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Divisional Practice and Double Patenting in Korea

  • September 30, 2025
  • Youngmin PARK

Unlike the U.S. system, the Korean patent regime does not allow continuations or continuation-in-part filings, nor does it provide a terminal disclaimer mechanism to address double patenting.  Instead, Korean patent law relies on a divisional filing system that imposes strict limits on obtaining multiple patents for overlapping subject matter.

 

Overview of Divisional Practice in Korea 

 

Timing Requirements for Divisional Filings

 

Under Article 52 of the Korean Patent Act (“KPA”), an applicant may file a divisional application based on the original disclosure of a parent application (i) at any time before the Examiner issues a first Office Action (either a Notice of Preliminary Rejection or a Notice of Allowance); (ii) if the applicant has received a Notice of Preliminary Rejection, within the period designated for submitting a response thereto; (iii) if the applicant has received a final rejection, at the time of requesting continued examination or lodging an appeal against the final rejection; or (iv) within 3 months of receiving the Notice of Allowance, but prior to paying the registration fee of the parent.

 

Common Uses and Objectives of Divisional Applications

 

Traditionally, divisional applications were used mainly to address unity of invention objections.  The applicant would delete the non-unitary claims from the parent and pursue them in a divisional.  

 

Although Korea does not have a continuation or continuation-in-part application system, a divisional application can serve as a de facto continuation of the original application.  By filing a divisional, the applicant can continue prosecution of certain aspects of the invention on a separate track. 

 

Strategic Considerations in Divisional Filing 

 

In Korea, applicants may use divisionals proactively as a strategy to reopen or extend prosecution on aspects of an invention as follows:

 

(1) Broader Claim Drafting After Final Rejection

 

Once a final rejection is issued in the parent application, Korean practice sharply limits amendments–the applicant may only narrow claims, correct obvious errors, or remove inconsistencies.  If a claim needs to be substantially rewritten or if new claims (supported by the original disclosure) are to be added after the final rejection, a divisional may serve as a continuation application through which such broader or new claims may be pursued. 

 

(2) Pre-Appeal Divisionals to Preserve Prosecution Options

 

In Korean practice, if an appeal of a patent application is unsuccessful, the applicant does not have any further opportunities to amend the claims and continue the prosecution after the adverse decision.  In this regard, by filing a divisional application concurrently at the time of lodging an appeal against a final rejection, the Korean divisional application system can be used as a vehicle for reopening the prosecution even if the appeal becomes unsuccessful.

 

Recent Developments in Divisional Practice in Korea

 

(1) Revision of Examination Order

 

Effective as of January 1, 2025, the Korean Intellectual Property Office (“KIPO”) amended regulations to change the examination priority of divisional applications.  

 

Under the previous regime, the examination timing of divisional applications was determined based on the parent application’s examination order.  This caused significant delays in processing regular applications and occasionally resulted in divisional cases being examined before the completion of the parent case prosecution, especially when a divisional was filed in parallel with an appeal against a final rejection of the parent application.  

 

The amendment addresses these issues, with divisional applications now being examined according to the order in which a request for examination for the divisional application itself is submitted.  

 

(2) Introduction of Deferred Examination for Divisionals

 

Recognizing the extended product development timelines in industries, such as telecom, pharmaceuticals, and biotech, the KPA has been amended to allow deferred examination of divisional applications.  

 

Effective July 11, 2025, applicants may request deferred examination for a divisional within nine months from the date of the examination request. The commencement of substantive examination may then be designated for any time, from two years after the request date up to five years from the filing date of the parent application.  

 

▶Double Patenting under Korean Patent Law

 

While divisional applications can be used to continue prosecution, such divisionals must claim an invention substantially different from the parent.  Otherwise, the KIPO will reject the divisional for double patenting.

 

Korea’s double patenting framework for divisionals has remained consistent in recent years, with no significant legislative or procedural updates.  The relevant standards continue to be governed by Article 36 of the KPA and longstanding Supreme Court precedents.

 

Statutory Basis: Article 36 of the KPA

 

Article 36(1) of the KPA stipulates that when two or more patent applications are filed for a same invention, only the application with the earliest filing date may be granted a patent.  If two or more patent applications directed to an identical invention are filed on a same day, the patent may be granted only to the applicant determined by an agreement among all of the applicants.  If no such agreement is reached, none of the applicants may obtain a patent (Article 36(2) of the KPA). 

 

Under Korean patent practice, a divisional application containing a claim identical or substantially identical to that of its parent case is subject to rejection under Article 36(2) of the KPA. 

 

Court Rulings on Double Patenting Cases

 

The Korean Supreme Court has clarified the legal standard for determining the identicalness of claims under Article 36 of the KPA: “Even if there exists a difference between the two inventions with respect to the technical constitution, they are deemed substantially identical to each other when such difference is no more than a mere addition, deletion or modification of a well-known or commonly practiced technical means, which does not produce any new effect.” (see, e.g., Supreme Court Case No. 2002Hu2778 decided on March 12, 2004)

 

Based on the above ruling, the Korean Supreme Court has determined that differences in the category of invention alone are insufficient to establish a distinction between inventions, and that the identicalness of inventions must be determined on a case-by-case basis.  Specifically, the Supreme Court held that an invention regarding a method for regenerating lost wax and a device for performing the method, each filed on the same day and granted as a patent and utility model respectively, were identical inventions (Supreme Court Case No. 2005Hu3017).  The Supreme Court also held that a compound invention and a method for preparing the compound are identical inventions where they are based on the same technical idea (Supreme Court Case No. 2007Hu2797). 

 

Further, the IP High Court rendered a decision that a divisional patent whose scope encompasses that of its parent patent is deemed substantially identical to the parent patent, and thus, is invalid for the reason of double patenting because both patents are based on a same technical idea and the constitutive differences between the two patents do not produce any new effect (IP High Court Case No. 2017Heo1021 rendered on October 12, 2017).

 

Risk of Double Patenting in Divisional Applications

 

The KIPO’s Examination Guidelines explain that two inventions are considered to be substantially identical when they differ only in non-essential matters without substantially affecting the concept of the inventions.  For example, simple differences in expression, recognition of the effects, purpose, or use, or simple modification of constitution are all recognized as potentially leading to a double patenting rejection.

 

Therefore, even if the categories of the inventions differ from each other, a rejection based on double patenting may arise for a parent and a divisional applications that fail to satisfy the above standards set forth in the KIPO Guidelines.

 

Practical Approaches to Double Patenting Rejections

 

For the reasons explained above, when filing a divisional application in Korea, it is important to make the claims of the divisional and the parent applications different from each other in substance to avoid a double patenting rejection.

 

Korean practice does not provide any system or mechanism analogous to the U.S. terminal disclaimer (for the obvious reason that there is no term difference between the two in principle).  Therefore, double patenting rejections issued against the parent application and the divisional application may be overcome only by deleting the rejected claims from one of the applications, or amending the claims of one or both of the applications to be distinguishable from each other.