Intellectual Property · Service

Patents

We advise on the legal architecture of patent portfolios: strategy, prosecution coordination, licensing, transactions and contentious proceedings. The technical drafting of patent specifications is conducted in coordination with qualified patent attorneys within our network, under our coordination and under unified counsel.

EPO · OEPM · PCT
Prosecution coordination
Unitary Patent & UPC
Coordinated representation
PCT (WIPO)
International applications
Central legal counsel
One strategy, many jurisdictions
What we handle

Scope of work

Patent strategy

Portfolio architecture, decisions on national versus regional versus international filing routes, prioritisation between patents, utility models and trade secrets, and timing of disclosure.

Prosecution coordination

Coordination of patent prosecution before the EPO, OEPM, the WIPO-administered PCT, and national offices across Latin America, Africa and other jurisdictions, with qualified European and local patent attorneys.

PCT applications

Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) international applications and entry into national phases.

Unitary Patent & UPC

European Patent with Unitary Effect (Unitary Patent) and proceedings before the Unified Patent Court (UPC), in coordination with qualified UPC representatives.

Licensing & transfer

Patent licensing, cross-licensing, technology transfer agreements and research and development agreements.

Oppositions

Opposition proceedings before the EPO and national offices.

Litigation

Patent litigation in coordination with specialised litigation counsel where direct representation is required.

Freedom-to-operate

Freedom-to-operate opinions and infringement risk assessments.

We act as the central legal counsel coordinating a patent strategy that spans multiple jurisdictions and technical disciplines.

Typical situations

When to engage us

Multi-jurisdiction portfolio

A technology or industrial company requiring strategic coordination of its patent portfolio across multiple jurisdictions.

Cross-border licensing

A licensor or licensee negotiating cross-border patent licensing.

Contentious matter

A party to an opposition, invalidity or infringement matter requiring coordinated legal counsel alongside technical attorneys.

Where we act

Jurisdictions

Coordination of representation before the EPO, the UPC, OEPM, WIPO under the PCT, and national patent offices across Latin America, Africa and other jurisdictions, through qualified European patent attorneys, UPC representatives and correspondent counsel.

Europe
EPO, the Unitary Patent and UPC, and OEPM, through qualified European patent attorneys and UPC representatives.
International
WIPO-administered PCT international applications and entry into national phases.
Latin America & Africa
National patent offices across the region and other jurisdictions through correspondent counsel.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How do I obtain patent protection in Europe?
A European patent is granted by the European Patent Office (EPO) through a single application and examination procedure. Once granted, it can take effect either as a Unitary Patent across the participating states or be validated as separate national patents in the countries you choose. We coordinate the whole process — strategy, prosecution and validation — working with qualified European patent attorneys.
What are the Unitary Patent and the Unified Patent Court (UPC)?
Since June 2023 a granted European patent can be registered for unitary effect, giving uniform protection across the participating EU member states with a single renewal, instead of validating country by country. The Unified Patent Court is the specialised court with jurisdiction over Unitary Patents and, in principle, classic European patents that have not been opted out. We coordinate both the unitary election and representation before the UPC.
What is the PCT, and does it give me a worldwide patent?
There is no single worldwide patent. The Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), administered by WIPO, lets you file one international application that preserves your rights in its member states and buys time — generally around 30 months from priority — before you must enter the national or regional phases where patents are actually granted. We plan the route and manage entry into each phase.
How long does a patent last?
A patent generally lasts twenty years from the filing date, provided annual maintenance (renewal) fees are paid. It is not renewable beyond that term, although certain pharmaceutical and plant-protection products may obtain a supplementary protection certificate extending protection for a limited period. We track maintenance deadlines across your portfolio.
Do you draft the technical patent specification yourselves?
We act as the central legal counsel for your patent strategy, transactions and disputes. The technical drafting of the specification is carried out by qualified patent attorneys within our network, under our coordination and unified counsel, so the legal strategy and the technical drafting stay aligned under a single point of contact.
What is a freedom-to-operate (FTO) opinion?
A freedom-to-operate opinion assesses whether you can make, use or sell a product in a given market without infringing patents held by others. It is distinct from patentability: a product can be new enough to patent and still infringe someone else’s rights. We provide FTO opinions and infringement risk assessments before launch or investment.
Patent, utility model or trade secret — which should I choose?
A patent gives the strongest protection but requires disclosure and examination; a utility model (available in some countries) is faster and cheaper but generally weaker and shorter; a trade secret avoids disclosure entirely but offers no protection against independent development or reverse engineering. The right choice depends on the technology, the market and the timing of disclosure, which is exactly what patent strategy decides.
Can you coordinate patents across Europe, Latin America and Africa?
Yes. We coordinate prosecution before the EPO, the UPC, OEPM and the PCT, and national patent offices across Latin America and Africa through correspondent counsel, working with qualified European and local patent attorneys. You keep a single point of contact for the whole Europe–Latin America–Africa corridor.