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By Richard Gearhart
Founding Partner

Inventors often ask how they can find patents related to their idea. Patent searching is not especially difficult, although it can be time consuming.

The goal of patent searching is to understand the prior art related to the invention. This serves several purposes. First, it can help an inventor decide if patent protection is worth pursuing. Second, it can help the patent drafter draft broad claims that avoid the prior art.

Prior art constitutes everything that ever happened prior to the date of invention by the inventor, anywhere in the world. It includes not only patents and patent applications, but other publications and products too.

A through patent search includes a review of patents and patent publications outside the US, as well as patents and patent publications outside the US.

The internet provides excellent access for prior art searching. For example, as simple keyword search in Google or Yahoo can locate similar products.

The internet is also an excellent venue for patent searching. There are a number of patent data bases that provide excellent results.

For example, the United States Patent and Trademark Office has an excellent data base for searches of US Patents and Publications. For Patents outside the US, good places to look include the World Intellectual Property Organization, website (Patent Scope), the European Patent Office search site Espacenet.

Other free online services include Google Patents, and Free Patents on Line, among others. It is not always clear, however, how secure the free online patent searching data bases are.

The most common approach to searching is to simply type in keywords that reflect the invention, and review the resulting results. Sometimes, however, the search returns too many results. The search can be narrowed by using classifications.

Classifications are the categories that the Patent Offices use to sort and organize patents into groups. Adding a classification to your search can limit your search results and omit extraneous patents that have no relation to your invention. A full explanation of classification searching is beyond the scope of this post, but for the truly dedicated an excellent explanation can be found at the US Patent Office Search Site Classification Help.

These data bases can provide the inventor excellent tools to do their own patent searching. Final decisions about whether to file a patent should always be made in consultation with a patent attorney.

About the Author
Richard Gearhart, Esq. is the founder of Gearhart Law and the host of a weekly radio show for entrepreneurs called “Passage to Profit”. He has built a firm with an international presence that helps entrepreneurs from around the world with their patent, trademark and copyright needs. Richard commands a breadth of experience that comes from nearly 30 years of practice in the writing and prosecution of hundreds of patents, and in all aspects of Intellectual Property law. In 2022, Richard was recognized by ROI New Jersey as a 2022 ROI Influencer in the Law List category for being one of the best of the best in New Jersey for intellectual property law. Gearhart Law emerged from Richard’s passion for entrepreneurship and startups and his belief that entrepreneurship grows the economy and creates jobs. When we started Gearhart Law, our goal was to help and support the new business ventures of 500 entrepreneurs and inventors. After 12 years, the firm has far surpassed this goal; today, we look forward to helping even more inventors and entrepreneurs get off to a great start and reach their own goals.