World Intellectual Property Day is observed each year on April 26.
World Intellectual Property Day is observed each year on April 26.
1footage/Envato

Rhode Island Commerce Launches Patent Grant Program Ahead of World Intellectual Property Day

Share
World Intellectual Property Day is observed each year on April 26.
World Intellectual Property Day is observed each year on April 26.
1footage/Envato
Rhode Island Commerce Launches Patent Grant Program Ahead of World Intellectual Property Day
Copy

Many fantasize about inventing the next “big thing.” But the cost of protecting their ideas from copycats can be a shocking dose of reality.

Rhode Island leaders want to help residents and small business owners achieve their dream inventions by helping pay for costs associated with a federal patent application. Gov Dan McKee and the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation are slated to unveil the new Invention Incentive Program Friday morning, one day before World Intellectual Property Day.

“When Rhode Islanders have a good idea, they should have a fair shot at protecting it,” McKee said in a statement. “By covering some of the upfront costs, this program gives Rhode Island inventors and small businesses the opportunity to take an important first step — protecting their ideas and setting the stage for what comes next.”

Costs to apply for a federal patent vary widely based on the type of patent and type of applicant, but range from $60 to more than $11,000, according to a fee schedule on the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office website. That does not include the cost to hire attorneys.

Rhode Island businesses with 500 or fewer employees, or individual residents, can apply to Rhode Island Commerce to receive reimbursement for up to $5,000 in application fees for provisional or nonprovisional patents, or costs associated with hiring a federally registered patent practitioner licensed in Rhode Island.

Grant applications open Friday and will be accepted through 5 p.m. on May 26.

“Innovation drives economic growth, and our small businesses are at the heart of that momentum,” Rhode Island Commerce Secretary Liz Tanner said in a statement. “This initiative is an investment for Rhode Island’s future — helping protect great ideas while empowering entrepreneurs to compete, grow, and lead.”

The grants are funded through a $1 million lump sum for “Innovation Initiatives” included in the state’s fiscal 2025 budget, $45,000 of which is set aside for patent grants, Matt Touchette, a Commerce spokesperson, said in an interview.

For more information or to apply, visit Commerce’s website.

This article was originally published by the Rhode Island Current.

A Wyoming-based firm has agreed to buy the Sunny Acres Trailer Park for $13 million. Because Rhode Island law grants trailer park residents a right of first refusal, Sharlene Patton is trying to convince her neighbors to buy the park themselves
A reprieve for the end of SNAP benefits, and Mayor Smiley on housing and other top Providence issues
A federal judge in Providence has ordered the USDA to release emergency funds to restore food assistance, siding with Rhode Island nonprofits and cities nationwide that sued over the shutdown’s freeze on SNAP benefits
The nonprofit trying to buy Roger Williams Medical Center and Our Lady of Fatima Hospital is still struggling to close its financing
Groups from Providence, Woonsocket and Central Falls say shutdown-related halt to food aid will strain local resources and leave families hungry