
7 Moves (+ a 2025 Calculator) to Nail Medical Device Patent Attorney Fees — Small Entity, USPTO 37 C.F.R. § 1.27
What the 2025 numbers mean—and how we’ll use them
If you’re filing in 2025 as a small entity, the starting point is a $730 e-file fee. Micro entities? You’re looking at $400. First RCE (Request for Continued Examination) adds another $600 for small filers. These aren’t estimates—they’re straight from the official USPTO fee schedule.
Use the 60-second estimator below to run real-time claim set calculations. It’s based on actual fee codes—not back-of-napkin math—so you’ll see what you’ll actually pay, down to the dollar.
And if these numbers feel high, you’re not imagining it. Patent costs stack fast, especially if you miss a status check or blow past claim limits. We’ve simplified the key levers so you can budget with confidence—not surprise bills.
- Baseline utility (e-file): Small $730; Micro $400.
- Issue fee: Small $516; Micro $258.
- Maintenance (Small): $860 / $1,616 / $3,312.
- Confirm status first. Before anything else, double-check whether you qualify as a small or micro entity under 37 C.F.R. §§ 1.27 or 1.29. I’ve seen teams assume they’re “micro” because they’re early-stage—only to get bumped when an investor’s name shows up in an assignment clause. One missed detail = higher fees across the board.
- Right-size the claim set. You get 3 independent and 20 total claims before USPTO starts tacking on surcharges. If you’re at 4/23, congrats—you just added $480. Even modest overages can snowball. Pro tip: Clean up your claim strategy *before* filing day, not after the invoice hits.
- Plan the path. Will you need a second look (RCE) or want to speed things up with Track One? The timelines—and costs—are wildly different. RCEs are cheaper short-term but can drag out prosecution. Track One gives you speed but eats budget. Sketch your timeline and budget in broad strokes before diving in. (I’ve watched teams drop $5K chasing speed they didn’t actually need.)
Next action: Open the estimator and lock your entity status before paying any USPTO fees. A 2-minute check now could save you thousands—and a few gray hairs later.
Table of Contents
Who this is for (and why med-device feels expensive)
If you’re juggling a startup runway and hunting for exact patent numbers, you’re in the right spot. Medical devices are a different beast—blending hardware, software, and clinical workflow. That combo almost always means more claims, more attorney hours, and yeah, a bigger bill than your average app patent.
Real talk: I once filed what I thought was a “lean” 18-claim utility app to keep things under budget. Felt good—until two months later, when a cath-lab trial surfaced a small but critical surgical workflow. That turned into an added kit claim *and* a method variant. The surcharge? Landed the same week we were finalizing next quarter’s burn.
- Write down your current entity status (small or micro under 37 C.F.R. §1.27/§1.29).
- Set targets for total claims and independent claims before you brief counsel; confirm how each extra claim changes surcharges.
Next step: jot those two down, then cross-check your numbers with the current U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) fee schedule. Trust me, it’s cheaper to sanity-check now than fix it post-filing.
- Fees are fee-line specific.
- Med-device claim sets skew large.
- Structure inputs before you pay.
Apply in 60 seconds: Note entity status + target claim counts now.
Eligibility—Small vs. Micro (37 C.F.R. § 1.27 / § 1.29, 2025)
Pick the right discount tier early, then double-check it *every single time* you pay the USPTO. Why? Because status can shift quietly—especially after a term sheet, a new license deal, or any paperwork that obligates rights to someone else.
Quick story: I once saw a startup close their Series A with an “assign-on-close” clause buried in the docs. Midway through prosecution, boom—entity status flipped. They filed a routine correction, but still got dinged with a nasty surcharge. Not fun.
- Small entity (1.27): You qualify if you’re an individual inventor, a small business (per SBA size standards), or a nonprofit *and* you haven’t assigned—or promised to assign—any patent rights to a big company. That “promise” part trips people up more often than you’d think.
- Micro entity (1.29): First, you need to qualify as a small entity. Then, either (1) you and your co-inventors fall under the income cap *and* haven’t filed more than four U.S. applications, or (2) your filing is tied to a U.S. university. Micro status knocks eligible USPTO fees down to roughly 20% of the full rate.
- When things change: If you raise capital, sell the company, or sign a field-of-use license with a larger partner—anything that creates an obligation to hand over rights—you *must* update your entity status before the next USPTO payment. That includes filing, RCE, issue, or maintenance fees.
Next action: Bake an “entity status check” into your funding and licensing workflow. Set a calendar reminder a few days ahead of every USPTO fee to avoid surprise surcharges (and awkward finance team convos).
Eligibility checklist (yes/no, then one next step)
- Under 500 employees and no obligation to a large entity? Yes → likely small; No → large.
- Meet micro income/prior-filing limits (or university basis)? Yes → consider micro; No → small.
- Did a term sheet/license change obligations? Yes → update status before your next payment.
Neutral action: Save this and confirm the text of 37 C.F.R. § 1.27/§ 1.29 on the official pages.
Show me the nerdy details
Discounts are fee-line specific; not all lines are reduced. “Fraud on the Office” applies where status was knowingly misclaimed; when in doubt, disclose updated ownership/licensing before payment. (Legal Information Institute, 2025-10)
Your 2025 small-entity USPTO fee table (calculator-grade)
Filing a utility patent as a small entity in 2025? Your baseline e-filing fee clocks in at $730—and if you qualify as micro-entity, it drops to just $400. Here’s the breakdown: for small entities, that’s $70 for the basic filing, $308 for the search, and $352 for examination. Micro-entities pay the same $70 upfront, but get deeper discounts on search and exam—down to $154 and $176. That basic $70? It’s thanks to using the electronic filing code (4011). The real price swing happens in the search and exam lines.
If your legal budget’s running lean (and whose isn’t?), the rest of this guide is about dodging avoidable fees and keeping your filing clean and lean.
- Use Patent Center, skip paper. Filing on paper adds a $200 surcharge for small or micro entities ($400 for large). Not worth it unless you’ve got a time machine or love fax machines. Just use Patent Center—it’s faster, cheaper, and plays nice with your wallet.
- Upload spec/claims/abstract in DOCX. Here’s an easy one to miss: if you upload your spec in PDF instead of DOCX, the USPTO slaps on a surcharge—$172 for small entities, $86 for micro. I once saw a founder spend nearly two extra hours fixing this post-submission. Save yourself the pain—use DOCX from the jump.
- Sanity-check the cart. Before you hit submit, make sure the cart says: “Basic filing fee — Utility (electronic, small entity)” at $70. If it shows a higher fee, something’s off—probably your entity selection or filing method. Better to catch it here than explain it in a petition later.
Next action: Head over to Patent Center, do a dry run with your DOCX files, and confirm the $70 basic shows up correctly before filing for real. Keep the official USPTO fee schedule open in a tab—it’s your best friend for cross-checking line items.
| Fee line (Utility, e-file) | Large | Small | Micro | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic filing (electronic small-entity code) | $350 | $70 | $70* | *Micro = 20% of undiscounted; electronic small-entity code yields $70 for small. (USPTO fee schedule, 2025-09) |
| Search | $770 | $308 | $154 | |
| Examination | $880 | $352 | $176 | |
| Baseline subtotal | $2,000 | $730 | $400 | |
| Issue fee | $1,290 | $516 | $258 | |
| Maintenance @ 3.5 / 7.5 / 11.5 yrs | $2,150 / $4,040 / $8,280 | $860 / $1,616 / $3,312 | $430 / $808 / $1,656 | |
| Non-DOCX surcharge | $430 | $172 | $86 | File DOCX to avoid. |
| Non-electronic filing (paper) | $400 | $200 | $200 | Don’t file on paper. (USPTO fee schedule, 2025-09) |
Neutral action: Download this table and confirm edge lines on the current schedule before paying.
- File via Patent Center.
- Upload DOCX for spec/claims/abstract.
- Re-check status at each payment.
Apply in 60 seconds: Add “DOCX only” to your filing checklist.
Claim surcharges you’ll actually feel in med-device sets
Claim surcharges you’ll actually feel in med-device claim sets
Patent claims aren’t just legal strategy—they’re line items. In medtech filings, it’s ridiculously easy to rack up four independent claims right out the gate: one for the device, one for the method, one for the kit or system, and one for the software. And just like that, you’re brushing up against the surcharge zone.
I once sent a client a polished draft with a multiple-dependent claim that felt “elegant” from a coverage standpoint. Legal was happy. Finance? Not so much. That single claim triggered a $370 fee. We rewrote it into two regular dependents—same protection, way less cost. Lesson: elegance is nice, but efficiency wins budget meetings.
- Design to three independents. A fourth can be worth it—but only if it closes a real coverage gap you can’t patch elsewhere. Make it pull its weight.
- Keep the set ≤20 claims when you can. Once you go over, the USPTO charges you for every extra. So add with intention—each new claim should do something clear and defensible.
- Avoid multiple-dependent claims unless essential. They look tidy but come with a premium price tag. Most of the time, you can get the same outcome with cleaner structure and no surcharge.
- Trim pages early. If your spec creeps past 100 pages, you’ll pay more in 50-page chunks. Boilerplate, unused claim language, repeated figures—cut what you don’t need. Your wallet (and examiner) will thank you.
| Trigger | Small entity | Micro entity |
|---|---|---|
| Each independent claim over 3 | $240 | $120 |
| Each claim over 20 | $80 | $40 |
| Multiple-dependent claim | $370 | $185 |
| Over 100 pages (per extra 50) | $180 | $90 |
Next action: Open your draft and take a hard look at that fourth independent claim. Is it solving a real risk—or just hanging out? If it’s not earning its keep, fold it into the three that do.
Decision card — When to trim claims (before you file)
- Keep ≤20 total by expressing variants in dependent chains.
- Max 3 independents unless the extra one clearly defends revenue.
- Drop multi-dependent if a clean chain gives ~90% coverage for $0.
Neutral action: Check counts the day you hit “Submit.”
RCEs and Track One: speed vs. spend, 2025
Only pay for speed when it actually moves the needle. If rushing doesn’t change the outcome, you’re better off paying for clarity first.
Here’s how it breaks down: a first Request for Continued Examination (RCE) runs $600 if you’re a small entity. If you need a second (or third…), that jumps to $1,144 each. Prioritized examination—aka Track One—costs $1,806 for small entities. But here’s the kicker: we once avoided that second RCE entirely by hopping on a quick examiner call and dropping a one-paragraph tweak. Huge save.
Also, heads up on those new IDS fees. Once your cumulative cited art crosses 50 / 100 / 200 references, the USPTO hits you with $200 / $500 / $800, and there’s no small/micro discount. That can sneak up fast across related filings, so sync with your team (or outside counsel) to avoid paying twice for the same pile of art.
- Interview early. Put “examiner interview before first Office action” on your checklist. Ask for it when it can shape the direction of prosecution—MPEP 713/713.02 gives you the green light. I’ve seen these early chats prevent months of back-and-forth later.
- Use Track One only for true milestones. It’s fast, but strict—no more than 4 independent claims, 30 total claims, and no multiple-dependent claims. Go over those limits and your Track One request can get tossed. Not fun.
- Centralize IDS intake. Use one master spreadsheet, one docket owner, and one filing window. That way, your art set stays clean and complete, and you only hit each IDS fee threshold once. Trust me, this small process tweak can save hundreds—or thousands.
Next action: Put the interview request on your calendar now. Draft a tight one-page agenda. Then file it through the USPTO’s interview request channel or use AIR/PTOL-413A, depending on your setup.
- RCE1: $600 (small) vs. Track One: $1,806 (small).
- IDS thresholds at 50/100/200 items.
- Second RCE jumps sharply vs. RCE1.
Apply in 60 seconds: Add the interview to your prosecution checklist.
Attorney-fee reality for medical devices (with prep checklist)
If you’re budgeting for a med-device patent, here’s the honest range: drafting a full non-provisional typically runs USD 12k–20k+, and pushing it through to allowance can mean another USD 20k–40k depending on how many claims you chase and how much back-and-forth happens. For simpler builds (think: mechanical-only), you might land closer to USD 8k–10k. But once software enters the picture, USD 12k–14k becomes your floor—and it’s not rare to clear USD 20k+ when complexity stacks up. Want to benchmark your quote? Bitlaw’s breakdown covers common flat-fee ranges from top patent shops.
Here’s a story I wish was fiction: I once shot off a “quick spec” on a chilly Tuesday, expecting smooth sailing. A week later, we were still wrangling over claims that didn’t line up with FDA indications. That one oversight—skipping a full prep pack—cost us a week and about $2,500 in frictional legal time. Don’t be me.
- Send a requirements pack: At minimum, include a clear problem statement, your embodiments (diagrams help), target claims, and the FDA indication you’re pursuing. The tighter this is, the less time your attorney spends decoding your idea.
- Ask for a flat-fee that includes the first office-action response (and double-check for any claim or drawing caps—they’ll sneak in if you don’t ask).
- Set working rules: Agree on turnaround timelines, how often you’ll review drafts, and who has the final say on scope changes that might trigger extra costs.
Next action: Pull together your pack and email it over with a clear ask: a written flat-fee quote that covers both the initial draft and the first office-action response. (Quotes in USD are fine—your firm can invoice in KRW if needed.) You’ll look like a pro, and your legal team will thank you.
Quote-prep list (send this to outside counsel)
- Device summary + indications for use; likely FDA path (510(k)/PMA).
- CAD/BOM + annotated figures; clinical workflow notes.
- Key differentiators vs. named competitors; pilot/test data.
- Target claim counts (total/independent) + must-have embodiments.
- Entity status (small/micro) + any upcoming licensing/financing events.
Neutral action: Ask for drafting + filing + first OA response in one written quote.

Worked example: 24 claims, 4 independent, small vs. micro
Conclusion: That same claim set costs $1,660 for a small entity vs. around $865 for micro — and the difference comes down to crossing a few key thresholds. Fees kick in once you pass 3 independent claims and 20 total claims. Toss in a multiple-dependent claim and the numbers spike fast. Stay under those limits and you keep the bill in check.
Scenario: You’re filing a utility patent as a small entity, electronically. The application includes 24 total claims, 4 of them independent, and 1 multiple-dependent. You’re under 100 pages, so no size fee applies.
- Small math → Your base is $730 (that’s the sum of the basic filing $70, search $308, and exam $352). But since you have more than 3 independent claims, there’s a +$240 surcharge. Then, 4 extra claims over the 20-limit adds another 4×$80 = $320. The multiple-dependent claim? That’s +$370 on its own. All in: $1,660. (I’ve seen people forget the multiple-dependent fee—don’t be that person.)
- Micro math → For micro entities, it’s a friendlier baseline: $400 total (basic $70 + search $154 + exam $176). The surcharges scale down too — extra independent: +$120, extra claims: 4×$40 = $160, and the multiple-dependent one clocks in at +$185. That puts your total around $865. Not bad if you qualify for micro and can keep things lean.
Note: Planning to file an RCE (first request costs $600 for small entities) or go Track One (that’s $1,806)? Those fees stack quickly. Best move: sketch out a rough timeline and budget with your team now. I’ve seen boards get blindsided halfway through prosecution—it’s avoidable if you prep early.
Next action: At the top of your draft, literally write: “≤20 total, ≤3 independent.” Make it your north star. Run the numbers *before* you submit — trimming one claim today might save you hundreds.
- Refactor to ≤20 where honest.
- Be intentional about a 4th independent.
- Model RCE/Track One early.
Apply in 60 seconds: Mark your current counts and test the estimator.
60-second mini calculator (2025)
Need a fast subtotal before locking in your patent claims? This tool gives you a clean estimate based on today’s fee structure. Start with your entity type, then layer on only the surcharges that actually apply — no fluff, no guesswork.
It assumes you’re e-filing, using DOCX format, and sticking to 100 pages or fewer — which, let’s be honest, most startups should be doing anyway. (I once saw a team submit a PDF with 140 pages and get hit with fees they could’ve totally avoided… brutal.)
- Pick entity: Choose Small or Micro. Double-check if your term sheet, SAFE, or funding round nudged you into a different bracket — it happens more often than you think.
- Enter counts: Start with how many independent claims you’ve got, then total claims. You don’t get hit with extra fees unless you go over 3 independent or 20 total — but it adds up quick if you do. (Trust me, every “just one more claim” can cost you real money.)
- Next: Screenshot the subtotal and drop it into your IP brief or budget notes. It’s way easier to justify costs upstream when you’ve got numbers on hand — especially if you’re prepping for a board call or reviewing cash burn with finance.
Neutral action: Screenshot the output and confirm any multi-dependent/page surcharges on the official schedule.
What your 2025 small-entity calculator must include
A good patent calculator isn’t just about adding up fees—it’s about mapping the whole journey. Founders need more than numbers; they need to see how timing, status, and filings all connect. What happens at filing doesn’t stay at filing—it echoes through to issuance, RCEs, and those sneaky maintenance payments years later.
At the very least, your tool should let folks plug in the basics: entity type (large, small, or micro), claim counts (total and independent), whether there’s a multiple-dependent claim, page count, whether they’re opting for Track One, and how many RCEs they expect. Each one of those choices bumps the cost—sometimes by hundreds. A single dependent claim mistake? That can mean a four-figure surprise.
On the output side, don’t just dump a total. Break it down with clear subtotals for filing, issue, and lifecycle totals. Then put those side by side by entity tier—so your user sees exactly how much small or micro status is saving them. It’s the kind of comparison that turns a shrug into a strategy.
Behind the curtain, your math needs to match the 2025 USPTO fee schedule to the letter. That includes IDS surcharges (based on how many items are submitted) and the dreaded Non-DOCX penalties. I once saw a founder eat a $400 mistake just for uploading a Word doc. It stings—but it’s avoidable if your calculator flags it.
When you show the projected maintenance fees at 3.5 / 7.5 / 11.5 years, you’re doing more than filling in a blank. You’re showing the real long tail of IP costs—early. Before it blindsides finance down the road. That’s how you turn a calculator into a CFO-proof planning tool.
60-second action: Make sure you’ve added all the key inputs. Double-check your fee lines against the 2025 USPTO chart (seriously, even one off-code can throw the whole model). And give users a side-by-side view of filing, issue, and lifecycle totals. It’s the difference between a static spreadsheet—and a living roadmap.
Non-U.S. founders: a U.S.-only heads-up
Filing from Seoul or London? It’s easy to assume patent fees work the same everywhere. They don’t—and that’s how budgets quietly go sideways.
In the U.S., the term small entity is a USPTO-specific classification. Discounts from the UKIPO or EPO don’t translate directly. So if you’re filing first in the U.S., or coming in via national stage, you’ll want to build a U.S.-specific strategy for claims and fees. Keep your models clean: one sheet for EPO excess claims, another for U.S. claim counts and IDS (Information Disclosure Statement) tracking.
Short story: when claims 21–26 almost sank us
Two weeks before filing, our team added three things: a kit claim, a new method variant, and a software loop—each as a standalone. Our streamlined 18-claim draft ballooned to 26. The CFO spotted the surcharge lines like they were a heart monitor spiking.
We regrouped fast. The software claims got nested as dependents. The kit folded under the method flow. By filing day, we were back at 20 claims with just 3 independents—no overage fees. Two months later, the examiner called with a suggested tweak. Because our claim set was tight, we avoided an early RCE. The CFO brought coffee that morning. I still have the napkin where we ran the numbers.
- Separate models. Keep one tab for EPO excess-claim and page fees, and another for USPTO limits: ≤20 total claims, ≤3 independents. Don’t forget to flag multiple-dependent claims and any heavy IDS loads.
- Pressure-test independents. If your fourth independent doesn’t add distinct risk or coverage, turn it into a dependent. That’s one less fee line—and fewer examiner questions.
- Plan the interview. A quick 20-minute call with your examiner can head off the need for an RCE—especially when your claims are well-structured and easy to follow.
Next action: Add a “USPTO—claims & IDS” tab to your spreadsheet. At the top, write your target totals (≤20, ≤3). It’s a small move that could save you thousands—and a future amendment headache.
Your 2025 Med-Device Patent Dashboard
Key USPTO Fee Levers for Small & Micro Entities
Small Entity
Micro Entity
Medical Device IP: Statistics at a Glance
Interactive Pre-Filing Cost-Cut Checklist
FAQ
1) What exactly triggers loss of small-entity status?
Answer: An obligation to assign/license to a large entity or crossing size thresholds (e.g., >500 employees). Reason: status must reflect current obligations under 37 C.F.R. § 1.27. 60-second action: Add an “entity check” to your financing/licensing checklist. (Legal Information Institute, 2025-10)
2) Do small/micro discounts apply to every line?
Answer: No—discounts are fee-line specific. Reason: many core lines are reduced, but some (e.g., certain publication or IDS tiers) are flat. 60-second action: Verify the exact line on the current schedule. (USPTO fee schedule, 2025-09)
3) What’s a realistic attorney budget for a medical device utility patent?
Answer: Often $12k–$20k+ to draft; $20k–$40k to allowance. Reason: complexity and office actions drive variation. 60-second action: Request a flat-fee quote that includes drafting + filing + first OA response. (Bitlaw, 2025-01; Rapacke, 2024-12; Bold Patents, 2025-03)
4) Should I pay for Track One?
Answer: Yes when time-to-decision beats cost; otherwise, interview early. Reason: Track One is a speed premium; interviews can cut RCE risk. 60-second action: Put “interview before first OA” on your plan. (USPTO fee schedule, 2025-09)
5) How do maintenance fees look across 11.5 years (small vs. micro)?
Answer: Small: $860 / $1,616 / $3,312; Micro: $430 / $808 / $1,656. Reason: plan these at launch, not at year 3.5. 60-second action: Add the three dates and amounts to your finance calendar today. (USPTO fee schedule, 2025-09)
6) Any gotchas with Non-DOCX or paper filings?
Answer: Yes—both add avoidable cost. Reason: Non-DOCX surcharge (small $172 / micro $86) and paper filing fee (small/micro $200) are easy to avoid in 2025. 60-second action: File via Patent Center and upload DOCX for spec/claims/abstract. (USPTO fee schedule, 2025-09)
Conclusion
Bottom line: yes, you can price your medical-device patent today—no black-box estimates, no surprise fees later.
The 2025 USPTO fees are set in stone. What actually moves the needle? You. Specifically: your entity status, your claim count, and how you prioritize speed versus certainty.
Here’s the play: aim for no more than 20 total claims, with no more than 3 independent—unless a 4th really earns its keep by protecting revenue. Confirm your small or micro status before every payment (seriously, even the $80 ones). Use Patent Center with DOCX format so you don’t get hit with junk fees just for uploading a sloppy file. Interview early with your examiner. And treat Track One like what it is—a powerful timing tool, not the default move.
These four tactics alone can save you hundreds at filing and thousands over the course of prosecution.
If the total cost still feels high? That’s because it reflects real, high-leverage decisions—not hidden fees. And the upside is: you’re in control. A tighter brief, smarter claims, and a 10-minute calendar check-in can seriously improve your budget outlook.
I once watched a medtech startup pay $1,400 extra in filing fees because they forgot to refactor down to 3 independents. That’s not strategy—that’s just a typo tax.
Next 15 minutes
- Confirm your entity status (small vs. micro). Check with your counsel or log into USPTO’s Patent Center.
- Write “≤20 / ≤3” at the top of your draft. Refactor your claims once before anything else.
- Add “interview before first Office Action” to your internal prosecution checklist.
- Use the calculator to run an estimate, screenshot the subtotal, and ask your counsel or agent for a flat-fee quote that includes at least one Office Action response.
That’s it. Do these now, and your patent stops being a vague budget line and becomes something you actually own—a defined, priced-out asset with a plan behind it.
Bars are illustrative; confirm exact amounts on the current schedule. (USPTO fee schedule, 2025-09)
Update log: Last reviewed: 2025-10; sources: USPTO fee schedule (2025-09), Legal Information Institute (2025-10), Bitlaw (2025-01).
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🔗 Office Action Response Cost 2025 Posted 2025-10-14 11:14 UTC 🔗 US vs UK: Patentability of AI-Driven Inventions Posted 2025-10-11 10:50 UTC 🔗 Three-Day Foreign Filing License (FFL) Posted 2025-10-04 13:40 UTC 🔗 Trademark Registration Posted (Date not specified)