether the supply of a patented API to a generic applicant or its CMO falls within the scope of the Bolar exemption when the API is destined exclusively for MA-related manufacture. The prevailing academic view is that functional coverage is arguable but far from settled, and recent commentary has noted that some national courts have rejected Bolar protection for subcontractors operating at arm’s length from the MA applicant. API suppliers face the highest residual risk in the supply chain and should implement strict contractual and documentary controls.
| Entity Type | Typical Activity | Bolar Coverage in Germany (2026 View) |
|---|---|---|
| Generic MA applicant (company seeking MA) | Bioanalytical studies, regulatory testing to support MAA | Generally covered, core beneficiary of Bolar; allowed to use patented material for regulatory approval processes, subject to SPC considerations and documentary proof. |
| Contract Manufacturer (CMO) making finished product on order | Manufacturing, stability, validation runs for MA dossier | Conditional/ambiguous, some German courts limit coverage to entities with their own interest in the MA; EU and comparative case law is split; contractual purpose limitations and documentation are essential. |
| Third-party API supplier (not the MA applicant) | Manufacture/supply of API to generic applicant or CMO | Mixed, some case law treats subcontractors as outside scope; academic analyses argue functional coverage is possible if activity is “for approval”; risk remains high; strict contractual purpose language is required. |
| CRO conducting clinical trials / bioequivalence testing | Running trials, generating clinical or analytical data for MAA | Generally covered when activity is clearly for regulatory approval, but the CRO must avoid any commercial exploitation outside the MAA context and retain MA-related documentation. |
The clinical trial exemption in Germany is closely related to, but not identical with, the Bolar exemption. Understanding where these provisions overlap and diverge is critical for CROs, sponsors and their legal advisers.
Activities that fall squarely within the Bolar exemption include Phase I–III clinical trials conducted to generate data for a marketing authorisation application, bioequivalence studies for generic medicines, and comparability studies for biosimilars. The exemption covers not only the conduct of the trials themselves but also the “practical requirements thereof”, meaning the manufacture, import and supply of clinical trial material using the patented compound. The key condition is that the trial must serve the regulatory approval objective. Trials conducted for purely commercial purposes (for example, to generate data for marketing claims post-launch, or investigator-initiated studies unrelated to an MA dossier) fall outside the scope of the Bolar provisions in Germany.
A related but distinct issue is data exclusivity, the period during which an MA applicant cannot cross-refer to the originator’s clinical trial data to support its own application. Data exclusivity is a regulatory concept (governed by the EU Pharma Package and Directive 2001/83/EC), not a patent-law concept. The Bolar exemption permits the generation of data through studies and trials; it does not override data-exclusivity or regulatory-data-protection periods. Practitioners should note the red flag: even where Bolar shields the physical conduct of a trial, the resulting data may not be usable to support an MA filing until the relevant data-exclusivity period expires.
This distinction, between what may lawfully be done and what may lawfully be submitted, is a frequent source of confusion and must be addressed in project planning.
API manufacturing and supply sit at the junction of patent risk and regulatory necessity. The question of whether the supply of a patented API constitutes a protected Bolar activity or an infringing commercial act is among the most practically significant, and least settled, issues in German pharmaceutical patent law.
Where an API supplier manufactures and delivers a patented active substance to a generic applicant (or its CMO) exclusively for the purpose of producing test batches, stability samples, or clinical trial material destined for inclusion in an MA dossier, there is a credible argument that the activity is functionally within the Bolar exemption. This argument is strongest when the supplier can demonstrate: (a) a written contract limiting the purpose of the supply to MA-related activities; (b) batch-level traceability linking each delivery to a specific regulatory project; and (c) quantities consistent with regulatory (not commercial) requirements.
Conversely, if API volumes exceed what is needed for regulatory purposes, or if the API is stockpiled for commercial launch, the Bolar defence will almost certainly fail.
Given the legal uncertainty, API suppliers operating in the German market should implement the following controls:
Robust contractual frameworks are the single most important risk-mitigation tool for any third party relying, directly or derivatively, on the Bolar exemption. The following clause structures and operational controls represent current best practice, though each should be tailored to the specific transaction with qualified legal counsel. Practitioners looking at cross-border IP protection strategies will recognise the importance of jurisdiction-specific drafting.
Germany remains one of Europe’s most active jurisdictions for pharmaceutical patent enforcement. The Düsseldorf, Munich and Mannheim courts hear a disproportionate share of EU patent disputes, and originator companies have historically pursued aggressive injunction strategies against generic entrants and, increasingly, against their supply-chain partners. The relevance of the Bolar exemption in Europe’s busiest patent courts cannot be overstated.
Key enforcement trends and practical considerations for 2026 include:
Firms engaged in generic or biosimilar development should conduct regular intellectual property audits and ensure that their Bolar compliance framework is litigation-ready at all times.
Understanding what the Bolar exemption is, and what it does not cover, is fundamental for every participant in Germany’s pharmaceutical supply chain in 2026. The EU Pharma Package has advanced harmonisation, but the boundaries of Section 11 PatG coverage for CMOs, CROs and API suppliers remain in flux. Proactive contractual controls, rigorous documentation and litigation-ready evidence management are the pillars of effective Bolar compliance. Companies navigating these complexities can explore further resources through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with qualified German patent and pharmaceutical law specialists.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Anke Krebs at dompatent, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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