Patents are territorial. A U.S. patent only protects your invention in the United States. If a company manufactures your product in Germany or sells it in Japan, your U.S. patent provides zero protection. This reality led to the creation of the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) — a critical tool for inventors planning global expansion.
The PCT allows you to file one international application and get 30+ months to decide which countries warrant expensive national filings. Instead of immediately filing in 10 different countries (costing $30,000+), you file a single PCT application, conduct an international search, and strategically choose your markets.
How the PCT Timeline Works
When you file a PCT application, you enter a structured process. At approximately 16 months, you receive an International Search Report (ISR) that reveals what prior patents and publications exist globally. This is invaluable — you learn whether your invention is truly novel before committing to expensive national filings.
Next, you have an optional step: International Preliminary Examination (IPE). This provides a preliminary patentability assessment, giving you additional data before entering the national phase. At the 30-month mark, you must decide: enter national phase in specific countries or abandon the application.
Cost Considerations
Filing a PCT application costs approximately $1,600 for micro-entities with the WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization). Each country you enter during national phase costs $2,000–$5,000+, depending on the country and whether translation is required. China, for example, requires translation into Mandarin. So the real power of the PCT is strategic: you only pay for the countries where your market exists.
Direct Filing vs. PCT: When Each Makes Sense
If you need patent protection in only one or two countries and you know this immediately, direct filing may be faster. But if you're uncertain about your markets or need time to raise funding (which most startups do), the PCT buys precious time. The Paris Convention gives you 12 months from your first filing to claim priority in other countries — the PCT extends this to 30 months total.
Key Markets to Consider
When deciding which countries to enter during national phase, focus on where your market actually exists. The major markets are: the United States (via the USPTO), the European Union (via the European Patent Office, which grants a single patent covering all EU member states), China (via CNIPA — increasingly critical as China leads in patent filings), Japan (via JPO), South Korea, and India. Filing in all six regions costs substantially more than filing in one or two, so target intelligently.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Many inventors miss the 30-month national phase deadline, abandoning potentially valuable patent rights. Others fail to translate applications properly, leading to rejection. Some ignore regional patent offices and miss opportunities. File your PCT, monitor your deadlines, and consult an international patent attorney before the 30-month deadline arrives.