Whether you're an inventor, a startup, or a business — your idea deserves legal protection. We explain patent meaning in Urdu and English, walk you through the Patents Ordinance 2000, and help you file the right way.
Let's keep it simple. A patent is an official legal right given to an inventor. It says: "This idea belongs to you. No one else can copy it, sell it, or use it without your permission."
In plain English — a patent protects your invention. Whether it's a machine, a chemical process, a software method, or a new product design, a patent gives you exclusive rights for a set period of time.
Patent meaning in Urdu: پیٹنٹ ایک قانونی دستاویز ہے جو کسی موجد کو اس کی ایجاد پر خصوصی حقوق دیتی ہے۔ یعنی کوئی دوسرا شخص آپ کی ایجاد کو آپ کی اجازت کے بغیر نہیں بنا سکتا، بیچ سکتا یا استعمال کر سکتا۔
The word "patent" also appears in medical language. Patent meaning medical refers to an open passageway in the body — like a "patent airway," meaning an unblocked airway. This is completely different from an invention patent, but it's the same word used in two different fields.
💡 Short answer for Google: What is a patent? A patent is a legal right granted by the government that gives an inventor exclusive control over their invention — usually for 20 years.
And if you want to look up existing patents? Google Patents (patents.google.com) is a free searchable database of millions of global patent records. It's a great first step before filing — Qadir Chamber can help you conduct a proper patent search to check if your idea is already registered.
Not every idea qualifies for a patent. There are clear rules. Here's what your invention must satisfy — and the different types of patents available.
Your invention must not have been publicly disclosed, used, or patented before anywhere in the world. This is the #1 requirement. That's why doing a patent search (including on Google Patents) before filing is critical.
Your invention must not be obvious to someone who already has knowledge in that field. A small tweak to an existing product usually won't qualify. It needs a genuine inventive step.
The invention must be useful and capable of being made or used in some kind of industry. This is broad — it includes agriculture, manufacturing, technology, medicine, and more.
In exchange for patent protection, you must fully disclose how the invention works. This is why learning how to draft a patent properly is so important — incomplete applications get rejected.
A common question is: what's the difference between utility and design patent? And what is an innovation patent? Here's a clear breakdown.
| Type of Patent | What It Protects | Duration | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Utility Patent | How something works or is used (a process, machine, composition) | 20 years | Inventors, engineers, scientists |
| Design Patent | How something looks (the visual ornamental appearance) | 15 years | Product designers, manufacturers |
| Innovation Patent | Minor improvements or incremental innovations on existing products | 8 years | Businesses updating existing products |
| Plant Patent | New varieties of plants that have been asexually reproduced | 20 years | Agricultural/biotech innovators |
📌 Not sure which type applies to your invention? Our patent law attorney will assess your idea and recommend the right patent type — before you spend time and money on the wrong filing.
Pakistan's patent system is governed by the Patents Ordinance 2000, which was introduced to modernize the country's intellectual property regime and align it with international standards.
The Patent Act Pakistan (formally the Patents Ordinance 2000) covers:
Some people ask about the Patent Act 1970 — this refers to India's patent law, which is separate from Pakistan's. Similarly, the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 is a UK law. Pakistan's own framework is the Patents Ordinance 2000, which is what applies here.
Under international patent law, inventors can seek protection in multiple countries using the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT). Pakistan is a signatory. This means if you've filed in Pakistan, you can extend protection internationally through a single PCT application — before pursuing individual country filings.
Historical patents show just how transformative this system has been — the steam engine, the telephone, aspirin, and the transistor all started as patent applications. Your invention could be next.
Here's a real-world patent example to make this concrete:
A pharmaceutical company invents a new drug compound. They file a patent. For the next 20 years, no competitor can manufacture or sell that compound without paying a license fee. After 20 years, it becomes "generic" — available to everyone.
The patent holder has the exclusive right to make, use, sell, and import the patented product. They can also license it to others for royalty payments — turning the patent into a revenue stream.
Many inventors get confused about how to file a patent in Pakistan. Here's the step-by-step process — and where Qadir Chamber fits in to make it smooth, fast, and right the first time.
Before anything else, search existing patents using Google Patents or the IPO Pakistan database. This tells you whether your invention already exists and helps you understand how to draft your patent to be distinct. Qadir Chamber conducts a thorough patentability assessment at this stage.
This is the most critical step. Learning how to draft a patent correctly involves writing precise patent claims, a full description, abstract, and drawings. Poor drafting leads to rejection — or a weak patent that's easy to work around. Our attorneys handle this for you.
Submit the application to the Intellectual Property Organization of Pakistan. Under the Patents Ordinance 2000, the application is given a filing date. You can also file a provisional application first to secure your priority date while you finalize the full application.
IPO Pakistan examines your application for formality and substance. If there are objections, you'll receive an official letter (office action) to which your attorney must respond. The application is published in the official journal after 18 months.
Once approved, the patent is granted and registered. You'll receive a patent certificate. Annual renewal fees must be paid to keep it in force. If needed, you can then file internationally via the PCT route for global patent protection.
Patent costs depend on several factors — complexity of the invention, number of claims, and whether you're seeking international protection.
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We get these questions a lot. Here's clear, honest guidance on some specific patent scenarios.
You can't patent an app itself, but you can patent the underlying method, process, or technical feature that makes it work. For example, a unique algorithm, a new data-processing technique, or an innovative UI interaction may qualify. The software idea alone doesn't — but the technical implementation can. Our team will help assess your app's patentable elements.
Here's an important distinction: you don't patent a business name — you trademark it. A trademark protects your brand name, logo, and identity. A patent protects your invention. If you want to protect your business name, Qadir Chamber handles trademark registration under a separate practice area. Don't confuse the two — it's a common and costly mistake.
These three are different and protect different things. A patent protects inventions. A copyright protects original creative works (books, code, music, art) automatically. A trademark protects brand names and logos. The difference between copyright, patent, and trademark is one of the most searched topics in IP law — and rightly so, because using the wrong one means your rights aren't protected.
Patent accessibility refers to how easily the public can access, read, and understand patent documents. In Pakistan and globally, patent databases like Google Patents and WIPO's Patentscope are open to everyone. This transparency is by design — patents are a public deal: you disclose your invention, and society gives you time-limited exclusivity.
Here's the clearest comparison table you'll find. Understanding the difference between patent and copyright (and trademark) could save you from filing the wrong type of protection.
| Aspect | Patent | Copyright | Trademark |
|---|---|---|---|
| What it protects | Inventions, processes, methods | Creative works (books, music, art, code) | Brand names, logos, slogans |
| Registration required? | Yes — must be filed | No — automatic on creation | Yes — strongly recommended |
| Duration in Pakistan | 20 years (renewable) | Life of creator + 50 years | 10 years (renewable forever) |
| Governing law | Patents Ordinance 2000 | Copyright Ordinance 1962 | Trade Marks Ordinance 2001 |
| Who files | Inventor or assignee | Author or creator | Business or individual |
| Primary benefit | Exclusive commercial use of invention | Prevent copying of creative work | Exclusive use of brand identity |
There are many law firms in Pakistan. Here's what makes Qadir Chamber different — especially for patent work.
Filing a patent is just paperwork. Drafting a strong patent — with well-written claims that actually hold up — is a skill. Our attorneys understand how patents work from a legal and technical perspective, and we draft to win.
We handle Pakistan filings under the Patents Ordinance 2000 as well as international patent law matters via PCT. Whether you want protection in Pakistan only or globally, we've got the expertise.
Many of our clients are first-time inventors or startups. We speak plainly, explain everything clearly, and help you understand how patents work before you commit to spending money — not after.
We go beyond just "filing a patent." We help you build an IP strategy — including how to use your patent rights for licensing, investor negotiations, and competitive positioning. A patent is a business asset, not just a certificate.
Real questions, plain answers. No legal jargon.
Talk to a patent law attorney at Qadir Chamber — for free. We'll assess your invention, explain your options, and tell you exactly what to do next. No pressure, no jargon.
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