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Patents

Not all claims are created equal – understanding their role is key to effective patent drafting.

What dependent claims are really for

Everyone in IP knows how claims work.

Independent claims define the scope of protection.
Dependent claims add further limitations.

Simple enough. But if you look at real-world patent applications, the question quickly becomes:

What are all these dependent claims actually doing?

The uncomfortable truth

A surprising number of dependent claims are not there for legal or technical reasons — they are there to increase the claim count.

More claims can make an application look more robust.
But from a strategic perspective, these claims often add little to no value.

They do not meaningfully refine the invention.
They do not help during prosecution.
And they do not strengthen enforceability.

In short: they are noise.

The useful types of dependent claims

If we strip things down, most dependent claims fall into three meaningful categories:

1. Clarifying claims

Some dependent claims are used to make the language of an independent claim more precise or easier to interpret.

These can be helpful — especially when:

However, in many cases, this content can just as well live in the description.
Keeping it as a claim is not always necessary.

2. Narrowing claims (the important ones)

These are the workhorses.

Dependent claims that reduce the scope of the independent claim are critical during prosecution.
They provide fallback positions when prior art is cited.

Without them, you may be forced into awkward amendments — or worse, lose protection entirely.

Good narrowing claims:

These are worth every line.

3. Decorative claims

Then there are claims that:

They do not help in examination.
They do not help in enforcement.
They only make the claim set longer — and more expensive.

Why this matters: cost

In several jurisdictions, you pay per claim.

That means every unnecessary claim has a direct financial impact:

From an IP management perspective, this is low-hanging fruit.

A lean, well-structured claim set:

A more disciplined approach

Before filing, it is worth asking for each dependent claim:

If the answer is no, it is a candidate for deletion.

Conclusion

Dependent claims are not just “nice to have additions” to an independent claim.

They are tools.

Used correctly, they:

Used poorly, they:

As with most things in IP: quality beats quantity.

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