MPEP § 609.04(a) — Content Requirements for an Information Disclosure Statement (Annotated Rules)

§609.04(a) Content Requirements for an Information Disclosure Statement

USPTO MPEP version: BlueIron's Update: 2025-12-31

This page consolidates and annotates all enforceable requirements under MPEP § 609.04(a), including statutory authority, regulatory rules, examiner guidance, and practice notes. It is provided as guidance, with links to the ground truth sources. This is information only, it is not legal advice.

Content Requirements for an Information Disclosure Statement

This section addresses Content Requirements for an Information Disclosure Statement. Primary authority: 35 U.S.C. 120, 37 CFR 1.98, and 37 CFR 1.97(f). Contains: 9 requirements, 1 prohibition, 4 guidance statements, 3 permissions, and 4 other statements.

Key Rules

Topic

Foreign Priority Claims

11 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-96bb33bbcb9ad6892e3206e4]
Information Disclosure Statement Items Must Be Properly Identified
Note:
Each item in an IDS must be correctly identified by specific details such as patent numbers, application information, and publication data.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-e843ff798ba7b6164636a36a]
U.S. Patents Must Be Identified By Inventor, Number, and Date
Note:
Each U.S. patent in an IDS must be identified with the inventor's name, patent number, and issue date.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-14f3ecf292d8183f72e95d74]
U.S. Patent Application Publications Must Be Identified by Applicant, Publication Number, and Date
Note:
Each U.S. patent application publication in an IDS must be identified with the applicant's name, its publication number, and the date of publication.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-f1a554c5fd54e9f4d18b929e]
Inventor Can Identify U.S. Patent Application Publication
Note:
An inventor can be used instead of the applicant to identify a U.S. patent application publication in an IDS.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-54859ae8b78730594e2647eb]
U.S. Applications Must Be Identified by Inventor, Application Number, and Filing Date
Note:
Each U.S. application in an IDS must be properly identified with the inventor's name, eight-digit application number (series code and serial number), and filing date.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryRecommendedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-a4507b6ea4f85072433e671c]
Patent or Publication Must Be Listed Instead of Application
Note:
If a U.S. application listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or published, the applicant must list the patent or publication instead of the application.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-84cedfb4a38e699db196e161]
Requirement for Identifying Foreign Patents and Publications
Note:
Each foreign patent or published foreign application must be identified with the issuing country, document number, and publication date.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-d072ca06e507c9c253fecf34]
Each Publication Must Be Properly Identified
Note:
Each item of information in an IDS must be identified by the publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages, and date and place of publication.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-f26781af334ea8ae504d79f9]
All Pages Required When No Page Numbers Given
Note:
When no page numbers are supplied for a publication citation, all pages of the publication must be considered relevant.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-502b0bd09618304ed38e4373]
Publication Date Must Include Month and Year Except for Sufficiently Early Years
Note:
The date of publication must include the month and year, but can be just the year if it is sufficiently earlier than the filing date.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
StatutoryRecommendedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-fe580444f89d4adf7bafcbbb]
Publication Details Must Be Identified
Note:
Each publication must be identified by its publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages, and date and place of publication.

37 CFR 1.98(b) requires that each item of information in an IDS be identified properly. U.S. patents must be identified by the inventor, patent number, and issue date. U.S. patent application publications must be identified by the applicant, patent application publication number, and publication date. The Office will also accept a citation in an IDS where a U.S. patent application publication is identified using the inventor instead of the applicant. U.S. applications must be identified by the inventor, the eight digit application number (the two digit series code and the six digit serial number), and the filing date. If a U.S. application being listed in an IDS has been issued as a patent or has been published, the applicant should list the patent or application publication in the IDS instead of the application. Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application must be identified by the country or patent office which issued the patent or published the application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date indicated on the patent or published application. Each publication must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, and date and place of publication. When no page numbers are supplied, it is understood that all of the pages of the publication are the relevant pages. The date of publication supplied must include at least the month and year of publication, except that the year of publication (without the month) will be accepted if the applicant points out in the information disclosure statement that the year of publication is sufficiently earlier than the effective U.S. filing date and any foreign priority date so that the particular month of publication is not in issue. The place of publication refers to the name of the journal, magazine, or other publication in which the information being submitted was published. See MPEP § 707.05(e), for more information on data that should be used when citing publications and electronic documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(b)Foreign Priority ClaimsPriority and Benefit Claims
Topic

Sequence Listing Requirements

10 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-f8160a62e9eb4707e5ee8570]
Separate Listing of U.S. Patents and Publications Required
Note:
Applicants must use forms PTO/SB/08 to list U.S. patents and patent application publications separately in an Information Disclosure Statement.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) specifically requires that U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications be listed separately from the citations of other documents. The separation of citations will permit the Office to obtain the U.S. patent numbers and the U.S. patent application publication numbers by optical character recognition (OCR) from the scanned documents such that the documents can be made available electronically to the examiner to facilitate searching and retrieval of the cited U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications from the Office’s search databases. Applicants will comply with this requirement if they use forms PTO/SB/08, which provide a separate section for listing U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications. Applicants who do not use these forms for submitting an IDS must make sure that the U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications are listed in a separate section from citations of other documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)Sequence Listing RequirementsContent of Patent Application PublicationPublication of Patent Applications
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-d0cc6684cc41c1d0e321746b]
URL Required for Internet Publications
Note:
For internet publications, the URL of the source webpage must be provided along with a date of retrieval.

For publications obtained from the internet, the uniform resource locator (URL) of the webpage that is the source of the publication must be provided for the place of publication (e.g., "www.uspto.gov"). The publisher may be evident from the URL of the webpage. See MPEP § 707.05(e) for examples on listing documents retrieved from the internet, including social media posts and screen shots from videos. In particular, see examples 17 and 18. Further, for an internet publication obtained from a website that archives webpages, both the URL of the archived webpage submitted for consideration and the URL of the website from which the archived copy of the webpage was obtained should be provided on the document listing (e.g., "Hand Tools," webpage <http://www.farmshopstore.com/handtools.html>, 1 page, August 18, 2009, retrieved from Internet Archive Wayback Machine <http://web.archive.org/web/20090818144217/ http://www.farmshopstore.com/handtools.html> on December 20, 2012). Where the actual publication date of a non-patent document is not known, the applicant must, at a minimum, provide a date of retrieval (e.g., the date a webpage was retrieved) or a time frame (e.g., a year, a month and year, a certain period of time) when the document was available as a publication.

Jump to MPEP SourceSequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-415ff08322d74540468f70df]
Publisher Must Be Evident from URL
Note:
The publisher of an internet publication must be evident from the URL, and the actual publication date should be provided or a retrieval date if not known.

For publications obtained from the internet, the uniform resource locator (URL) of the webpage that is the source of the publication must be provided for the place of publication (e.g., "www.uspto.gov"). The publisher may be evident from the URL of the webpage. See MPEP § 707.05(e) for examples on listing documents retrieved from the internet, including social media posts and screen shots from videos. In particular, see examples 17 and 18. Further, for an internet publication obtained from a website that archives webpages, both the URL of the archived webpage submitted for consideration and the URL of the website from which the archived copy of the webpage was obtained should be provided on the document listing (e.g., "Hand Tools," webpage <http://www.farmshopstore.com/handtools.html>, 1 page, August 18, 2009, retrieved from Internet Archive Wayback Machine <http://web.archive.org/web/20090818144217/ http://www.farmshopstore.com/handtools.html> on December 20, 2012). Where the actual publication date of a non-patent document is not known, the applicant must, at a minimum, provide a date of retrieval (e.g., the date a webpage was retrieved) or a time frame (e.g., a year, a month and year, a certain period of time) when the document was available as a publication.

Jump to MPEP SourceSequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryRecommendedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-63cb765f9d6db5caabd37a3b]
URLs Required for Internet Publications
Note:
Provide the URL of the archived webpage and the website from which it was obtained when listing internet publications.

For publications obtained from the internet, the uniform resource locator (URL) of the webpage that is the source of the publication must be provided for the place of publication (e.g., "www.uspto.gov"). The publisher may be evident from the URL of the webpage. See MPEP § 707.05(e) for examples on listing documents retrieved from the internet, including social media posts and screen shots from videos. In particular, see examples 17 and 18. Further, for an internet publication obtained from a website that archives webpages, both the URL of the archived webpage submitted for consideration and the URL of the website from which the archived copy of the webpage was obtained should be provided on the document listing (e.g., "Hand Tools," webpage <http://www.farmshopstore.com/handtools.html>, 1 page, August 18, 2009, retrieved from Internet Archive Wayback Machine <http://web.archive.org/web/20090818144217/ http://www.farmshopstore.com/handtools.html> on December 20, 2012). Where the actual publication date of a non-patent document is not known, the applicant must, at a minimum, provide a date of retrieval (e.g., the date a webpage was retrieved) or a time frame (e.g., a year, a month and year, a certain period of time) when the document was available as a publication.

Jump to MPEP SourceSequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-a371d03bbc076b7795b56afa]
Date of Retrieval Required for Non-Patent Documents
Note:
Applicants must provide a date of retrieval or time frame when non-patent documents were available as publications, especially for internet sources.

For publications obtained from the internet, the uniform resource locator (URL) of the webpage that is the source of the publication must be provided for the place of publication (e.g., "www.uspto.gov"). The publisher may be evident from the URL of the webpage. See MPEP § 707.05(e) for examples on listing documents retrieved from the internet, including social media posts and screen shots from videos. In particular, see examples 17 and 18. Further, for an internet publication obtained from a website that archives webpages, both the URL of the archived webpage submitted for consideration and the URL of the website from which the archived copy of the webpage was obtained should be provided on the document listing (e.g., "Hand Tools," webpage <http://www.farmshopstore.com/handtools.html>, 1 page, August 18, 2009, retrieved from Internet Archive Wayback Machine <http://web.archive.org/web/20090818144217/ http://www.farmshopstore.com/handtools.html> on December 20, 2012). Where the actual publication date of a non-patent document is not known, the applicant must, at a minimum, provide a date of retrieval (e.g., the date a webpage was retrieved) or a time frame (e.g., a year, a month and year, a certain period of time) when the document was available as a publication.

Jump to MPEP SourceSequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-52820b344b297fd1bd993dc2]
Disclosure of Cumulative Patents/Publications Optional
Note:
Allows submission of a single copy for patents/publications with substantively cumulative disclosures, provided a statement is made and other copies are omitted.

Second, 37 CFR 1.98(c) states that when the disclosures of two or more patents or publications listed in an information disclosure statement are substantively cumulative, a copy of one of the patents or publications may be submitted without copies of the other patents or publications provided that a statement is made that these other patents or publications are cumulative. The examiner will then consider only the patent or publication of which a copy is submitted and will so indicate on the list, form PTO/SB/08, submitted, e.g., by crossing out the listing of the cumulative information. But see Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co. v. Samsung Electronics Co., 204 F.3d 1368, 1374, 54 USPQ2d 1001, 1005 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (Reference was not cumulative since it contained a more complete combination of the claimed elements than any other reference before the examiner. “A withheld reference may be highly material when it discloses a more complete combination of relevant features, even if those features are before the patent examiner in other references.” (citations omitted).).

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(c)Sequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-bfda99d2bcbc5e2320a0b406]
Submit Only Non-Cumulative Patents/ Publications
Note:
When multiple patents or publications are listed as cumulative, submit only one and indicate the others are redundant on form PTO/SB/08.

Second, 37 CFR 1.98(c) states that when the disclosures of two or more patents or publications listed in an information disclosure statement are substantively cumulative, a copy of one of the patents or publications may be submitted without copies of the other patents or publications provided that a statement is made that these other patents or publications are cumulative. The examiner will then consider only the patent or publication of which a copy is submitted and will so indicate on the list, form PTO/SB/08, submitted, e.g., by crossing out the listing of the cumulative information. But see Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co. v. Samsung Electronics Co., 204 F.3d 1368, 1374, 54 USPQ2d 1001, 1005 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (Reference was not cumulative since it contained a more complete combination of the claimed elements than any other reference before the examiner. “A withheld reference may be highly material when it discloses a more complete combination of relevant features, even if those features are before the patent examiner in other references.” (citations omitted).).

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(c)Sequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-e24379420444f0f01f981260]
Non-Cumulative Reference Requirement
Note:
A reference must not be cumulative if it contains a more complete combination of the claimed elements than other references before the examiner.

Second, 37 CFR 1.98(c) states that when the disclosures of two or more patents or publications listed in an information disclosure statement are substantively cumulative, a copy of one of the patents or publications may be submitted without copies of the other patents or publications provided that a statement is made that these other patents or publications are cumulative. The examiner will then consider only the patent or publication of which a copy is submitted and will so indicate on the list, form PTO/SB/08, submitted, e.g., by crossing out the listing of the cumulative information. But see Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co. v. Samsung Electronics Co., 204 F.3d 1368, 1374, 54 USPQ2d 1001, 1005 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (Reference was not cumulative since it contained a more complete combination of the claimed elements than any other reference before the examiner. “A withheld reference may be highly material when it discloses a more complete combination of relevant features, even if those features are before the patent examiner in other references.” (citations omitted).).

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(c)Sequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-b81494f7df260973de9f87b5]
Withheld Reference May Be Highly Material When Disclosing Complete Combination of Features
Note:
A reference that is withheld may still be considered highly material if it discloses a more complete combination of relevant features, even if those features are present in other references submitted to the examiner.

Second, 37 CFR 1.98(c) states that when the disclosures of two or more patents or publications listed in an information disclosure statement are substantively cumulative, a copy of one of the patents or publications may be submitted without copies of the other patents or publications provided that a statement is made that these other patents or publications are cumulative. The examiner will then consider only the patent or publication of which a copy is submitted and will so indicate on the list, form PTO/SB/08, submitted, e.g., by crossing out the listing of the cumulative information. But see Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co. v. Samsung Electronics Co., 204 F.3d 1368, 1374, 54 USPQ2d 1001, 1005 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (Reference was not cumulative since it contained a more complete combination of the claimed elements than any other reference before the examiner. “A withheld reference may be highly material when it discloses a more complete combination of relevant features, even if those features are before the patent examiner in other references.” (citations omitted).).

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(c)Sequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-e5af0f9045f50fc2110ae494]
Copy Submission for Substantially Identical Patents/ Publications
Note:
Allows submission of a single copy when disclosures are substantively cumulative, with the examiner considering only that copy and noting the omission on form PTO/SB/08.

Second, 37 CFR 1.98(c) states that when the disclosures of two or more patents or publications listed in an information disclosure statement are substantively cumulative, a copy of one of the patents or publications may be submitted without copies of the other patents or publications provided that a statement is made that these other patents or publications are cumulative. The examiner will then consider only the patent or publication of which a copy is submitted and will so indicate on the list, form PTO/SB/08, submitted, e.g., by crossing out the listing of the cumulative information. But see Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co. v. Samsung Electronics Co., 204 F.3d 1368, 1374, 54 USPQ2d 1001, 1005 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (Reference was not cumulative since it contained a more complete combination of the claimed elements than any other reference before the examiner. “A withheld reference may be highly material when it discloses a more complete combination of relevant features, even if those features are before the patent examiner in other references.” (citations omitted).).

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(c)Sequence Listing Requirements
Topic

Timing of Duty

5 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-89e629327c25b3963f85d3f4]
Requirement for Concise Non-English Explanation
Note:
Requires a brief explanation of relevance in non-English information, unless translated.

The requirement for a concise explanation of relevance is limited to information that is not in the English language. The explanation required is limited to the relevance as understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information at the time the information is submitted to the Office. If a complete translation of the information into English is submitted with the non-English language information, no concise explanation is required. There is no requirement for the translation to be verified, including reliable machine translations. An English-language equivalent application may be submitted to fulfill this requirement if it is, in fact, a translation of a foreign language application being listed in an information disclosure statement. The English language equivalent application should be separately listed and identified as an English language equivalent in the information disclosure statement. Submission of an English language abstract of a reference, such as one generated by a foreign patent office, may fulfill the requirement for a concise explanation. Where the information listed is not in the English language, but was cited in a search report or other action by a foreign patent office in a counterpart foreign application, the requirement for a concise explanation of relevance can be satisfied by submitting an English-language version of the search report or action which indicates the degree of relevance found by the foreign office. This may be an explanation of which portion of the reference is particularly relevant, to which claims it applies, or merely an “X”, “Y”, or “A” indication on a search report. The requirement for a concise explanation of non-English language information would not be satisfied by a statement that a reference was cited in the prosecution of a United States application which is not relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)Timing of DutyIDS Fees and CertificationDuty of Disclosure Fundamentals
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-c251279bf32a65dfcdb7f28e]
Requirement for Complete Translation of Non-English Information
Note:
If a complete translation into English is submitted with non-English information, no concise explanation of relevance is required.

The requirement for a concise explanation of relevance is limited to information that is not in the English language. The explanation required is limited to the relevance as understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information at the time the information is submitted to the Office. If a complete translation of the information into English is submitted with the non-English language information, no concise explanation is required. There is no requirement for the translation to be verified, including reliable machine translations. An English-language equivalent application may be submitted to fulfill this requirement if it is, in fact, a translation of a foreign language application being listed in an information disclosure statement. The English language equivalent application should be separately listed and identified as an English language equivalent in the information disclosure statement. Submission of an English language abstract of a reference, such as one generated by a foreign patent office, may fulfill the requirement for a concise explanation. Where the information listed is not in the English language, but was cited in a search report or other action by a foreign patent office in a counterpart foreign application, the requirement for a concise explanation of relevance can be satisfied by submitting an English-language version of the search report or action which indicates the degree of relevance found by the foreign office. This may be an explanation of which portion of the reference is particularly relevant, to which claims it applies, or merely an “X”, “Y”, or “A” indication on a search report. The requirement for a concise explanation of non-English language information would not be satisfied by a statement that a reference was cited in the prosecution of a United States application which is not relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)Timing of DutyIDS Fees and CertificationDuty of Disclosure Fundamentals
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-7faf6353cd22118c54765597]
No Requirement for Translation Verification
Note:
There is no need to verify translations, including machine translations, when submitting non-English language information in an Information Disclosure Statement.

The requirement for a concise explanation of relevance is limited to information that is not in the English language. The explanation required is limited to the relevance as understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information at the time the information is submitted to the Office. If a complete translation of the information into English is submitted with the non-English language information, no concise explanation is required. There is no requirement for the translation to be verified, including reliable machine translations. An English-language equivalent application may be submitted to fulfill this requirement if it is, in fact, a translation of a foreign language application being listed in an information disclosure statement. The English language equivalent application should be separately listed and identified as an English language equivalent in the information disclosure statement. Submission of an English language abstract of a reference, such as one generated by a foreign patent office, may fulfill the requirement for a concise explanation. Where the information listed is not in the English language, but was cited in a search report or other action by a foreign patent office in a counterpart foreign application, the requirement for a concise explanation of relevance can be satisfied by submitting an English-language version of the search report or action which indicates the degree of relevance found by the foreign office. This may be an explanation of which portion of the reference is particularly relevant, to which claims it applies, or merely an “X”, “Y”, or “A” indication on a search report. The requirement for a concise explanation of non-English language information would not be satisfied by a statement that a reference was cited in the prosecution of a United States application which is not relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)Timing of DutyIDS Fees and CertificationDuty of Disclosure Fundamentals
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-90699c493ff1a701e3151b70]
Requirement for English Search Report Explanation
Note:
When a foreign search report is cited, an English-language version indicating the reference's relevance must be provided.

The requirement for a concise explanation of relevance is limited to information that is not in the English language. The explanation required is limited to the relevance as understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information at the time the information is submitted to the Office. If a complete translation of the information into English is submitted with the non-English language information, no concise explanation is required. There is no requirement for the translation to be verified, including reliable machine translations. An English-language equivalent application may be submitted to fulfill this requirement if it is, in fact, a translation of a foreign language application being listed in an information disclosure statement. The English language equivalent application should be separately listed and identified as an English language equivalent in the information disclosure statement. Submission of an English language abstract of a reference, such as one generated by a foreign patent office, may fulfill the requirement for a concise explanation. Where the information listed is not in the English language, but was cited in a search report or other action by a foreign patent office in a counterpart foreign application, the requirement for a concise explanation of relevance can be satisfied by submitting an English-language version of the search report or action which indicates the degree of relevance found by the foreign office. This may be an explanation of which portion of the reference is particularly relevant, to which claims it applies, or merely an “X”, “Y”, or “A” indication on a search report. The requirement for a concise explanation of non-English language information would not be satisfied by a statement that a reference was cited in the prosecution of a United States application which is not relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)Timing of DutyIDS Fees and CertificationDuty of Disclosure Fundamentals
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-3fec41a01e02b7e7482a7d27]
Requirement for Concise Non-English Explanation
Note:
A concise explanation of non-English language information is required, not satisfied by a reference cited in U.S. prosecution under 35 U.S.C. 120.

The requirement for a concise explanation of relevance is limited to information that is not in the English language. The explanation required is limited to the relevance as understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information at the time the information is submitted to the Office. If a complete translation of the information into English is submitted with the non-English language information, no concise explanation is required. There is no requirement for the translation to be verified, including reliable machine translations. An English-language equivalent application may be submitted to fulfill this requirement if it is, in fact, a translation of a foreign language application being listed in an information disclosure statement. The English language equivalent application should be separately listed and identified as an English language equivalent in the information disclosure statement. Submission of an English language abstract of a reference, such as one generated by a foreign patent office, may fulfill the requirement for a concise explanation. Where the information listed is not in the English language, but was cited in a search report or other action by a foreign patent office in a counterpart foreign application, the requirement for a concise explanation of relevance can be satisfied by submitting an English-language version of the search report or action which indicates the degree of relevance found by the foreign office. This may be an explanation of which portion of the reference is particularly relevant, to which claims it applies, or merely an “X”, “Y”, or “A” indication on a search report. The requirement for a concise explanation of non-English language information would not be satisfied by a statement that a reference was cited in the prosecution of a United States application which is not relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)Timing of DutyIDS Fees and CertificationDuty of Disclosure Fundamentals
Topic

Content of Patent Application Publication

4 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-3e80f1d6b445d9b787651011]
U.S. Patents and Patent Publications Must Be Listed Separately in IDS
Note:
Applicants must list U.S. patents and patent application publications separately from other document citations in an Information Disclosure Statement to facilitate electronic searching.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) specifically requires that U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications be listed separately from the citations of other documents. The separation of citations will permit the Office to obtain the U.S. patent numbers and the U.S. patent application publication numbers by optical character recognition (OCR) from the scanned documents such that the documents can be made available electronically to the examiner to facilitate searching and retrieval of the cited U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications from the Office’s search databases. Applicants will comply with this requirement if they use forms PTO/SB/08, which provide a separate section for listing U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications. Applicants who do not use these forms for submitting an IDS must make sure that the U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications are listed in a separate section from citations of other documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)Content of Patent Application PublicationPublication of Patent ApplicationsSequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-32dfc13dbd665924aa5993db]
Separate U.S. Patents and Patent Publications in IDS
Note:
Applicants must list U.S. patents and patent publications separately to facilitate OCR and electronic access for examiners.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) specifically requires that U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications be listed separately from the citations of other documents. The separation of citations will permit the Office to obtain the U.S. patent numbers and the U.S. patent application publication numbers by optical character recognition (OCR) from the scanned documents such that the documents can be made available electronically to the examiner to facilitate searching and retrieval of the cited U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications from the Office’s search databases. Applicants will comply with this requirement if they use forms PTO/SB/08, which provide a separate section for listing U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications. Applicants who do not use these forms for submitting an IDS must make sure that the U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications are listed in a separate section from citations of other documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)Content of Patent Application PublicationPublication of Patent ApplicationsSequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-995bb7768d88b9c0feb3f02b]
U.S. Patents and Publications Must Be Listed Separately in IDS
Note:
Applicants must list U.S. patents and patent application publications separately from other citations when submitting an IDS.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) specifically requires that U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications be listed separately from the citations of other documents. The separation of citations will permit the Office to obtain the U.S. patent numbers and the U.S. patent application publication numbers by optical character recognition (OCR) from the scanned documents such that the documents can be made available electronically to the examiner to facilitate searching and retrieval of the cited U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications from the Office’s search databases. Applicants will comply with this requirement if they use forms PTO/SB/08, which provide a separate section for listing U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications. Applicants who do not use these forms for submitting an IDS must make sure that the U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications are listed in a separate section from citations of other documents.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)Content of Patent Application PublicationPublication of Patent ApplicationsSequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-1d74a0af226f248d9d52bd4e]
No Requirement for Copy of Each U.S. Patent or Application Publication in IDS Unless Office Requires
Note:
There is no obligation to submit a copy of each U.S. patent or patent application publication listed in an Information Disclosure Statement unless the Office specifically requires it.

There is no requirement for a copy of each U.S. patent or U.S. patent application publication listed in an IDS unless required by the Office. 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2).

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)Content of Patent Application PublicationPublication of Patent Applications
Topic

Transmittal Content

4 rules
StatutoryProhibitedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-7a577094f0adcb0fbd327c09]
Information Disclosure Statement Must Be Submitted Separately
Note:
The list of information complying with format and identification requirements must be submitted in a separate paper, not incorporated into the specification.

The list of information complying with the format requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) and the identification requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(b) may not be incorporated into the specification of the application in which it is being supplied, but must be submitted in a separate paper. A separate list is required so that it is easy to confirm that applicant intends to submit an information disclosure statement and because it provides a readily available checklist for the examiner to indicate which identified documents have been considered. A separate list will also provide a simple means of communication to applicant to indicate the listed documents that have been considered and those listed documents that have not been considered. Use of form PTO/SB/08, Information Disclosure Statement, to list the documents is encouraged.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)Transmittal ContentPatent Application ContentApplication Transmittal
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-8ac92e29938c3413c9dd6169]
Information Disclosure Statement Must Be Submitted Separately
Note:
Applicants must submit an information disclosure statement in a separate paper to ensure clarity and provide a checklist for examiners.

The list of information complying with the format requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) and the identification requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(b) may not be incorporated into the specification of the application in which it is being supplied, but must be submitted in a separate paper. A separate list is required so that it is easy to confirm that applicant intends to submit an information disclosure statement and because it provides a readily available checklist for the examiner to indicate which identified documents have been considered. A separate list will also provide a simple means of communication to applicant to indicate the listed documents that have been considered and those listed documents that have not been considered. Use of form PTO/SB/08, Information Disclosure Statement, to list the documents is encouraged.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)Transmittal ContentApplication TransmittalPatent Application Content
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-090fce55ddfd7246fd1f0ea7]
Separate List for Information Disclosure Statement
Note:
A separate list must be provided to indicate which documents have been considered and which have not in an information disclosure statement.

The list of information complying with the format requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) and the identification requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(b) may not be incorporated into the specification of the application in which it is being supplied, but must be submitted in a separate paper. A separate list is required so that it is easy to confirm that applicant intends to submit an information disclosure statement and because it provides a readily available checklist for the examiner to indicate which identified documents have been considered. A separate list will also provide a simple means of communication to applicant to indicate the listed documents that have been considered and those listed documents that have not been considered. Use of form PTO/SB/08, Information Disclosure Statement, to list the documents is encouraged.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)Transmittal ContentApplication TransmittalPatent Application Content
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-0cc7f268bc5b07bbc1bfcfbf]
Use of PTO/SB/08 for Information Disclosure Statement
Note:
Encourages the use of form PTO/SB/08 to list documents in an information disclosure statement.

The list of information complying with the format requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) and the identification requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(b) may not be incorporated into the specification of the application in which it is being supplied, but must be submitted in a separate paper. A separate list is required so that it is easy to confirm that applicant intends to submit an information disclosure statement and because it provides a readily available checklist for the examiner to indicate which identified documents have been considered. A separate list will also provide a simple means of communication to applicant to indicate the listed documents that have been considered and those listed documents that have not been considered. Use of form PTO/SB/08, Information Disclosure Statement, to list the documents is encouraged.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)Transmittal ContentApplication TransmittalPatent Application Content
Topic

Article 19 Amendment Scope

4 rules
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-7509051d23c04d8bcf42721a]
Applicant May Cite Part of Pending Application
Note:
An applicant can choose to cite only a portion of a pending application and its claims, rather than the entire application, in an information disclosure statement.

A pending U.S. application only identified in the specification’s background information rather than being cited separately on an IDS listing is not part of an IDS submission. Therefore, the requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) of supplying a copy of the pending application is not applicable. Pursuant to 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii), applicant may choose to cite only a portion of a pending application including any claims directed to that portion rather than the entire application. There are exceptions to this requirement that a copy of the information must be provided. First, 37 CFR 1.98(d) states that a copy of any patent, publication, pending U.S. application, or other information listed in an information disclosure statement is not required to be provided if: (A) the information was previously cited by or submitted to, the Office in a prior application, provided that the prior application is properly identified in the IDS and is relied on for an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120; and (B) the IDS submitted in the earlier application complies with 37 CFR 1.98(a)-(c). If both of these conditions are met, the examiner will consider the information previously cited or submitted to the Office and considered by the Office in a prior application relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120. This exception to the requirement for copies of information does not apply to information which was cited in an international application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty. If the information cited or submitted in the prior application was not in English, a concise explanation of the relevance of the information to the new application is not required unless the relevance of the information differs from its relevance as explained in the prior application. See subsection III. below.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)Article 19 Amendment ScopePCT Article 19 AmendmentsPCT Description and Claims
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-f61af683576b5024da9f4b0f]
Exceptions for Providing IDS Copies Not Required
Note:
Exceptions exist where a copy of information listed in an IDS is not required, including when the information was previously cited or submitted and complies with specific conditions.

A pending U.S. application only identified in the specification’s background information rather than being cited separately on an IDS listing is not part of an IDS submission. Therefore, the requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) of supplying a copy of the pending application is not applicable. Pursuant to 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii), applicant may choose to cite only a portion of a pending application including any claims directed to that portion rather than the entire application. There are exceptions to this requirement that a copy of the information must be provided. First, 37 CFR 1.98(d) states that a copy of any patent, publication, pending U.S. application, or other information listed in an information disclosure statement is not required to be provided if: (A) the information was previously cited by or submitted to, the Office in a prior application, provided that the prior application is properly identified in the IDS and is relied on for an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120; and (B) the IDS submitted in the earlier application complies with 37 CFR 1.98(a)-(c). If both of these conditions are met, the examiner will consider the information previously cited or submitted to the Office and considered by the Office in a prior application relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120. This exception to the requirement for copies of information does not apply to information which was cited in an international application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty. If the information cited or submitted in the prior application was not in English, a concise explanation of the relevance of the information to the new application is not required unless the relevance of the information differs from its relevance as explained in the prior application. See subsection III. below.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)Article 19 Amendment ScopeStatement Under Article 19PCT Description Requirements
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-566041d132a1c934909072a7]
Information from Prior Application Can Be Reused Without Copy
Note:
If a prior application is relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120, the examiner will consider information previously cited or submitted without requiring a copy if both conditions are met.

A pending U.S. application only identified in the specification’s background information rather than being cited separately on an IDS listing is not part of an IDS submission. Therefore, the requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) of supplying a copy of the pending application is not applicable. Pursuant to 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii), applicant may choose to cite only a portion of a pending application including any claims directed to that portion rather than the entire application. There are exceptions to this requirement that a copy of the information must be provided. First, 37 CFR 1.98(d) states that a copy of any patent, publication, pending U.S. application, or other information listed in an information disclosure statement is not required to be provided if: (A) the information was previously cited by or submitted to, the Office in a prior application, provided that the prior application is properly identified in the IDS and is relied on for an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120; and (B) the IDS submitted in the earlier application complies with 37 CFR 1.98(a)-(c). If both of these conditions are met, the examiner will consider the information previously cited or submitted to the Office and considered by the Office in a prior application relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120. This exception to the requirement for copies of information does not apply to information which was cited in an international application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty. If the information cited or submitted in the prior application was not in English, a concise explanation of the relevance of the information to the new application is not required unless the relevance of the information differs from its relevance as explained in the prior application. See subsection III. below.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)Article 19 Amendment ScopeStatement Under Article 19PCT Description Requirements
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-9c349f233b503653e2013eea]
Requirement for Citing Portions of Pending U.S. Applications in IDS
Note:
The rule requires that a pending U.S. application identified only in the specification’s background must be cited as a whole or in part, with claims directed to that portion if chosen, but not requiring submission of a copy unless previously cited under 35 U.S.C. 120.

A pending U.S. application only identified in the specification’s background information rather than being cited separately on an IDS listing is not part of an IDS submission. Therefore, the requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) of supplying a copy of the pending application is not applicable. Pursuant to 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii), applicant may choose to cite only a portion of a pending application including any claims directed to that portion rather than the entire application. There are exceptions to this requirement that a copy of the information must be provided. First, 37 CFR 1.98(d) states that a copy of any patent, publication, pending U.S. application, or other information listed in an information disclosure statement is not required to be provided if: (A) the information was previously cited by or submitted to, the Office in a prior application, provided that the prior application is properly identified in the IDS and is relied on for an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120; and (B) the IDS submitted in the earlier application complies with 37 CFR 1.98(a)-(c). If both of these conditions are met, the examiner will consider the information previously cited or submitted to the Office and considered by the Office in a prior application relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120. This exception to the requirement for copies of information does not apply to information which was cited in an international application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty. If the information cited or submitted in the prior application was not in English, a concise explanation of the relevance of the information to the new application is not required unless the relevance of the information differs from its relevance as explained in the prior application. See subsection III. below.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)Article 19 Amendment ScopeStatement Under Article 19PCT Description Requirements
Topic

IDS Fees and Certification

4 rules
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-52016d403c72e5c3745cb666]
Concise Explanation Required for Non-English IDS Listings
Note:
A concise explanation of relevance must be provided for non-English information disclosed, as understood by the most knowledgeable individual.

Each information disclosure statement must further include a concise explanation of the relevance, as it is presently understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information listed that is not in the English language. The concise explanation may be either separate from the specification or part of the specification. If the concise explanation is part of the specification, the IDS listing should include the page(s) or line(s) numbers where the concise explanation is located in the specification.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)IDS Fees and CertificationInformation Disclosure StatementDuty of Disclosure
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-bfb2a795f1ebbf26dc80c8ac]
IDS Concise Explanation Required for Non-English References
Note:
An IDS must include a concise explanation of non-English references, either as part of the specification or in a separate section.

Each information disclosure statement must further include a concise explanation of the relevance, as it is presently understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information listed that is not in the English language. The concise explanation may be either separate from the specification or part of the specification. If the concise explanation is part of the specification, the IDS listing should include the page(s) or line(s) numbers where the concise explanation is located in the specification.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)IDS Fees and CertificationInformation Disclosure StatementDuty of Disclosure
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-f822f5c707366413dd22e8d8]
Requirement for English Language Equivalent Application
Note:
An English-language equivalent application must be submitted if it is a translation of a foreign language application listed in an information disclosure statement.

The requirement for a concise explanation of relevance is limited to information that is not in the English language. The explanation required is limited to the relevance as understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information at the time the information is submitted to the Office. If a complete translation of the information into English is submitted with the non-English language information, no concise explanation is required. There is no requirement for the translation to be verified, including reliable machine translations. An English-language equivalent application may be submitted to fulfill this requirement if it is, in fact, a translation of a foreign language application being listed in an information disclosure statement. The English language equivalent application should be separately listed and identified as an English language equivalent in the information disclosure statement. Submission of an English language abstract of a reference, such as one generated by a foreign patent office, may fulfill the requirement for a concise explanation. Where the information listed is not in the English language, but was cited in a search report or other action by a foreign patent office in a counterpart foreign application, the requirement for a concise explanation of relevance can be satisfied by submitting an English-language version of the search report or action which indicates the degree of relevance found by the foreign office. This may be an explanation of which portion of the reference is particularly relevant, to which claims it applies, or merely an “X”, “Y”, or “A” indication on a search report. The requirement for a concise explanation of non-English language information would not be satisfied by a statement that a reference was cited in the prosecution of a United States application which is not relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)IDS Fees and CertificationInformation Disclosure StatementTiming of Duty
StatutoryRecommendedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-0216a4d84f6a7b2ecc88fd23]
Requirement for English Language Equivalent Application
Note:
An English language equivalent application must be separately listed and identified as such in the information disclosure statement if a foreign language application is submitted.

The requirement for a concise explanation of relevance is limited to information that is not in the English language. The explanation required is limited to the relevance as understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information at the time the information is submitted to the Office. If a complete translation of the information into English is submitted with the non-English language information, no concise explanation is required. There is no requirement for the translation to be verified, including reliable machine translations. An English-language equivalent application may be submitted to fulfill this requirement if it is, in fact, a translation of a foreign language application being listed in an information disclosure statement. The English language equivalent application should be separately listed and identified as an English language equivalent in the information disclosure statement. Submission of an English language abstract of a reference, such as one generated by a foreign patent office, may fulfill the requirement for a concise explanation. Where the information listed is not in the English language, but was cited in a search report or other action by a foreign patent office in a counterpart foreign application, the requirement for a concise explanation of relevance can be satisfied by submitting an English-language version of the search report or action which indicates the degree of relevance found by the foreign office. This may be an explanation of which portion of the reference is particularly relevant, to which claims it applies, or merely an “X”, “Y”, or “A” indication on a search report. The requirement for a concise explanation of non-English language information would not be satisfied by a statement that a reference was cited in the prosecution of a United States application which is not relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)IDS Fees and CertificationInformation Disclosure StatementTiming of Duty
Topic

Sequence Listing Format

3 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-542e018f0f9fff47ec017dd1]
Information Disclosure Statement Must Follow Specific Format
Note:
The rule requires that an IDS listing include a specified format for each page, separate sections for U.S. patents and patent publications, a column for examiner initials, and a heading identifying the list as an IDS.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) requires the following format for an IDS listing: (A) a specified format/identification for each page of an IDS, and that U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications be listed in a section separately from citations of other documents; (B) a column that provides a space next to each document listed to permit the examiner’s initials; and (C) a heading that identifies the list as an IDS.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)Sequence Listing FormatSequence Listing Requirements
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-05383c1450c372fcd0c0b007]
Electronic IDSs Permitted Only Through USPTO System or Specific Disc Formats
Note:
This rule permits electronic submission of IDSs only through the USPTO patent electronic filing system or specific disc formats for large tables, computer program listings, and sequence listings.

Electronic means or medium for filing IDSs are not permitted except for: (A) IDSs electronically submitted using the USPTO patent electronic filing system (see MPEP § 609.07); or (B) copies of large tables, computer program listings, and sequence listings submitted as a PDF file and a “Sequence Listing XML” submitted as an XML file on a read-only optical disc in compliance with 37 CFR 1.52(e)(2) and (3) which are cited in a paper IDS. A read-only optical disc cannot be used to submit an IDS listing or copies of the documents cited in the IDS (except for large tables, a computer program listing, a sequence listing, and a “Sequence Listing XML”, discussed above). For example, published information, such as the visual output of a software program or a video, may be submitted only if reduced to writing, such as in the form of screen shots and/or a transcript.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.52(e)(2)Sequence Listing FormatSequence Listing RequirementsPDF Document Requirements
StatutoryProhibitedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-dda2d7231e2338b28ed038a4]
Read-Only Optical Discs Prohibited for IDS Listings
Note:
An optical disc cannot be used to submit an IDS listing or documents cited in the IDS, except for large tables, computer program listings, sequence listings, and Sequence Listing XML files.

Electronic means or medium for filing IDSs are not permitted except for: (A) IDSs electronically submitted using the USPTO patent electronic filing system (see MPEP § 609.07); or (B) copies of large tables, computer program listings, and sequence listings submitted as a PDF file and a “Sequence Listing XML” submitted as an XML file on a read-only optical disc in compliance with 37 CFR 1.52(e)(2) and (3) which are cited in a paper IDS. A read-only optical disc cannot be used to submit an IDS listing or copies of the documents cited in the IDS (except for large tables, a computer program listing, a sequence listing, and a “Sequence Listing XML”, discussed above). For example, published information, such as the visual output of a software program or a video, may be submitted only if reduced to writing, such as in the form of screen shots and/or a transcript.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.52(e)(2)Sequence Listing FormatSequence Listing RequirementsPDF Document Requirements
Topic

Amendments Adding New Matter

3 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-ec762660957b499d11dfaddd]
Copy Required for Cited Pending U.S. Applications
Note:
A copy of a pending U.S. application must be provided if the cited information is not part of the specification or drawings, or if the application is not stored in the USPTO’s IFW system.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) requires a copy of a pending U.S. application that is being cited in an IDS if (A) the cited information is not part of the specification, including the claims, and the drawings (e.g., an Office Action, remarks in an amendment paper, etc.), or (B) the cited application is not stored in the USPTO’s IFW system. The requirement in 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) for a legible copy of the specification, including the claims, and drawings of each cited pending U.S. patent application (or portion of the application which caused it to be listed) is sua sponte waived where the cited pending application is stored in the USPTO’s IFW system. This waiver is limited to the specification, including the claims, and drawings in the U.S. application (or portion of the application). If material other than the specification, including the claims, and drawings in the file of a U.S. patent application is being cited in an IDS, the IDS must contain a legible copy of such material.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)Amendments Adding New MatterAmendments to ApplicationExamination Procedures
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-beed0f72d700cc74624a3788]
Specification and Drawings Not Required for Cited Pending Applications in IFW System
Note:
If a pending U.S. patent application cited in an IDS is stored in the USPTO’s IFW system, the requirement to submit a legible copy of its specification, including claims and drawings is waived.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) requires a copy of a pending U.S. application that is being cited in an IDS if (A) the cited information is not part of the specification, including the claims, and the drawings (e.g., an Office Action, remarks in an amendment paper, etc.), or (B) the cited application is not stored in the USPTO’s IFW system. The requirement in 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) for a legible copy of the specification, including the claims, and drawings of each cited pending U.S. patent application (or portion of the application which caused it to be listed) is sua sponte waived where the cited pending application is stored in the USPTO’s IFW system. This waiver is limited to the specification, including the claims, and drawings in the U.S. application (or portion of the application). If material other than the specification, including the claims, and drawings in the file of a U.S. patent application is being cited in an IDS, the IDS must contain a legible copy of such material.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)Amendments Adding New MatterAmendments to ApplicationSIR Patent Rights Waiver
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-1bdfc9bfdfba097ca1cb2757]
Copy of Non-Specification Material Required in IDS
Note:
If material other than the specification, including claims and drawings is cited in an IDS, a legible copy must be included.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) requires a copy of a pending U.S. application that is being cited in an IDS if (A) the cited information is not part of the specification, including the claims, and the drawings (e.g., an Office Action, remarks in an amendment paper, etc.), or (B) the cited application is not stored in the USPTO’s IFW system. The requirement in 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) for a legible copy of the specification, including the claims, and drawings of each cited pending U.S. patent application (or portion of the application which caused it to be listed) is sua sponte waived where the cited pending application is stored in the USPTO’s IFW system. This waiver is limited to the specification, including the claims, and drawings in the U.S. application (or portion of the application). If material other than the specification, including the claims, and drawings in the file of a U.S. patent application is being cited in an IDS, the IDS must contain a legible copy of such material.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)Amendments Adding New MatterAmendments to ApplicationSIR Patent Rights Waiver
Topic

PTAB Contested Case Procedures

2 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-42e1604880ef0f0f63335f3a]
IDS List Must Include Clear Heading
Note:
Each page of the IDS list must have a heading indicating it is an IDS to ensure proper treatment and reduce handling errors.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) also requires that each page of the list include a heading that clearly indicates that the list is an IDS. Since the Office treats an IDS submitted by the applicant differently than information submitted by a third party, a heading on each page of the list to indicate that the list is an IDS would promote proper treatment of the IDS submitted by the applicant and reduce handling errors.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)PTAB Contested Case Procedures
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-4590a1d4425eb736f306e2c6]
Heading Required for IDS Submitted by Applicant
Note:
Each page of an IDS submitted by the applicant must include a heading indicating it is an IDS to ensure proper treatment and reduce handling errors.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(1) also requires that each page of the list include a heading that clearly indicates that the list is an IDS. Since the Office treats an IDS submitted by the applicant differently than information submitted by a third party, a heading on each page of the list to indicate that the list is an IDS would promote proper treatment of the IDS submitted by the applicant and reduce handling errors.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(1)PTAB Contested Case Procedures
Topic

Types of Office Actions

2 rules
StatutoryPermittedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-f8cc0b88e4a81f84dfd0a671]
Pending U.S. Applications Can Be Listed Separately
Note:
Allows pending U.S. applications cited in an Information Disclosure Statement to be listed under the non-patent literature section or a new appropriately labeled section.

Pending U.S. applications that are being cited can be listed under the non-patent literature section or in a new section appropriately labeled. If applicant seeks consideration of documents other than the specification (including the claims) and drawings of an application, for example, Office actions, applicant must list such documents separately under the non-patent literature section or in a new section appropriately labeled. The USPTO would be understood to be the publisher/place of publication for a listed U.S. Office action or a U.S. application. Similarly, the foreign or international entity (e.g., WIPO, EPO) would be understood to be the publisher/place of publication for a listed foreign or international search report.

Jump to MPEP SourceTypes of Office ActionsExaminer's Action (37 CFR 1.104)Office Actions and Responses
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-919f1b20e0862ed9a94ad1cf]
USPTO Is Publisher for U.S. Office Actions and Applications
Note:
The USPTO is considered the publisher/place of publication for listed U.S. Office actions and applications.

Pending U.S. applications that are being cited can be listed under the non-patent literature section or in a new section appropriately labeled. If applicant seeks consideration of documents other than the specification (including the claims) and drawings of an application, for example, Office actions, applicant must list such documents separately under the non-patent literature section or in a new section appropriately labeled. The USPTO would be understood to be the publisher/place of publication for a listed U.S. Office action or a U.S. application. Similarly, the foreign or international entity (e.g., WIPO, EPO) would be understood to be the publisher/place of publication for a listed foreign or international search report.

Jump to MPEP SourceTypes of Office ActionsExaminer's Action (37 CFR 1.104)Office Actions and Responses
Topic

Translations for Foreign References

2 rules
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-d7a85ed790b06d14e926f158]
Translations Must Be Written and Actual
Note:
Translators must prepare written translations of non-English documents for filing, which must accurately represent the original content.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(3)(ii) states that if a written English language translation of a non-English language document, or portion thereof, is within the possession, custody or control of, or is readily available to any individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c), a copy of the translation shall accompany the statement. Translations are not required to be filed unless they have been reduced to writing and are actually translations of what is contained in the non-English language information. If no translation is submitted, the examiner will consider the information in view of the concise explanation and insofar as it is understood on its face, e.g., drawings, chemical formulas, English language abstracts, in the same manner that non-English language information in Office search files is considered by examiners in conducting searches.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(3)(ii)Translations for Foreign ReferencesInformation Disclosure StatementCopies of References (1.98(a)(2))
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-4020342cc0f63818dd3ab444]
No Translation Requirement
Note:
Examiner will consider non-English information based on concise explanation and other understandable elements if no translation is provided.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(3)(ii) states that if a written English language translation of a non-English language document, or portion thereof, is within the possession, custody or control of, or is readily available to any individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c), a copy of the translation shall accompany the statement. Translations are not required to be filed unless they have been reduced to writing and are actually translations of what is contained in the non-English language information. If no translation is submitted, the examiner will consider the information in view of the concise explanation and insofar as it is understood on its face, e.g., drawings, chemical formulas, English language abstracts, in the same manner that non-English language information in Office search files is considered by examiners in conducting searches.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(3)(ii)Translations for Foreign ReferencesExaminer Consideration of IDSInformation Disclosure Statement
Topic

Patent Application Content

1 rules
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-df81b7bcd479a23757e691e2]
Pending US Applications Must Be Listed Separately
Note:
If an applicant seeks consideration of documents other than the specification and drawings, such as Office actions, they must be listed separately in the Information Disclosure Statement.

Pending U.S. applications that are being cited can be listed under the non-patent literature section or in a new section appropriately labeled. If applicant seeks consideration of documents other than the specification (including the claims) and drawings of an application, for example, Office actions, applicant must list such documents separately under the non-patent literature section or in a new section appropriately labeled. The USPTO would be understood to be the publisher/place of publication for a listed U.S. Office action or a U.S. application. Similarly, the foreign or international entity (e.g., WIPO, EPO) would be understood to be the publisher/place of publication for a listed foreign or international search report.

Jump to MPEP SourcePatent Application ContentTypes of Office ActionsExaminer's Action (37 CFR 1.104)
Topic

Application Publication

1 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-d3c21c12d8680a65454321bc]
Publisher for Foreign Search Report
Note:
The foreign or international entity, such as WIPO or EPO, is considered the publisher/place of publication for a listed foreign or international search report.

Pending U.S. applications that are being cited can be listed under the non-patent literature section or in a new section appropriately labeled. If applicant seeks consideration of documents other than the specification (including the claims) and drawings of an application, for example, Office actions, applicant must list such documents separately under the non-patent literature section or in a new section appropriately labeled. The USPTO would be understood to be the publisher/place of publication for a listed U.S. Office action or a U.S. application. Similarly, the foreign or international entity (e.g., WIPO, EPO) would be understood to be the publisher/place of publication for a listed foreign or international search report.

Jump to MPEP SourceApplication PublicationTypes of Office ActionsExaminer's Action (37 CFR 1.104)
Topic

Copies and Certified Documents

1 rules
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-f816aefa9799b465cc5f3017]
Information Disclosure Statement Must Include Copies of Listed Items
Note:
Each information disclosure statement must include a legible copy of each foreign patent, publication, and other listed items as required by the Office.
In addition to the list of information, each information disclosure statement must also include a legible copy of:
  • (A) Each foreign patent;
  • (B) Each publication or that portion which caused it to be listed, other than U.S. patents and U.S. patent application publications unless required by the Office;
  • (C) For each cited pending unpublished U.S. application, the application specification including the claims, and any drawings of the application, or that portion of the application which caused it to be listed including any claims directed to that portion, unless the cited pending U.S. application is stored in the Image File Wrapper (IFW) system. The requirement in 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) for a legible copy of the specification, including the claims, and drawings of each cited pending U.S. patent application (or portion of the application which caused it to be listed) is sua sponte waived where the cited pending application is stored in the USPTO’s IFW system. See Waiver of the Copy Requirement in 37 CFR 1.98 for Cited Pending U.S. Patent Applications, 1287 OG 163 (October 19, 2004); and
  • (D) All other information or that portion which caused it to be listed.
Jump to MPEP SourceCopies and Certified DocumentsAccess to Pending ApplicationsAccess to Application Files
Topic

SIR Patent Rights Waiver

1 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-6a22f7158dec6f6bfbab9b1b]
Waiver for U.S. Application Citations in IDS
Note:
This rule waives the requirement to submit a legible copy of the specification, claims, and drawings when citing a pending U.S. application in an IDS if it is stored in the USPTO’s IFW system.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) requires a copy of a pending U.S. application that is being cited in an IDS if (A) the cited information is not part of the specification, including the claims, and the drawings (e.g., an Office Action, remarks in an amendment paper, etc.), or (B) the cited application is not stored in the USPTO’s IFW system. The requirement in 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) for a legible copy of the specification, including the claims, and drawings of each cited pending U.S. patent application (or portion of the application which caused it to be listed) is sua sponte waived where the cited pending application is stored in the USPTO’s IFW system. This waiver is limited to the specification, including the claims, and drawings in the U.S. application (or portion of the application). If material other than the specification, including the claims, and drawings in the file of a U.S. patent application is being cited in an IDS, the IDS must contain a legible copy of such material.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)SIR Patent Rights WaiverStatutory Invention Registration (Discontinued)Amendments Adding New Matter
Topic

PCT Description and Claims

1 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-b058687922a24adb1af92b9f]
Background Information Not Part of IDS Submission
Note:
A pending U.S. application identified only in the background section is not considered part of an IDS submission, thus no copy of it needs to be provided as required by 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii).

A pending U.S. application only identified in the specification’s background information rather than being cited separately on an IDS listing is not part of an IDS submission. Therefore, the requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) of supplying a copy of the pending application is not applicable. Pursuant to 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii), applicant may choose to cite only a portion of a pending application including any claims directed to that portion rather than the entire application. There are exceptions to this requirement that a copy of the information must be provided. First, 37 CFR 1.98(d) states that a copy of any patent, publication, pending U.S. application, or other information listed in an information disclosure statement is not required to be provided if: (A) the information was previously cited by or submitted to, the Office in a prior application, provided that the prior application is properly identified in the IDS and is relied on for an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120; and (B) the IDS submitted in the earlier application complies with 37 CFR 1.98(a)-(c). If both of these conditions are met, the examiner will consider the information previously cited or submitted to the Office and considered by the Office in a prior application relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120. This exception to the requirement for copies of information does not apply to information which was cited in an international application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty. If the information cited or submitted in the prior application was not in English, a concise explanation of the relevance of the information to the new application is not required unless the relevance of the information differs from its relevance as explained in the prior application. See subsection III. below.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)PCT Description and ClaimsArticle 19 Amendment ScopeStatement Under Article 19
Topic

Statement Under Article 19

1 rules
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-cce48ca712c0d87aae7c82dd]
Previous IDS Submission Requirement
Note:
A copy of information previously cited in a prior application and relied on for an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120 is not required to be provided if the current IDS complies with 37 CFR 1.98(a)-(c).

A pending U.S. application only identified in the specification’s background information rather than being cited separately on an IDS listing is not part of an IDS submission. Therefore, the requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) of supplying a copy of the pending application is not applicable. Pursuant to 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii), applicant may choose to cite only a portion of a pending application including any claims directed to that portion rather than the entire application. There are exceptions to this requirement that a copy of the information must be provided. First, 37 CFR 1.98(d) states that a copy of any patent, publication, pending U.S. application, or other information listed in an information disclosure statement is not required to be provided if: (A) the information was previously cited by or submitted to, the Office in a prior application, provided that the prior application is properly identified in the IDS and is relied on for an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120; and (B) the IDS submitted in the earlier application complies with 37 CFR 1.98(a)-(c). If both of these conditions are met, the examiner will consider the information previously cited or submitted to the Office and considered by the Office in a prior application relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120. This exception to the requirement for copies of information does not apply to information which was cited in an international application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty. If the information cited or submitted in the prior application was not in English, a concise explanation of the relevance of the information to the new application is not required unless the relevance of the information differs from its relevance as explained in the prior application. See subsection III. below.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)Statement Under Article 19PCT Description RequirementsInternational Filing Date
Topic

PCT International Application Filing

1 rules
StatutoryInformativeAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-a1055fd03897a33a57f4f67d]
Exception for PCT Cited Information
Note:
This exception does not require providing a copy of information cited in an international application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty.

A pending U.S. application only identified in the specification’s background information rather than being cited separately on an IDS listing is not part of an IDS submission. Therefore, the requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) of supplying a copy of the pending application is not applicable. Pursuant to 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii), applicant may choose to cite only a portion of a pending application including any claims directed to that portion rather than the entire application. There are exceptions to this requirement that a copy of the information must be provided. First, 37 CFR 1.98(d) states that a copy of any patent, publication, pending U.S. application, or other information listed in an information disclosure statement is not required to be provided if: (A) the information was previously cited by or submitted to, the Office in a prior application, provided that the prior application is properly identified in the IDS and is relied on for an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120; and (B) the IDS submitted in the earlier application complies with 37 CFR 1.98(a)-(c). If both of these conditions are met, the examiner will consider the information previously cited or submitted to the Office and considered by the Office in a prior application relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120. This exception to the requirement for copies of information does not apply to information which was cited in an international application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty. If the information cited or submitted in the prior application was not in English, a concise explanation of the relevance of the information to the new application is not required unless the relevance of the information differs from its relevance as explained in the prior application. See subsection III. below.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)PCT International Application FilingPatent Cooperation TreatyArticle 19 Amendment Scope
Topic

Publication Language

1 rules
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-fa18cc67065f30a8517a924b]
English Explanation Not Required for Non-English Prior App Info
Note:
If prior application information was not in English, a concise explanation of relevance is not required unless it differs from the previous explanation.

A pending U.S. application only identified in the specification’s background information rather than being cited separately on an IDS listing is not part of an IDS submission. Therefore, the requirements of 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii) of supplying a copy of the pending application is not applicable. Pursuant to 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii), applicant may choose to cite only a portion of a pending application including any claims directed to that portion rather than the entire application. There are exceptions to this requirement that a copy of the information must be provided. First, 37 CFR 1.98(d) states that a copy of any patent, publication, pending U.S. application, or other information listed in an information disclosure statement is not required to be provided if: (A) the information was previously cited by or submitted to, the Office in a prior application, provided that the prior application is properly identified in the IDS and is relied on for an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120; and (B) the IDS submitted in the earlier application complies with 37 CFR 1.98(a)-(c). If both of these conditions are met, the examiner will consider the information previously cited or submitted to the Office and considered by the Office in a prior application relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120. This exception to the requirement for copies of information does not apply to information which was cited in an international application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty. If the information cited or submitted in the prior application was not in English, a concise explanation of the relevance of the information to the new application is not required unless the relevance of the information differs from its relevance as explained in the prior application. See subsection III. below.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(2)(iii)Publication LanguageArticle 19 Amendment ScopeStatement Under Article 19
Topic

Copies of References (1.98(a)(2))

1 rules
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-f4cb431f47fde910b5e39908]
Translation of Non-English Documents Required If Available
Note:
If a non-English document's English translation is available, it must be provided with the statement.

37 CFR 1.98(a)(3)(ii) states that if a written English language translation of a non-English language document, or portion thereof, is within the possession, custody or control of, or is readily available to any individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c), a copy of the translation shall accompany the statement. Translations are not required to be filed unless they have been reduced to writing and are actually translations of what is contained in the non-English language information. If no translation is submitted, the examiner will consider the information in view of the concise explanation and insofar as it is understood on its face, e.g., drawings, chemical formulas, English language abstracts, in the same manner that non-English language information in Office search files is considered by examiners in conducting searches.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.98(a)(3)(ii)Copies of References (1.98(a)(2))Translations for Foreign ReferencesIDS Content Requirements
Topic

Information Disclosure Statement

1 rules
StatutoryRecommendedAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-097a33fc490a6267c776b342]
Concise Explanation for Non-English IDS Listings Must Be Included
Note:
The concise explanation of the non-English content must be included in the IDS and referenced with page or line numbers if part of the specification.

Each information disclosure statement must further include a concise explanation of the relevance, as it is presently understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information listed that is not in the English language. The concise explanation may be either separate from the specification or part of the specification. If the concise explanation is part of the specification, the IDS listing should include the page(s) or line(s) numbers where the concise explanation is located in the specification.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)Information Disclosure StatementIDS Fees and CertificationDuty of Disclosure
Topic

Duty of Disclosure Fundamentals

1 rules
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-55e4be6b7f065af19a1cc3ad]
Requirement for Concise Explanation of Non-English References
Note:
Individual most knowledgeable about non-English information must provide a concise explanation of its relevance.

The requirement for a concise explanation of relevance is limited to information that is not in the English language. The explanation required is limited to the relevance as understood by the individual designated in 37 CFR 1.56(c) most knowledgeable about the content of the information at the time the information is submitted to the Office. If a complete translation of the information into English is submitted with the non-English language information, no concise explanation is required. There is no requirement for the translation to be verified, including reliable machine translations. An English-language equivalent application may be submitted to fulfill this requirement if it is, in fact, a translation of a foreign language application being listed in an information disclosure statement. The English language equivalent application should be separately listed and identified as an English language equivalent in the information disclosure statement. Submission of an English language abstract of a reference, such as one generated by a foreign patent office, may fulfill the requirement for a concise explanation. Where the information listed is not in the English language, but was cited in a search report or other action by a foreign patent office in a counterpart foreign application, the requirement for a concise explanation of relevance can be satisfied by submitting an English-language version of the search report or action which indicates the degree of relevance found by the foreign office. This may be an explanation of which portion of the reference is particularly relevant, to which claims it applies, or merely an “X”, “Y”, or “A” indication on a search report. The requirement for a concise explanation of non-English language information would not be satisfied by a statement that a reference was cited in the prosecution of a United States application which is not relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120.

Jump to MPEP Source · 37 CFR 1.56(c)Duty of Disclosure FundamentalsDuty of DisclosureTiming of Duty
Topic

Continuation Benefit Claims

1 rules
StatutoryRequiredAlways
[mpep-609-04-a-54501ef47886425a2e21e2a2]
Requirement for Explaining Non-English Information Differently if Relevant Changes
Note:
If information from a prior application not in English is cited, an explanation of its relevance to the new application is only required if the relevance has changed.

If information cited or submitted in a prior application relied on under 35 U.S.C. 120 was not in English, a concise explanation of the relevance of the information to the new application is not required unless the relevance of the information differs from its relevance as explained in the prior application.

Jump to MPEP SourceContinuation Benefit ClaimsDomestic Benefit Claims (35 U.S.C. 120/121)Priority and Benefit Claims

Citations

Primary topicCitation
Article 19 Amendment Scope
Continuation Benefit Claims
Duty of Disclosure Fundamentals
IDS Fees and Certification
PCT Description and Claims
PCT International Application Filing
Publication Language
Statement Under Article 19
Timing of Duty
35 U.S.C. § 120
Sequence Listing Format37 CFR § 1.52(e)(2)
Copies of References (1.98(a)(2))
Duty of Disclosure Fundamentals
IDS Fees and Certification
Information Disclosure Statement
Timing of Duty
Translations for Foreign References
37 CFR § 1.56(c)
37 CFR § 1.97(f)
Copies and Certified Documents37 CFR § 1.98
Article 19 Amendment Scope
PCT Description and Claims
PCT International Application Filing
Publication Language
Statement Under Article 19
37 CFR § 1.98(a)
Content of Patent Application Publication
PTAB Contested Case Procedures
Sequence Listing Format
Sequence Listing Requirements
Transmittal Content
37 CFR § 1.98(a)(1)
Content of Patent Application Publication37 CFR § 1.98(a)(2)
Amendments Adding New Matter
Article 19 Amendment Scope
Copies and Certified Documents
PCT Description and Claims
PCT International Application Filing
Publication Language
SIR Patent Rights Waiver
Statement Under Article 19
37 CFR § 1.98(a)(2)(iii)
Copies of References (1.98(a)(2))
Translations for Foreign References
37 CFR § 1.98(a)(3)(ii)
Foreign Priority Claims
Transmittal Content
37 CFR § 1.98(b)
Sequence Listing Requirements37 CFR § 1.98(c)
Article 19 Amendment Scope
PCT Description and Claims
PCT International Application Filing
Publication Language
Statement Under Article 19
37 CFR § 1.98(d)
MPEP § 609.04(b)
Sequence Listing FormatMPEP § 609.07
Foreign Priority Claims
Sequence Listing Requirements
MPEP § 707.05(e)
Form Paragraph § 6.51
Sequence Listing RequirementsBut see Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co. v. Samsung Electronics Co., 204 F.3d 1368, 1374, 54 USPQ2d 1001, 1005 (Fed. Cir. 2000)
see Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co. v. Samsung Electronics Co., 204 F.3d 1368, 1376, 54 USPQ2d 1001, 1007 (Fed. Cir. 2000)

Source Text from USPTO’s MPEP

This is an exact copy of the MPEP from the USPTO. It is here for your reference to see the section in context.

BlueIron Last Updated: 2025-12-31