What a Patent Actually Protects
A patent is a government-granted right that gives an inventor the exclusive power to stop anyone else from manufacturing, using, selling, or importing their invention — without permission — for a defined period. In Egypt, that period is 20 years from the filing date, after which the invention enters the public domain and anyone can use it freely.
A patent does not protect the general idea behind an invention. It protects the specific technical implementation — described in detail in legal documents called "claims." The claims are the most critical part of any patent application: they define exactly what is and is not covered.
What can be patented in Egypt under IP Law No. 82 of 2002:
- Products: Physical devices, machines, compositions of matter (chemicals, pharmaceuticals, materials)
- Processes: Methods of manufacturing, processing, or treating materials
- Improvements: Novel enhancements to existing products or processes
- Software-implemented inventions: Only when tied to a specific technical effect — not purely functional or abstract algorithms
What cannot be patented:
- Pure scientific theories or mathematical methods
- Business methods as such (e.g., a pricing strategy)
- Aesthetic creations (protected instead by industrial design law)
- Surgical, diagnostic, or therapeutic methods on the human body
- Plant varieties and animal breeds (governed by separate laws)
- Inventions contrary to public order or morality
The Three Requirements Every Patent Must Meet
Before filing, your invention must satisfy three criteria. Filing without meeting all three is the single biggest waste of time and money in the patent world:
1. Novelty
The invention must not have been publicly disclosed anywhere in the world before your filing date — in any publication, patent, conference presentation, or public demonstration. This includes your own prior disclosures. If you publicly described your invention six months ago, that disclosure may destroy your novelty in Egypt (though some countries allow a grace period).
2. Inventive Step
The invention must not be obvious to a person skilled in the relevant technical field. This is the most subjective test. An invention that simply combines two known elements in an obvious way — without producing a surprising or unexpected result — fails this test even if the exact combination was never done before.
3. Industrial Applicability
The invention must be capable of being made or used in industry. This is almost always satisfied — nearly any tangible technical invention qualifies. Purely theoretical concepts without practical application do not.
Prior Art Search — Do It First
Before spending anything on drafting or filing, commission a prior art search. A professional search examines patent databases worldwide (USPTO, EPO, WIPO, EGPO) to find existing patents and publications that might anticipate or render your invention obvious. It is the only way to honestly assess whether you have a patentable invention.
Do You Actually Need a Patent?
This is the question most inventors skip — and it costs them dearly. A patent is powerful but expensive, slow, and public. It is not the right tool for every situation.
You likely do need a patent when:
- Your competitive advantage is a specific technical invention that competitors would immediately copy if unprotected
- You are seeking investment — investors frequently require IP protection as a condition of funding
- You intend to license the technology to others and need a legal monopoly to license against
- You are entering markets (especially regulated industries like pharmaceuticals, medical devices, or electronics) where patent portfolios are standard competitive tools
- Your invention is not easily reverse-engineered — a patent forces you to disclose it publicly, so if you could keep it secret, a trade secret strategy might be worth considering
You may not need a patent when:
- Your advantage is operational — speed, customer relationships, brand, or execution — not a specific technical implementation
- The technology will be obsolete before a patent is granted (2–4 years in Egypt)
- The invention can be kept as a trade secret more effectively than a patent could protect it (trade secrets are indefinite, patents expire and require public disclosure)
- The cost of enforcement would exceed the value of the protection — a patent gives you the right to sue infringers, but litigation is expensive
Filing a patent too early is a real mistake. Many inventors file before they know whether the product works commercially. If the invention needs significant development, a later improved version may deserve its own patent — but if you disclosed too much early, you may have destroyed your own novelty. File when the invention is mature enough to be described with precision.
How to File a Patent in Egypt
Patents in Egypt are registered with the Egyptian Patent Office (EGPO), which operates under the Academy of Scientific Research and Technology (ASRT). The process:
- Prior art search — Search Egyptian, regional, and international patent databases to assess novelty and freedom to operate
- Drafting the application — Prepare the specification (technical description), drawings, abstract, and — most critically — the patent claims that define the scope of protection
- Filing — Submit to EGPO with required fees and supporting documents. Arabic translation required for all submitted documents
- Formal examination — EGPO checks that the application meets procedural requirements
- Substantive examination — EGPO examiners assess novelty, inventive step, and industrial applicability against the prior art. Office actions may be issued requiring response
- Grant and publication — If approved, the patent is granted and published in the Official Gazette
Timeline: typically 2–4 years from filing to grant in Egypt. From the filing date, however, you can mark your product "Patent Pending" — which provides notice and some commercial deterrence even before the patent is formally granted.
Patent Costs in Egypt
| Cost Component | Approximate Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Prior art search | Professional fee | Critical — do not skip. Saves you from filing an unpatentable invention |
| Government filing fee (EGPO) | EGP 2,000–5,000 | Varies by application type and number of claims |
| Claims drafting & prosecution | Professional fee | The most important cost — quality of claims determines scope of protection |
| Annual maintenance fees | EGP 500–2,000/year | Due annually to keep the patent in force for up to 20 years |
| Office action responses | Professional fee per action | Common; IGBS includes in fixed-fee packages |
Going International: PCT and National Phase
An Egyptian patent only protects you in Egypt. To protect your invention in other countries — Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Europe, the USA — you need to file internationally.
The most efficient path is the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT): a single international application filed through WIPO that establishes your priority date across 150+ member countries. You then have up to 30 months from your Egyptian filing date to enter the "national phase" in each country where you want protection — deciding country by country based on your commercial assessment.
Egypt is a PCT member state. IGBS coordinates PCT filings and handles national phase entry across the MENA region and internationally through our correspondent network.
Who Owns the Patent: Employee vs. Employer
This is a question that creates serious disputes and is frequently misunderstood. In Egypt, the rules are:
- Inventions made during employment, in the employer's field of business, or using company resources — belong to the employer by default under IP Law No. 82 of 2002
- Inventions made entirely outside working hours, without company resources, and unrelated to the employer's business — belong to the employee
- Inventions made at the employer's explicit request or as part of a specific project — belong to the employer, though the employee may have a right to additional compensation if the invention's commercial value far exceeds their normal salary
- Employment contracts often contain broad IP assignment clauses that may go beyond the statutory default — always review your contract before filing in your own name
If you are an inventor who is also an employee: Do not file a patent in your own name for anything developed while employed without getting legal advice first. Filing a patent on an invention that belongs to your employer can constitute grounds for dismissal and may expose you to a claim for damages. IGBS provides IP ownership assessments before filing.
Frequently Asked Questions
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