
Provisional patent applications are filed in large numbers every year, but a sizable share of them never become anything more. The latest USPTO figures put provisional filings at 149,310 in fiscal year 2023, down from a pandemic-era peak of 174,464. Set against the hundreds of thousands of full utility applications the office processes, that gap tells the real story: the provisional is a placeholder, the non-provisional is the application that gets examined, and the two serve very different jobs in an inventor’s timeline.
What the two filings actually are
A provisional application establishes a filing date and lets an inventor use the phrase “patent pending” for twelve months. It is never examined, never published, and never matures into a granted patent on its own. According to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, a provisional automatically expires after one year and cannot be extended.
A non-provisional application is the real examination request. It carries formal claims, gets assigned to an examiner, and is the document that can issue as a patent. To keep the earlier date, an inventor must file the non-provisional within that twelve-month window and reference the provisional.
The conversion gap the numbers expose
Here is where the statistics get pointed. Independent analyses of USPTO data, including a review published by Thompson Patent Law, estimate that between 40 and 48 percent of provisional applications are abandoned without ever converting to a non-provisional. That means a large fraction of the roughly 149,000 provisionals filed in a given year quietly lapse twelve months later.
Some of that abandonment is strategic. An inventor files a provisional to lock a date, then spends the year deciding whether the idea justifies the cost of a full application. Other lapses are simpler: the inventor runs out of money, loses interest, or learns from a patent search that the concept is already covered.
Why the full application costs more, and why it should
Filing fees explain part of the spread. A provisional is inexpensive to file. The non-provisional requires formal claims, drawings that meet USPTO standards, and in most cases professional drafting. The USPTO fee schedule reflects that difference, and attorney drafting typically adds far more than the government fee itself.
The conversion data is a useful reality check for first-time inventors who assume a provisional is “getting a patent.” It is not. It buys time and a date. Whether that time gets used well is what separates the applications that convert from the ones that lapse.
How a virtual-first development firm reads these numbers
Enhance Innovations, a product development firm founded in 2010 and based in Champlin, Minnesota, treats the provisional year as a working window rather than a finish line. The firm brings industrial design, engineering, marketing, and licensing representation under one office, and its published guidance frames the twelve-month provisional period as the time to do the homework a serious filing needs: a real patent search, photorealistic renderings, and a clear sense of whether a company would license the idea.
That framing matches what the abandonment rate implies. The inventors whose provisionals convert tend to be the ones who used the year to test the concept, not the ones who filed and waited. A provisional with nothing behind it expires on schedule.
What inventors should take from the data
Three points hold up against the statistics. First, a provisional is a date and a label, not protection of a granted patent. Second, the twelve-month clock is unforgiving, and the conversion numbers show how many people let it run out. Third, the decision to convert should rest on evidence gathered during the year, including a prior-art search and an honest read of the market, rather than on optimism alone.
The Small Business Administration’s guidance on protecting intellectual property makes the same general point in plainer terms: the filing is a tool, and tools only work when they are part of a plan. The USPTO provisional figures, read alongside the conversion gap, are a quiet argument for using the provisional year rather than spending it.
This article is educational and is not legal or financial advice. Inventors should confirm current fees and requirements directly with the USPTO and consult a qualified professional about their specific situation.