Free Tool — Post-Grant

Patent Maintenance Fee Calculator

Enter your patent's issue date and entity type. Get all three maintenance fee deadlines, grace period windows, current USPTO fee amounts, and a calendar export — no signup required.

Enter Patent Details

The date printed on your patent grant — found in the upper right corner of the front page
Used for display only — does not affect calculations
Small entity: for-profit companies with under 500 employees, universities, nonprofits. Fees are 60% of large entity rates.

2024–2025 USPTO Maintenance Fee Schedule

Entity Type 3.5-Year Fee 7.5-Year Fee 11.5-Year Fee Late Surcharge
Large Entity $2,000 $3,760 $7,700 $160
Small Entity $1,000 $1,880 $3,850 $80
Micro Entity $500 $940 $1,925 $40

Fees are set under 35 U.S.C. § 41(b). Small entity status requires a verified written assertion. Micro entity status requires meeting gross income, prior patent, and employer eligibility requirements under 35 U.S.C. § 123. The USPTO does not send reminders — missing a maintenance fee causes the patent to expire.

Patent Maintenance Fee FAQ

When are patent maintenance fees due?

US utility patent maintenance fees are due at 3.5, 7.5, and 11.5 years after the patent grant date. Each deadline has a 6-month grace period (with a surcharge). If the fee is not paid within the grace period, the patent lapses.

Does the USPTO send reminders?

No. The USPTO sends no maintenance fee reminders. Approximately 50% of US utility patents lapse due to missed fees. You are solely responsible for tracking these deadlines. This calculator and the calendar export below can help.

Can a lapsed patent be revived?

Yes — within 2 years of the grace period deadline, you can file a petition to revive with an unintentional delay showing and pay the overdue fees plus a $850–$1,700 revival petition fee. After 2 years, revival is generally not available.

What qualifies as a small entity?

Small entity status applies to: for-profit companies with fewer than 500 employees (including affiliates), individuals (natural persons), and nonprofit organizations. Small entities pay approximately 60% of large entity fees for maintenance.

What qualifies as a micro entity?

Micro entity status requires: qualifying as a small entity, not having been named as inventor on more than 4 prior US patent applications, not exceeding 3× the median US household income, and not being obligated to assign to a non-micro entity employer.

How does maintenance fee timing relate to patent term?

US utility patents expire 20 years from the earliest US filing date, or 17 years from grant for patents filed before June 8, 1995 — whichever is longer. Maintenance fees keep the patent in force during those 20 years. After expiration, no maintenance fees are owed.

Do design and plant patents require maintenance fees?

No. Only US utility patents require maintenance fees. Design patents and plant patents have no maintenance fee requirements. International patents (PCT, EPO, etc.) have their own renewal fee schedules in each national phase jurisdiction.

Can entity status change over time?

Yes. Entity status can change between maintenance fee payments. If you no longer qualify for small or micro entity status, you must pay at the higher rate at the next maintenance fee window. Incorrectly claiming a lower entity status can affect patent enforceability.

Know when your fees are due. Know what your patents cover.

PatentSignal analyzes your patents in depth — claim scope, prosecution history, continuation gaps, and competitive position. Start with one patent, free.

Try PatentSignal Free →