IP-Academy

Inventive step. How does it work?

The last (but by no means the least) patentability requirement – an inventive step, which may be the most difficult requirement to define precisely.

Inventive step is a universal demand by the Patent Offices helping them to make sure that an invention, even if it could have been based on a bad idea, is not obvious to try. This non-obviousness defines patentability of inventions in the first place, since no other form of IP protection (even utility models) should meet this requirement in most of the jurisdictions.

The EPO puts it like this: “An invention shall be considered as involving an inventive step if, having regard to the state of the art, it is not obvious to a person skilled in the art.” (EPC, Art.56)
A “person skilled in the art” is an expert in a particular field with knowledge of “what was common general knowledge in the art (meaning industry)” at the date of filing an application.

So, to recap, an invention is not merely a new combination of known features, but their innovative mix which was not envisioned before even by the professionals and which requires that extra step of creativity. 

Related articles

An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙