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Expert Patent Revocation services for Indian businesses — transparent pricing, CA-led execution.
Patent revocation (also called patent invalidation) is the legal process of having a granted patent declared invalid and removed from the patent register. Under Section 64 of the Patents Act, 1970, a revocation petition can be filed before the Intellectual Property Appellate Board (IPAB) or, in certain counter-claim situations, before a High Court. The grounds for revocation are identical to the grounds for patent opposition (Section 25) but are available at any time during the patent’s lifetime — there is no one-year time limit. Revocation is the nuclear option in patent disputes. It is typically pursued when a competitor’s patent is blocking your product launch, when you are defending a patent infringement suit by challenging the validity of the plaintiff’s patent, or when a patent holder is asserting rights that are broader than what was actually invented. The revocation petition must establish, with evidence, that the patent does not meet one or more of the patentability criteria — novelty, inventive step, or industrial application — or that it falls within the Section 3 exclusions, or that it was obtained through fraud or non-disclosure of material information. The revocation process is adversarial and technically rigorous. The petitioner must present a detailed invalidity case supported by prior art documents (patents, research papers, product manuals, public disclosures), technical arguments showing that the invention was obvious or anticipated, and legal arguments on the proper interpretation of the patent claims. The patent holder (respondent) defends the patent’s validity. The IPAB hears both sides and issues a final order that can be further appealed to the High Court. The entire process typically takes 2 to 4 years.
Any "person interested" (a competitor, researcher, or entity affected by the patent) or the Central Government can file a patent revocation petition in India under Section 64.
Starting at
Money-back₹5,000 Professional Fee
Professional Fee: ₹5,000 | Govt Fee: ₹0 | Total: ₹5,000 (incl. govt fees)
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Starting price
₹5,000
Turnaround
7-10 Days
Govt fees
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Validity
Lifetime
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Patent revocation (also called patent invalidation) is the legal process of having a granted patent declared invalid and removed from the patent register. Under Section 64 of the Patents Act, 1970, a revocation petition can be filed before the Intellectual Property Appellate Board (IPAB) or, in certain counter-claim situations, before a High Court. The grounds for revocation are identical to the grounds for patent opposition (Section 25) but are available at any time during the patent’s lifetime — there is no one-year time limit. Revocation is the nuclear option in patent disputes. It is typically pursued when a competitor’s patent is blocking your product launch, when you are defending a patent infringement suit by challenging the validity of the plaintiff’s patent, or when a patent holder is asserting rights that are broader than what was actually invented. The revocation petition must establish, with evidence, that the patent does not meet one or more of the patentability criteria — novelty, inventive step, or industrial application — or that it falls within the Section 3 exclusions, or that it was obtained through fraud or non-disclosure of material information. The revocation process is adversarial and technically rigorous. The petitioner must present a detailed invalidity case supported by prior art documents (patents, research papers, product manuals, public disclosures), technical arguments showing that the invention was obvious or anticipated, and legal arguments on the proper interpretation of the patent claims. The patent holder (respondent) defends the patent’s validity. The IPAB hears both sides and issues a final order that can be further appealed to the High Court. The entire process typically takes 2 to 4 years.
Any "person interested" (a competitor, researcher, or entity affected by the patent) or the Central Government can file a patent revocation petition in India under Section 64.
Everything in one transparent fee — no add-ons, no surprises.
What's included
Document preparation
We draft, review and assemble every document your filing requires.
Government filing
Submitted to the correct authority with the right fees, first time.
Status tracking
Real-time updates in your client portal until you get the certificate.
Accuracy guarantee
Refile-for-free if rejected due to our error, plus a fee refund.
Transparent, all-inclusive — no hidden line items.
I-Pro specialist handling, drafting & filing
Statutory fee, passed through at cost
Inclusive of professional + estimated govt fee
Professional Fee: ₹5,000 | Govt Fee: ₹0 | Total: ₹5,000 (incl. govt fees)
Gather these before we begin to ensure a smooth filing process.
Predictable steps — zero surprises along the way.
Invalidity Search
Drafting the Petition
Filing in High Court