Fast-Track Patent Examination in India: How Startups Can Secure Patents Faster

Published by Linda Raj on

Fast-Track Patent Examination in India: How Startups Can Secure Patents Faster

In the world of innovation, speed is as valuable as originality—Fast-Track Patent Examination lets ideas lead, not lag. 

In the high-stakes world of intellectual property, timing isn’t just a factor it’s often the entire game. For inventors, startups, or tech-driven businesses, waiting three to five years for a patent grant can feel like an eternity, especially when market cycles move at the speed of light. Imagine launching a groundbreaking AI medical diagnostic tool, only to have competitors flood the market while your patent application sits in a chronological queue of over 200,000 pending files.

This is where Expedited Examination, or Fast-Track Patent Examination, comes into play. Introduced primarily to foster the Startup India initiative and refined through the Patents (Amendment) Rules, 2024, this mechanism can slash the time from filing to grant from years to just a few months.

Let’s examine how expedited examination works from a legal and procedural perspective.

Evolution of expedited examination in India

Historically, patent examination in India followed a strict queue-based system: applications were examined only after filing a Request for Examination (RFE) under Section 11B of the Patents Act, 1970. Examination order depended largely on filing dates.

Recognizing global competition and startup ecosystem growth, the Indian government amended the Patent Rules, 2003 through the Patent (Amendment) Rules, 2016, introducing Rule 24C, which created expedited examination initially for startups and applicants choosing India as the International Searching Authority (ISA) under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT).

Later amendments in 2019 and 2021 expanded eligibility categories, transforming expedited examination into a broader innovation policy tool.

Legal framework: Rule 24C explained

In India, patent examination is generally deferred, the Indian Patent Office (IPO) does not review your application unless you explicitly request it. Standard examination requests are filed via Form 18, while the fast-track route is governed by Rule 24C and requires Form 18A.

The key advantage? Under Rule 24C, once your application is referred to an examiner, the First Examination Report (FER) is typically issued within 1–3 months, compared to 12–24 months for regular applications. This accelerated timeline can make all the difference in competitive industries.

First Examination Report

Eligibility criteria (who can apply?)

Expedited examination is a privilege, not a right. Eligibility categories include:

  • Startups: Recognized by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT).
  • Small Entities: As defined under the MSME Act, 2006.
  • Female Applicants: Where at least one natural person applicant is a woman.
  • Government Entities: Departments, government companies, or institutions funded by the government.
  • PCT Applicants: Those who chose India as the International Searching Authority (ISA) or International Preliminary Examining Authority (IPEA).
  • PPH Participants: Applicants under a Patent Prosecution Highway agreement (e.g., India–Japan pilot).
  • Educational Institutions: Established by Central or State Acts.

Example Scenario 1:

Imagine an AI based startup developing a medical diagnostic algorithm. Investors require patent status confirmation before Series-A funding. By filing Form 18A, the startup may receive examination within months rather than years directly influencing fundraising outcomes.

Example Scenario 2:

A solo female biotech researcher in 2024 used the “Female Applicant” category. Even without startup registration, she bypassed thousands of corporate applications and received her FER in just 45 days, enabling faster commercialization of her innovation.

Procedural workflow

The expedited examination process follows these steps:

  • Patent filing (Provisional or Complete Specification): The journey begins with filing a provisional or complete specification. Provisional filings secure an early priority date while the invention evolves.
  • Early publication (Form 9): Applications cannot be examined until published. While standard publication occurs at 18 months, expedited applicants file Form 9 to trigger publication within weeks.
  • Submission of Form 18A: Eligible applicants submit Form 18A, declaring their category (startup, small entity, female applicant, etc.) and paying the expedited fees.
  • 31-month examination deadline: Following the 2024 amendment, the Request for Examination must be filed within 31 months from the priority date. Missing this leads to abandonment.
  • Controller verification and examiner allocation: The Controller checks eligibility and fees, then places the application in the expedited queue for priority examination.
  • First Examination Report (FER): The examiner reviews novelty, inventive step, industrial applicability, and patentable subject matter. FER is typically issued within 1–2 months for expedited applications.
  • Response to FER: Applicants must respond within 6 months (extendable by 3) with claim amendments, technical arguments, or supporting data.
  • Grant or Hearing: After compliance, the patent is granted. A hearing may be scheduled if objections remain unresolved.

Tip: Expedited examination is like an express lane, the scrutiny remains the same; timely responses and proper documentation are key to keeping the process fast.

Practical timeline comparison

Stage Normal Examination Expedited Examination
Form & rule Form 18, Rule 24B Form 18A, Rule 24C
FER issuance 12-24 months (typical) 1-3 months (approx.)
FER response 6 months (extendable by 3 months) 6 months (extendable by 3 months)
Fee for startup 4000 8000
Fee Large entity 20000 60000
Grant timeline 4–7 years 1–2 years (often)

Actual timelines vary depending on technology complexity and objections raised.

Strategic advantages for applicants

  1. Early patent certainty

Businesses gain clarity on patentability sooner, enabling licensing or commercialization.

  1. Investor confidence

Venture capitalists frequently assess IP strength. Faster examination reduces uncertainty.

  1. Enforcement readiness

Earlier grant enables infringement enforcement sooner.

  1. Alignment with product lifecycle

In fast-moving sectors like electronics or software, delayed patents risk becoming commercially irrelevant.

Real-World Illustration

expedited examination

India’s startup ecosystem has increasingly used expedited examination. Several deep-tech and biotech startups have leveraged fast-track examination to secure patents before entering international markets.

A notable trend emerged post-2016 amendments, where startup filings receiving expedited examination saw significantly faster grants, helping companies participate in global licensing negotiations earlier.

Additionally, under the Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) between India and Japan, applicants benefiting from favorable examination results in one jurisdiction can accelerate prosecution in India reducing duplication of examination efforts.

Legal and Practical Considerations

Despite advantages, expedited examination requires careful planning:

Eligibility must exist at filing

Status (e.g., startup or small entity) must be properly declared and documented.

Publication timing matters

If the application is not published, examination cannot begin. Early publication is often essential.

Higher official fees

Expedited examination involves higher government fees compared to regular examination.

Limited annual quota

The Patent Office processes expedited requests subject to capacity limits, meaning timing of filing matters.

Relevant developments and policy direction

India’s patent administration has increasingly emphasized speed and efficiency. The government has recruited additional examiners and digitized workflows to support expedited prosecution.

Recent judicial observations have also stressed reducing patent delays to promote innovation-led economic growth, reinforcing the policy objective behind Rule 24C.

Example: When should you use expedited examination?

Consider three practical cases:

  • Startup launching a SaaS platform needs patent grant before global expansion.
  • University spin-off commercializing research requires IP protection before industry collaboration.
  • Manufacturing SME exporting products wants granted patent for customs enforcement.

In each case, expedited examination becomes a strategic legal tool rather than merely a procedural shortcut.

Expedited Patent Examination

Fast Track or Expedited Patent Examination in India represents a significant evolution in the country’s patent ecosystem from a backlog-driven system to a more innovation-responsive framework. By enabling eligible applicants to accelerate examination under Rule 24C, India aligns its patent prosecution timelines closer to global innovation cycles.

However, expedited examination is most effective when integrated into a broader IP strategy including early publication, claim drafting precision, and prosecution planning. For inventors and businesses operating in competitive technological markets, understanding and leveraging expedited examination can mean the difference between owning a market opportunity and arriving too late to protect it.

In short, expedited examination is not just about speed, it is about strategic timing in innovation protection.


Linda Raj

Linda, Lead Patent Scientist at DexPatent, is dedicated to aiding IP Counsel and Patent attorneys in Patent research and management. Her interests span from reading books to writing on subjects related to innovation, work, and life.

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