USPTO Invites Patent Owner Input To Stem Tide Of Reexamination Proceedings
After issuing an announcing an imagined 鈥淎I-assisted evaluator for patent eligibility determinations,鈥 the USPTO issued another press release on April 1, 2026, that stakeholders need to take seriously. The real notice relates to ex parte reexamination proceedings, and announced a new process permitting patent owners to weigh in before the USPTO decides whether to proceed with reexamination.
According to the USPTO , the Director is waiving existing rules that do not provide for early patent owner input, due to the 鈥渆xtraordinary situation鈥 of 鈥渢he recent increased volume of ex parte reexamination requests.鈥 Having expanded the use of discretionary denials to limit Inter Partes Review (IPR) proceedings, it seems the USPTO now seeks to stem the tide of ex parte reexamination proceedings.
The Current Reexamination SNQ Paradigm
Under 35 U.S.C. 搂 302, 鈥淎ny person at any time may file a request for reexamination 鈥 of any claim of a patent on the basis of any prior art 鈥.鈥 Under 35 U.S.C. 搂 303, 鈥淸w]ithin three months following the filing of a request for reexamination 鈥 the Director will determine whether a substantial new question of patentability affecting any claim of the patent concerned is raised by the request 鈥.鈥 Under 35 U.S.C. 搂 304, 鈥淸i]f 鈥 the Director finds that a substantial new question of patentability 鈥 is raised, the determination will include an order for reexamination of the patent for resolution of the question.鈥
Thus, unlike the IPR statute that gives the Director discretion whether to institute an IPR proceeding, the reexamination statute seems to require the Director to order reexamination if it is found that a substantial new question of patentability (鈥淪NQ鈥) has been raised. But see 35 U.S.C.搂 325(d) (referenced below).
The statutory reexamination scheme does not expressly provide for patent owner input until after an SNQ determination has been made. Under 35 U.S.C. 搂 304, 鈥淭he patent owner will be given a reasonable period 鈥 within which he may file a statement on such [SNQ], including any amendment 鈥 for consideration in the reexamination.鈥 Indeed, under current USPTO guidance 鈥淸t]he patent owner has no right to file a statement subsequent to the filing of [a request for reexamination] prior to the order for reexamination.鈥 See MPEP 搂 2249.
The New Process for Input from Both Sides
The Notice explains that the new process will enable the USPTO to make SNQ determinations with 鈥渢he benefit of relevant information from patent owner[s].鈥 The patent owner pre-order paper must be filed 鈥渘o later than the date that is 30 days from the date of service of the request on the patent owner鈥 and 鈥渂e limited to thirty (30) pages or fewer.鈥 Regarding the content:
The [patent owner pre-order] paper must be limited to arguments or facts to support patent owner’s position that, despite the argued teaching(s) in the request, the Office should maintain the decision of patentability made during examination 鈥 after considering the alleged new teaching(s) in the request for reexamination.
On the other hand, the pre-order paper 鈥渟hould not address why the USPTO should exercise discretion under 35 U.S.C. 搂 325(d),鈥 which is considered after an SNQ determination has been made. Further, arguments regarding whether an alleged teaching is 鈥渘ew鈥 鈥渟hould not be included in a patent owner pre-order paper,鈥 because those arguments can be presented in a patent owner鈥檚 statement under 37 CFR 搂1.530 or in a patent owner’s response to an Office action鈥 during the reexamination proceeding.
Under the new process, the reexamination requester will not generally be permitted to respond to the patent owner鈥檚 pre-order paper, but may petition to do so under exceptional circumstances, 鈥渟uch as to address alleged misrepresentations of fact or law or other improper arguments that materially impede the determination of a substantial new question.鈥
According to the Notice, 鈥淸w]hen considering whether to order reexamination, the Office will review the request and the contents of any patent owner pre-order paper and any third party requester responsive paper 鈥. [and] then determine whether the request establishes a substantial new question of patentability.鈥
Will the New Process Stem the Tide of Reexamination Requests?
The impact of the lower IPR institution rate on reexamination requests is evident in , which show requests have more than doubled in recent months.

While reduced USPTO staffing levels may make it challenging to review these requests in a timely manner, it is not clear that permitting early patent owner input will discourage requests for reexamination, unless it leads to a significant drop in SNQ findings. Indeed, stakeholders on the requester side likely will view the new process as an attempt to make it easier for the USPTO to deny reexamination requests, further limiting opportunities to have the USPTO review its own work and revoke patents that never should have been granted.
Can the USPTO Do This?
The Patlex Corp. v. Mossinghoff case cited in the Notice (758 F.2d 594 (Fed. Cir. 1985)) upheld the USPTO鈥檚 current rules that restrict patent owner input prior to the SNQ determination. In that case, the USPTO justified the restrictions in the interests of efficiency, stating that the USPTO 鈥渃an not accommodate a 鈥榝lurry of paper鈥 at this [SNQ] stage.鈥
Although the court found the rules were 鈥渨ithin tolerable limits of 鈥 the reexamination statute鈥 and did 鈥渘ot violate the due process clause,鈥 it seems likely that the Federal Circuit would uphold new rules implementing a new process that gives patent owners an early opportunity to be heard. Indeed, the USPTO鈥檚 justification for the new process implies that increased efficiencies being realized in the Central Reexamination Unit mean that patent owner pre-order papers 鈥渃an be accommodated鈥 and 鈥渟hould enable the Office to be better able to weed out those requests that do not raise a substantial question of patentability, prior to instituting a full-blown proceeding.鈥
The set to be published April 26, 2026, includes other significant changes to reexamination practice and sets a public comment period expiring May 30, 2026.