Our Expert in Italy
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Last reviewed: 17 May 2026
Patent litigation in Italy has entered a fundamentally different landscape. The convergence of three separate reform streams, substantive amendments to the Italian Intellectual Property Code (Codice della Proprietà Industriale, or CPI), sweeping civil-justice procedural reforms under Decreto Legislativo 149/2022 as progressively implemented through 2026, and the EPO fee increases effective 1 April 2026, forces every patentee, in-house counsel and IP manager to reassess enforcement strategy. Forum selection between national Italian courts and the Unified Patent Court now involves a materially different cost-benefit calculus, interim-relief procedures have been streamlined, and the way Italian courts assess patent damages has been recalibrated.
This article provides a practical, step-by-step playbook for teams that need to make enforcement decisions right now, covering forum choice, interim-relief tactics, evidence preservation and cross-border cost modelling under the reformed rules.
Industry observers expect the combined effect of these reforms to accelerate first-instance patent proceedings in Italy, tighten the window for evidence preservation, and make Italian courts a more competitive forum for cross-border patent enforcement within Europe. The sections below translate each reform into concrete action items, decision checklists and worked cost examples designed for in-house teams managing patent portfolios with Italian exposure.
Before diving into the detail, here are five immediate action items that patent litigation teams should prioritise in light of the 2026 changes:
The rest of this article unpacks each of these points with tactical detail, legislative citations and worked examples.
The Unified Patent Court became operational on 1 June 2023, creating a single court with jurisdiction over European patents (including Unitary Patents) across Contracting Member States. Italy ratified the UPC Agreement and is a full participant, meaning that European patents designating Italy fall within the UPC’s jurisdiction unless the patent holder has filed an opt-out under Article 83 of the UPC Agreement. The UPC operates through a Central Division (with seats in Paris and Munich), Local Divisions and Regional Divisions. Italy hosts a Local Division in Milan, which handles patent litigation in Italy under UPC rules.
For patentees, the practical implication is a genuine choice: enforce a European patent through Italy’s specialised IP sections (the Sezioni Specializzate in Materia di Impresa) or through the UPC’s Milan Local Division (or the Central Division for revocation actions). This forum selection question, UPC vs Italian courts, has become the single most consequential tactical decision in European patent enforcement, and the 2026 reforms alter the variables on both sides of the equation.
Italy’s specialised IP sections, located in designated courts such as Milan, Rome, Turin and Bologna, have historically offered a robust system for patent injunctions. The standard for obtaining a preliminary injunction (provvedimento cautelare) requires the applicant to demonstrate fumus boni iuris (a prima facie case on the merits) and periculum in mora (urgency or risk of irreparable harm). Italian courts have been willing to grant ex-parte preliminary measures in cases of genuine urgency, and the descrizione procedure, a court-supervised evidence inspection and seizure at the alleged infringer’s premises, remains one of Italy’s most powerful enforcement tools. Understanding this baseline is essential for evaluating what the 2026 reforms actually change.
The 2026 amendments to the Codice della Proprietà Industriale (CPI) refine several provisions that directly affect patent litigation strategy. The changes address three core areas: the standards for granting injunctive relief, the methodology for computing patent damages, and the evidentiary framework for establishing infringement.
On injunctive relief, the amended CPI clarifies the proportionality assessment that courts must apply when deciding whether to grant a permanent injunction. The reforms codify principles that Italian courts had been developing through case law, requiring judges to weigh the scope of the injunction against the economic impact on both parties and third-party interests. This does not weaken the injunction remedy; rather, it provides a more predictable framework for its application.
On damages, the amendments strengthen the patentee’s position by refining the statutory basis for claiming lost profits and providing clearer guidance on reasonable-royalty calculations. The revised provisions encourage courts to consider the infringer’s actual profits as one factor in determining the royalty base, moving closer to a hybrid model that accounts for both the patentee’s loss and the infringer’s gain.
On evidentiary presumptions, the reforms introduce a more structured burden-shifting mechanism in cases involving process patents, reinforcing the reversal of the burden of proof where the patented process produces a new product.
| Date | Instrument | Effect on Patent Litigation |
|---|---|---|
| 10 October 2022 | D.Lgs. 149/2022 (Riforma Cartabia), enacted | Comprehensive civil-procedure reform; phased implementation through 2026 |
| 28 February 2023 | D.Lgs. 149/2022, first tranche operative | New procedural rules for ordinary civil proceedings take effect |
| 1 June 2023 | UPC Agreement enters into force | UPC jurisdiction begins; opt-out window opens; Milan Local Division operational |
| Early 2026 | CPI amendments (IP Code 2026) published in Gazzetta Ufficiale | Revised injunction, damages and evidentiary standards for IP cases |
| 1 April 2026 | EPO fee increases effective | Higher renewal, examination and opposition fees affect prosecution budgets |
| 5 April 2026 | Further civil-procedure reform provisions operative | Telematic filing enhancements; expedited preliminary-injunction route fully operational |
The Riforma Cartabia (D.Lgs. 149/2022), as progressively implemented through April 2026, introduces several procedural changes that directly affect the pace and structure of patent litigation in Italy. The reforms mandate stricter case-management timelines, encourage front-loaded exchange of evidence and written submissions, and introduce enhanced telematic (electronic) filing requirements that eliminate many of the administrative delays associated with paper-based proceedings.
The practical effect on first-instance timing is significant. Under the pre-reform system, patent cases before Italy’s specialised IP sections typically took 18–30 months to reach a first-instance decision. Early indications suggest the reformed procedural framework could compress this to approximately 14–22 months in well-managed cases, primarily through tighter scheduling of preliminary hearings, reduced scope for adjournments, and mandatory pre-trial exchange of technical evidence. For interim relief specifically, the expedited preliminary-injunction route now allows courts to schedule hearings within days of filing in cases of demonstrated urgency.
The 2026 procedural reforms enhance the infrastructure for the descrizione (evidence inspection and seizure) procedure by enabling fully telematic filing of applications and supporting documentation. This means a patentee can file an emergency application for evidence preservation electronically, attach technical exhibits, and receive a court order without the delays previously associated with physical registry filings. The reforms also clarify the court’s power to appoint technical experts (consulenti tecnici d’ufficio) at the preliminary stage to assist with evaluating complex technical evidence during a descrizione.
For in-house teams, the key takeaway is speed: the window between discovering an infringement and obtaining a court-supervised evidence inspection has narrowed. Teams that delay beyond 48–72 hours risk having courts question the urgency (periculum in mora) of the application.
Forum selection in patent enforcement across Europe has never been more consequential. The table below provides a side-by-side comparison of the key factors that patentees should weigh when choosing between the UPC (via the Milan Local Division or Central Division) and Italian national courts under the reformed system.
| Factor | Italian National Courts (Post-2026) | UPC (Milan Local Division / Central Division) |
|---|---|---|
| Geographic scope of injunction | Italy only (enforceable in other EU states via Brussels Ia Regulation) | All UPC Contracting Member States (single injunction, pan-European effect) |
| Interim measures, ex parte | Available; requires fumus boni iuris + periculum in mora; strong descrizione tradition | Available under Article 62(5) UPCA; court may grant without hearing the defendant in urgent cases |
| Typical time to first-instance decision | 14–22 months (post-reform estimate); PI within days to weeks | 12–18 months (target); PI within weeks; still developing case-management practice |
| Risk of central revocation | Counterclaim for invalidity stays within national proceedings; no pan-European revocation risk | Counterclaim or Central Division action can revoke patent across all Contracting States |
| Damages | Lost profits or reasonable royalty under revised CPI; well-developed case law | Damages under UPC Rules of Procedure (Rule 118+); still limited jurisprudence |
| Legal costs (estimate, mid-complexity case) | €80,000–€200,000 through first instance (including technical experts) | €100,000–€300,000 (including court fees, representation, translation); court fees scale with value in dispute |
| Language | Italian | Language of the patent (typically English, French or German) or language of the Local Division |
The UPC is the stronger forum when a patentee needs pan-European relief from a single set of proceedings, particularly against a multinational infringer operating across multiple Contracting Member States. It is also advantageous where the patent is strong on validity (minimising the revocation risk) and the patentee wants to establish UPC precedent. The UPC’s ability to grant a single injunction covering all Contracting States eliminates the need for parallel national proceedings, a significant cost saving where infringement spans multiple jurisdictions.
Italian national courts remain the preferred forum where the infringement is concentrated in Italy, the patent may face validity challenges (limiting pan-European revocation risk), or the patentee wants to leverage Italy’s mature descrizione procedure and established PI practice. The reformed Italian system, with compressed timelines and enhanced telematic filing, is now more competitive on speed. National proceedings also avoid the UPC’s higher court fees and the risk that a defendant will bring a central revocation action. For disputes involving Italian-language technical evidence or Italian manufacturing operations, national courts offer practical advantages in managing the evidentiary record.
The two-part test for obtaining interim relief in patent cases remains anchored in fumus boni iuris (likelihood of success on the merits) and periculum in mora (urgency). The 2026 procedural reforms do not change this substantive standard but significantly accelerate the mechanics of obtaining relief.
A step-by-step tactical checklist for seeking emergency patent injunctions in Italy under the reformed system:
For cross-border patent enforcement cases, such as those involving goods manufactured in China and imported through Italian ports, the Evidence Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2020/1783) and the enforcement provisions under Regulation (EU) No 608/2013 (customs enforcement of IP rights) provide additional tools. Italian customs authorities can detain suspected infringing goods at the border upon application by the patent holder, buying time for formal proceedings. The 2026 reforms do not alter the customs procedure itself but make it faster to obtain the companion judicial orders needed to convert a customs detention into a substantive seizure.
Where evidence is located in other EU Member States, a patentee litigating in Italian courts can use the Evidence Regulation to request cross-border evidence taking. In UPC proceedings, Rule 192 of the UPC Rules of Procedure provides a self-contained framework for ordering evidence preservation and inspection across Contracting Member States.
The revised CPI provisions affecting patent damages in Italy reinforce two primary methods of calculation: lost profits (the profits the patentee would have earned but for the infringement) and reasonable royalty (the licence fee that willing parties would have agreed upon). The 2026 amendments clarify that courts may also consider the infringer’s actual profits as a factor in determining the reasonable-royalty base, which in practice tends to increase awards in cases where the infringer has generated substantial revenue from the infringing product.
Italian courts have historically been conservative on damages awards compared to certain other European jurisdictions. Industry observers expect the reformed framework to produce modestly higher awards over time, as courts gain experience applying the updated statutory guidance and as patentees present more sophisticated economic evidence.
The following table illustrates a worked cost comparison for a mid-complexity patent infringement case (value in dispute: €2–5 million) under three enforcement scenarios. These estimates include legal fees, court fees, technical expert costs and EPO prosecution costs where relevant. EPO fee increases effective 1 April 2026 affect the cost of maintaining the patent in force during litigation.
| Cost Category | Italian National Courts (Post-2026) | UPC (Milan Local Division) |
|---|---|---|
| Court/filing fees | €3,000–€8,000 | €10,000–€20,000 (value-based scale) |
| Legal representation (through first instance) | €60,000–€150,000 | €80,000–€200,000 |
| Technical experts (court-appointed + party) | €15,000–€40,000 | €15,000–€50,000 |
| Translation costs | Minimal (proceedings in Italian) | €5,000–€20,000 (depending on patent language) |
| EPO annual renewal fees (3-year litigation horizon, post-April 2026) | €2,500–€5,000 per designated state per year (increased rates) | Same (patent must be maintained at EPO regardless of forum) |
| Total estimated first-instance cost | €80,000–€200,000 | €110,000–€290,000 |
| Typical time to first-instance decision | 14–22 months | 12–18 months |
The EPO’s updated Rules relating to Fees, effective 1 April 2026, increase renewal fees, examination fees and opposition fees across the board. For a patentee maintaining a European patent designating multiple states during a 2–3 year litigation cycle, the cumulative increase in EPO prosecution costs can add €5,000–€15,000 to the total enforcement budget. This is a factor that many cost models overlook, and it slightly narrows the cost advantage of national proceedings over UPC litigation when the patent is validated in multiple jurisdictions.
Effective patent enforcement in Italy does not always begin with a court filing. The 30/90/180-day framework below provides a structured approach to escalation:
Days 1–30: Investigate and prepare
Days 31–90: Secure evidence and interim relief
Days 91–180: Merits proceedings and settlement posture
Once a preliminary injunction is granted in Italian patent litigation, the patentee must initiate merits proceedings within a deadline set by the court (typically 20–60 days, depending on the type of measure). Failure to file merits proceedings within this window will cause the preliminary injunction to lapse. Under the reformed civil-procedure rules, the transition from PI to merits hearing is more tightly managed, with courts setting firm scheduling orders at the first case-management conference.
For cross-border patent enforcement involving manufacturers in non-EU jurisdictions, parallel coordination between Italian proceedings and proceedings in the country of manufacture (such as China) may be necessary. This requires careful management of timing, evidence and legal privilege across jurisdictions, a tactical dimension that the 2026 reforms do not directly address but that becomes more critical as Italian proceedings accelerate.
The 2026 reforms to patent litigation in Italy, spanning the Italian IP Code 2026 amendments, civil-justice procedural reforms and EPO fee increases, create both opportunities and new tactical demands for patentees. Three prioritised actions for in-house teams:
For specific guidance on patent enforcement strategy in Italy, including forum selection, interim-relief applications and cross-border coordination, consult a qualified patent litigation lawyer in Italy through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Francesco Misuraca at SMAF & Associates, SAS, S.T.A., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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