Patent deadlines look simple until you actually have to calculate one. The “three-month response” looks like a fixed number on the calendar — until the day lands on a federal holiday, or the Office Action was technically mailed on a different date than the one shown in the system, or the applicant claims a foreign priority that shifts the entire downstream chain. Patent deadline calculation is where most docketing errors are born, and where the right cheat sheet pays for itself.
This guide walks through the rules a U.S. patent docketer needs at their fingertips: the statutory clocks, the extension framework, the weekend-and-holiday rule, the PCT 30-month deadline, the maintenance fee schedule, and the patent term adjustment (PTA) verification window. Every rule is tied to its underlying authority so you can cite back to the source.
The Foundational Rule: Statutory vs. Shortened Statutory
U.S. patent law gives the USPTO authority under 35 U.S.C. § 133 to set a statutory period for reply of up to six months. In practice the USPTO almost always sets a “shortened statutory period” (SSP) that is shorter than six months. The most common SSP is three months for a non-final Office Action under 37 CFR § 1.134. The applicant can extend the SSP up to the statutory maximum of six months by paying escalating extension fees under 37 CFR § 1.136(a).
The trigger date for the SSP is the mail date stamped on the Office Action, not the date the firm received it. If the Office Action was mailed on March 15, the three-month SSP runs to June 15 with no extension, July 15 with a one-month extension, August 15 with a two-month extension, and so on, capped at September 15.
The Weekend-and-Holiday Rule
If the calculated due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or federal holiday in the District of Columbia, the deadline rolls forward to the next business day under 37 CFR § 1.7(a). This is one of the most commonly miscalculated rules because the calendar a docketer is looking at is rarely a federal-holiday calendar. Build the federal holiday list into the docketing system rather than relying on memory.
Note the asymmetry: the rule rolls the deadline forward only. A deadline that falls naturally on a Friday before a Monday holiday does not get the benefit of the rule.
The Extension of Time Framework
Under 37 CFR § 1.136(a), the applicant can buy time in one-month increments by paying an extension fee. The fees increase substantially with each month. As of late 2025, the small-entity fees are roughly:
| Extension | Small Entity Fee (approx.) | Large Entity Fee (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 month | $110 | $220 |
| 2 months | $320 | $640 |
| 3 months | $740 | $1,480 |
| 4 months | $1,160 | $2,320 |
| 5 months | $1,580 | $3,160 |
Always verify the current fee on the USPTO fee schedule before filing — the fees change roughly annually. The extension can be requested concurrently with the response, and the request can be a one-paragraph statement: “Applicant petitions for a [X]-month extension of time to respond to the Office Action mailed [date].”
Crucially, extensions cannot push the deadline beyond six months from the SSP trigger date. Under 35 U.S.C. § 133, after the six-month statutory maximum the application is presumed abandoned, and revival under 37 CFR § 1.137 requires a petition and a substantially higher fee.
The Information Disclosure Statement (IDS) Window
An IDS submitted under 37 CFR § 1.97 has its own clock. Without a fee or certification, the IDS must be filed within three months of the application’s filing date or before the first Office Action on the merits, whichever is later. With a certification under § 1.97(e) (the reference was first cited in a foreign Office Action within the last three months), the IDS can be filed later but the certification text must be exact.
The 30-day clock under § 1.97(e) starts on the date the foreign Office Action was issued, not the date it was received by the U.S. correspondence address. This is a common stumbling point.
The PCT 30-Month National Stage Deadline
Under 35 U.S.C. § 371 and 37 CFR § 1.495, an applicant entering the U.S. national stage from a PCT application must file the basic national fee, an English translation, and the executed inventor’s oath or declaration within 30 months of the earliest claimed priority date. Some jurisdictions allow 31 months; the U.S. is firmly 30 months.
The most common PCT docketing error is anchoring the 30-month clock to the PCT filing date rather than the earliest priority date. If the PCT claims priority to a U.S. provisional filed a year earlier, the 30-month clock starts on the provisional filing date, not the PCT filing date. A docketing rules engine should compute both and use the earlier of the two.
The Issue Fee Window
Once a Notice of Allowance issues under 37 CFR § 1.311, the issue fee must be paid within three months of the mail date of the notice. Unlike SSP deadlines, this window cannot be extended. Missing the issue fee deadline causes the application to lapse, recoverable only by a petition to revive under 37 CFR § 1.137.
The Maintenance Fee Schedule
U.S. utility patents require maintenance fees at three checkpoints under 37 CFR § 1.362:
| Window | Fee Window Opens | Fee Window Closes | Surcharge Window |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.5-year fee | 3 years from issue | 3.5 years from issue | 3.5 to 4 years (with surcharge) |
| 7.5-year fee | 7 years from issue | 7.5 years from issue | 7.5 to 8 years (with surcharge) |
| 11.5-year fee | 11 years from issue | 11.5 years from issue | 11.5 to 12 years (with surcharge) |
After the surcharge window closes, the patent expires. Revival under 37 CFR § 1.378 is available for up to 24 months on an unintentional-delay basis, but it is fact-intensive and not guaranteed.
Patent Term Adjustment (PTA) Verification
The USPTO calculates PTA under 35 U.S.C. § 154(b) and reports it on the issue notification. The applicant has two months from the issue date (extendable to seven months total) to file a request for reconsideration of the PTA calculation under 37 CFR § 1.705 if it appears incorrect. Many docketers skip this verification step. On valuable patents with multi-year prosecution delays, a successful PTA correction can be worth significant additional patent term.
The IPR One-Year Bar
Under 35 U.S.C. § 315(b), an inter partes review petition is barred if filed more than one year after the petitioner is served with a complaint alleging infringement of the patent. This is the most common IPR procedural defeat, and it is purely a docketing problem. Every patent litigation matter should generate an IPR-bar tickler set at 11 months from service of the complaint.
Putting It All Together: The Docketer’s Mental Model
Every patent deadline calculation reduces to four questions:
- What is the trigger event? (Office Action mailed, NOA issued, complaint served, fee window opens.)
- What is the trigger date? (Almost always the official mail/issue/service date, never the firm’s receipt date.)
- What is the rule? (Statute or CFR section that fixes the calculation.)
- Does the weekend-and-holiday rule apply? (If the calculated date is a weekend or DC federal holiday, roll forward.)
If a docketer can answer those four questions for every entry, the calculation will be right. If they cannot, the entry should be flagged for verification by the docketing manager before it goes onto the attorney’s tickler list.
Conclusion
Patent deadline calculation is not difficult, but it is unforgiving. The rules are well-documented, the citations are stable, and modern docketing platforms automate the arithmetic. What still trips up firms is the human side: the trigger date that gets misread, the holiday calendar that is not loaded, the foreign priority that gets missed. The cheat sheet above is the starting point. The dual-entry rule we cover in our patent docketing best practices guide is the safety net.
Need help auditing your deadline calculations? Contact Perspire IP for a sample-tested review of your active U.S. matters.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the trigger date for an Office Action response?
The mail date stamped on the Office Action by the USPTO, not the date the firm received or downloaded it. The shortened statutory period under 37 CFR § 1.134 starts running on the mail date.
Can a patent deadline be extended past six months?
Not under 37 CFR § 1.136(a). Six months from the trigger date is the absolute statutory maximum under 35 U.S.C. § 133. Beyond that, the application is abandoned and revival under 37 CFR § 1.137 requires a petition.
What happens if a patent deadline falls on a federal holiday?
Under 37 CFR § 1.7(a), if the deadline falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or federal holiday in the District of Columbia, the action may be taken on the next business day. Build the federal holiday calendar into the docketing system rather than relying on memory.
How do I calculate the PCT 30-month deadline?
Take the earliest priority date claimed in the PCT application and add 30 months. If the PCT claims priority to a U.S. provisional, the clock runs from the provisional filing date, not the PCT filing date.
How long is the issue fee window?
Three months from the mail date of the Notice of Allowance under 37 CFR § 1.311. This window cannot be extended. Missing it causes the application to lapse, recoverable only by petition to revive.
Citations & Authorities
- 35 U.S.C. § 133 (statutory maximum reply period).
- 35 U.S.C. § 154(b) (patent term adjustment).
- 35 U.S.C. § 315(b) (one-year IPR bar).
- 35 U.S.C. § 371 (national stage entry).
- 37 CFR § 1.7 (weekend and holiday rule).
- 37 CFR § 1.97 (Information Disclosure Statement).
- 37 CFR § 1.134 – 1.137 (reply periods, extensions, abandonment, revival).
- 37 CFR § 1.311 (issue fee).
- 37 CFR § 1.362 (maintenance fee schedule).
- 37 CFR § 1.495 (PCT national stage requirements).
- 37 CFR § 1.705 (PTA reconsideration).
- USPTO MPEP § 710, “Period for Reply,” available at uspto.gov.
- USPTO MPEP § 2731, “Period of Adjustment,” available at uspto.gov.
- USPTO Fee Schedule, available at uspto.gov.