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Brexit Transition Toolkit: Intellectual Property

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Brexit’s Impact on Intellectual Property

EU Intellectual Property law has continued to operate as normal during the transition period. No changes to the services provided by the UK’s Intellectual Property Office (IPO) were proposed during this period and the withdrawal agreement included provisions for dealing with IP rights at the end of the transition period, ensuring continued protection of existing EU level IP rights.

Patents

The UK remains a participating state in the European Patent Convention which means leaving the EU should not affect the current European patent system or European patents covering the UK.

The Unitary Patent & Unified Patent Court

This unified system is expected to be available at the start of 2022 however the UK has already announced that it will not currently participate.

Trade Marks

At the end of the transition period EU Trade Marks will continue to protect trade marks in EU member states however they will no longer protect trade marks in the UK.

Under the withdrawal agreement the IPO will immediately and automatically create a comparable UK trade mark for all existing EU trade marks to ensure protection of trade marks in the UK is maintained. Businesses that have applications pending for EU trade marks at the end of the transition period will be granted 9 months to apply for the same protection in the UK.

Other rights and designs

The withdrawal agreement ensures continued protection of existing EU rights and designs in the UK following the end of the transition period.

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If you have any further enquiries please contact our Brexit Team via the below form.