
As we reported on Tuesday, the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) has published an amended fee schedule for application filings that is due to take effect on July 1, 2008. In a Federal Register Notice that was published on Wednesday, June 18, 2008, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office will announce its intention to amend 37 C.F.R. § 1.445(a)(1)-(3) to increase the application transmittal fee (to $415 from $300) and the search fee (to $2,225 from $1,800). The fee associated with a supplemental search would also increase to $2,225 from $1,800. These proposed fee increases follow the recent rate hike of November 2007 (FY 2008), where the search and supplemental search fees were increased to $1,800 from $1,000.

In the Notice, the Office argues that these fee increases are being made to merely offset the estimated average costs to the PTO associated with PCT application processing and preparation of international search reports and written opinions. The Notice states that the estimated average cost of PCT application processing "is slightly over $415.00" while search reports and written opinions have an estimated average cost of "slightly over $2,225.00 for each invention." The Notice also clarifies that this fee increase will impact all PCT applicants filing with the U.S. Receiving Office (US/RO) as the PCT does not account for small entity fee discounts.
Any written comments to this Notice must be received on or before 60 days after publication of the Federal Register Notice (June 18, 2008). Comments should be sent by electronic mail message over the Internet addressed to AC28.comments@uspto.gov. While the PTO prefers comments submitted via the internet, comments may also be submitted by mail addressed to: Mail Stop Comments–Patents, Commissioner for Patents, P.O. Box 1450, Alexandria, VA, 22313-1450, or by facsimile to (571) 273-0459, marked to the attention of Boris Milef, Office of the Deputy Commissioner for Patent Examination Policy. Comments may also be sent by electronic mail message over the Internet via the Federal Rulemaking Portal. Please see the Federal eRulemaking Portal website for additional instructions on providing comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal.

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