Patent family


A patent family is "a set of patents taken in various countries to protect a single invention." In other words, a patent family is "the same invention disclosed by a common inventor and patented in more than one country." Patent families can be regarded as a "fortuitous by-product of the concept of priorities for patent applications".

Definitions

The International Patent Documentation Centre, the European Patent Office and WIPO recognize the following definitions of simple and extended patent families:
Simple patent family: All patent documents have exactly the same priority date or combination of priority dates.
Extended patent family: All patent documents are linked via a priority document belonging to one patent family. The extended families allow for additional connectors to link other than strictly priority date. These include: domestic application numbers, countries that have not ratified the Paris Convention, or if the application was filed too late to claim priority.
Those are not the only possible definitions of a patent family, however. Another definition, which is broader than the "simple patent family" definition but narrower than the "extended patent family" definition, is to consider that "ll the documents having at least one common priority belong to the same patent family."
In general, "atent families are defined by databases, not by national or international laws, and family members for a particular invention can vary from database to database."