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A Notice of Allowance is a document sent to a patent applicant from the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) after a patent examiner has decided to issue the requested patent.
The Notice of Allowance comes after the inventor has turned in a patent application and provided all information about the invention. This information includes the patents description, design, drawings, or blueprints.
Every nonprovisional design and plant application, new or amended, and including the drawings, if any, when first assigned to a Technology Center (TC) must be classified and assigned to an examiner for examination. The supervisory patent examiner normally assigns the application to an examiner.
The simplest way to identify success in obtaining patents is to look at the allowance rate. On average, ing to the USPTO, just over 70% of patent applications are ever allowed. By contrast, for our clients who do not abandon their applications for business reasons, we have an allowance rate of 93.3%.
The examiners statement of reasons for allowance is the personal opinion of the examiner as to why the claims are allowable. The examiners statement should not create an estoppel.
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People also ask

How long does patent protection last? Patent protection is granted for a limited period, generally 20 years from the filing date of the application.
Allowed: patent application which has been indicated by an examiner as meeting all statutory (laws) and regulatory (rules) requirementsnot patented yet; may or may not have been published.
If you come across a patent EP000001A1, for instance, the A1 means that it is an application document. If you come across EP000001B1 this is the granted document. Another way to check is by going to the Legal area, which is the 5th tab along the top when you click into a patent document.

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