What Is a Provisional Patent Application?

A provisional patent application is a simplified, lower-cost way to establish an early filing date with the USPTO while you continue developing your invention. It's "provisional" because it never becomes an issued patent—instead, you have exactly 12 months to convert it into a full, non-provisional patent application.

For independent inventors, the provisional patent is a game-changer. It gives you breathing room to perfect your invention, test the market, and prepare a stronger full application—all while protecting your priority date.

Why File a Provisional Patent?

The provisional patent offers several strategic advantages:

Key Advantage: In most countries, public disclosure before filing kills your patent rights. But with a provisional application, you can publicly launch your product in month 11 of your 12-month window and still get patent protection. This is why many startups file provisionally first.

What You MUST Include in a Provisional Application

The USPTO's requirements for a provisional application are simpler than a non-provisional, but you must still provide sufficient detail. Here's what's required:

1. Written Description (Specification)

A detailed explanation of how your invention works. This is your most critical document. It must be detailed enough that someone skilled in your field could understand and potentially rebuild your invention.

Include:

2. Drawings and Diagrams

Visual representations of your invention from multiple angles. These don't need to be professional patent drawings, but they must be clear and well-labeled.

3. Inventor Information

Full legal names of all inventors (not assignees or companies—just the actual people who created it).

4. Filing Fees

$320 for micro-entities. File through USPTO's EFS-Web system.

Common Mistakes in Provisional Applications

Many inventors inadvertently weaken their provisional applications by missing these critical details:

Mistake #1: Insufficient Written Description

Problem: Writing vague descriptions like "The device works as intended" without explaining how.

Impact: When you file your non-provisional application, examiners will reject your claims because they weren't "enabled" by the provisional specification.

Solution: Write as if you're teaching someone unfamiliar with your field. Explain every component, every step, every variation. The more detail, the better.

Mistake #2: Poor Drawings

Problem: Simple sketches with no labels or unclear orientation.

Impact: During non-provisional examination, examiners can't understand the invention visually, leading to rejections.

Solution: Use clear, technical drawings with reference numbers. Label everything. Show multiple views.

Mistake #3: Adding New Matter in the Non-Provisional

Problem: Including new features, modifications, or embodiments in your non-provisional that weren't disclosed in the provisional.

Impact: You lose priority date protection for anything new. Those elements get your later (non-provisional) filing date, which is problematic for claims involving them.

Solution: Include all likely variations and versions in your provisional, even if you don't plan to commercialize them immediately.

Mistake #4: Ignoring the 12-Month Deadline

Problem: Missing the filing deadline to convert to non-provisional.

Impact: Your provisional expires, and you lose all patent rights. You can't extend a provisional—there's no grace period for this deadline.

Solution: Set a calendar reminder 2–3 months before the deadline. File the non-provisional application early if needed.

Your 12-Month Provisional-to-Non-Provisional Strategy

Here's a realistic timeline for maximizing your provisional application:

1

Month 1: File Your Provisional Application

Submit your provisional patent application to the USPTO. Cost: $320. You now have patent pending status and a priority date.

2

Months 1-6: Develop & Test

Use this time to refine your invention, test market viability, and gather market feedback. You're legally protected during this period.

3

Months 3-6: Conduct Patent Search

Search USPTO, Google Patents, and Espacenet to understand prior art and identify what makes your invention truly novel. This informs your non-provisional claims.

4

Months 6-9: Prepare Non-Provisional Application

Work with a patent attorney or agent (or prepare your own) to draft formal claims, refined drawings, and a comprehensive specification. This is where you distinguish your invention from prior art.

5

Month 10-11: File Non-Provisional Application

Submit your non-provisional application while your provisional is still active (within 12 months). Your priority date remains the provisional filing date.

6

Months 12-24+: Examination & Office Actions

The USPTO examines your non-provisional application. Respond to any office actions with amendments and arguments. Continue commercializing while the application is pending.

Provisional vs. Non-Provisional: When to File Each

File Provisional First If:

File Non-Provisional Directly If:

Our recommendation: For most independent inventors, file provisional first. It's the safer, more cost-effective approach. Learn more in Module 3: Writing Your Application.

Converting Provisional to Non-Provisional

When converting, your non-provisional application will:

The provisional and non-provisional are separate filings. Filing a non-provisional doesn't affect your provisional—it simply expires 12 months after the provisional filing date, and you continue with the non-provisional.

International Considerations

If you plan to file internationally using the PCT (Patent Cooperation Treaty), you must file a non-provisional application to establish priority. You can use your provisional priority date, but you'll need a non-provisional application as the basis for international filing.

Learn more about international strategy in Module 5: International Strategy.

Key Takeaways: The Provisional Patent Advantage

The provisional patent is one of the best strategic tools available to independent inventors. It's affordable, flexible, and gives you the protection you need while you develop your idea into a commercial product.