
On April 1, 2026, USPTO Director Squires issued an Official Gazette Notice allowing patent owners a limited amount of time to respond to a request for ex parte reexamination (EPR) before the Office determines whether the request presents a substantial new question of patentability (SNQ). Under this new procedure, within 30 days of being served with an EPR, a patent owner can file a paper up to 30 pages long, explaining to the Office why the EPR does not raise a SNQ. The Notice purports to implement this new procedure to enable the Office to consider input from the patent owner before making an SNQ determination that would start the EPR.
The Notice does not change any existing rules governing the handling of EPRs, nor does the Notice make any new rules in 37 CFR. The Notice does say that if a patent owner opts to file a timely response, the Office will waive the provisions of 37 CFR § 1.530 (statement by patent owner in ex parte reexaminations) and § 1.540 (consideration of responses in ex parte reexamination) that bar patent owner responses before the Office determines whether there is an SNQ.
But nothing currently in the rules permits such a procedure. Or does it?







