Legal & IP
Definition
Patent pending means a patent application has been filed for an invention, but no patent has yet been granted or finally rejected.
A product or invention can be marked patent pending after a provisional, non-provisional, design, or international patent application has been filed with the relevant patent office. The phrase does not create enforceable patent rights by itself; it signals that an application exists and that patent protection may issue later. If the patent is granted, the owner may be able to enforce rights from the grant date and, in limited circumstances, seek pre-issuance damages if statutory notice requirements are met. False patent marking can create legal risk, so the label should only be used when an active application actually exists.
Patent pending status can deter copying, support investor conversations, and preserve flexibility while a product is being tested. But it is not a substitute for a well-written application. A patent attorney can determine whether a provisional, design, or utility filing fits the invention and ensure the application supports the claims you may need later.