Study Guide
Registration Examination for Patent Practitioners Study Guide
Use the saved domain outline to connect patentability requirements and patent fundamentals, patent application filing and claim drafting, patent prosecution and mpep-based practice, post-grant proceedings, appeals, and international patent law to scenario-based questions and explanations.
How the Exam Is Structured
Registration Examination for Patent Practitioners (Patent Bar) validates patentability requirements and patent fundamentals, patent application filing and claim drafting, patent prosecution and mpep-based practice, post-grant proceedings, appeals, and international patent law. The ExamPal practice bank includes 96 premium questions and 40 free questions mapped across the official blueprint.
| Domain | Weight | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Domain 1: Patentability Requirements and Patent Fundamentals | 30% | Task 1: Assess statutory subject matter eligibility under 35 U.S.C. § 101; Patent-eligible statutory categories |
| Domain 2: Patent Application Filing and Claim Drafting | 21% | Task 1: Prepare and evaluate patent application components; Required parts of a nonprovisional application |
| Domain 3: Patent Prosecution and MPEP-Based Practice | 24% | Task 1: Respond to Office actions and examiner rejections; Responses to Office actions |
| Domain 4: Post-Grant Proceedings, Appeals, and International Patent Law | 12% | Task 1: Apply rules governing appeals to the PTAB; Appealing examiner rejections |
| Domain 5: Patent Ownership, Infringement, and Ethics | 13% | Task 1: Determine inventorship, ownership, and transfer of rights; Inventorship versus ownership |
30% of exam
Domain 1: Patentability Requirements and Patent Fundamentals
Covers the core substantive patent law tested on the Patent Bar, including subject matter eligibility, novelty, nonobviousness, disclosure, definiteness, and foundational patent concepts. This domain emphasizes applying 35 U.S.C. §§ 101, 102, 103, and 112 to common fact patterns and understanding basic patent terminology and rights.
21% of exam
Domain 2: Patent Application Filing and Claim Drafting
Covers the mechanics of preparing, filing, and drafting patent applications, including provisional and nonprovisional requirements, continuing applications, claim drafting, priority, and fee/status issues. This domain focuses on application formalities and timing rules that affect filing dates and patent rights.
24% of exam
Domain 3: Patent Prosecution and MPEP-Based Practice
Covers prosecution practice before the USPTO, including Office action responses, restriction practice, continuation and RCE practice, disclosure obligations, issuance, corrections, petitions, and use of the MPEP. This domain emphasizes procedural strategy and compliance during examination.
12% of exam
Domain 4: Post-Grant Proceedings, Appeals, and International Patent Law
Covers appellate practice before the PTAB, post-grant review mechanisms, reissue and correction practice, and international filing principles. This domain focuses on procedures for challenging or correcting patents and on basic foreign filing frameworks.
13% of exam
Domain 5: Patent Ownership, Infringement, and Ethics
Covers ownership and transfer of patent rights, infringement principles, practitioner ethics, and special ownership-related statutory and administrative issues. This domain tests who owns rights, how infringement is analyzed, and the professional responsibility rules governing patent practitioners.
Key Terms to Know
These terms are loaded from the shared terminology pack and appear across the question explanations.
- 35 U.S.C. § 101
- Statutory provision defining patent-eligible subject matter as any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter.
- 35 U.S.C. § 102
- Statutory provision governing novelty and what qualifies as prior art.
- 35 U.S.C. § 103
- Statutory provision governing obviousness based on prior art.
- 35 U.S.C. § 112(f)
- Statutory provision allowing claim elements to be expressed as a means or step for performing a function without reciting structure, material, or acts.
- 35 U.S.C. § 133
- Statutory provision governing the time for prosecuting an application and responding to USPTO actions.
- 35 U.S.C. § 321(c)
- Statutory provision setting the deadline for filing a post-grant review petition no later than 9 months after patent grant.
- 37 C.F.R. § 1.137
- Regulation governing revival of abandoned patent applications for unavoidable or unintentional delay.
- 37 C.F.R. § 1.27
- Regulation defining small entity status and related fee reduction eligibility.
- 37 C.F.R. § 1.29
- Regulation defining micro entity status and the requirements for eligibility.
- MPEP
- The Manual of Patent Examining Procedure, which provides guidance on patent examination practice and procedure.
- Office Action
- An official written communication from the USPTO examiner stating objections, rejections, or other requirements.
- Patent Trial and Appeal Board
- The USPTO tribunal that handles appeals and post-grant trial proceedings such as IPR and PGR.
- RCE
- Abbreviation for Request for Continued Examination.
- Request for Continued Examination
- A filing that reopens prosecution after it has been closed, allowing further examination of an application.
- accused device
- The product or apparatus alleged to infringe a patent claim.
- claim
- The part of a patent that defines the legal scope of the invention.
- clerical error
- A minor mistake in a patent that may be corrected through statutory correction procedures when no deceptive intent is involved.
- composition of matter
- A statutory category of invention covering chemical compositions and mixtures.
Official Materials and Guidance
This page is built from USPTO official materials and ExamPal shared release pack, the shared syllabus, topic tree, terminology pack, free pack, and premium pack.
- -Guidance: USPTO registration exam page, fee schedule, MPEP/source materials
- -Domain outline: No percentage split published; MPEP/patent laws/rules/procedure, patentability, prosecution, PCT, appeals, post-grant/reissue/reexamination.