Apple's Patent Grants Declined in 2025 as Innovation Slows

Apple's U.S. patent activity declined sharply in 2025 amid a broader slowdown in patent filings, according to newly released data from IFI CLAIMS Patent Services.

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The data shows that Apple was granted 2,722 U.S. patents in 2025, down from 3,082 in 2024, a year-over-year decline of roughly 12% that pushed the company down two positions to sixth place in IFI's annual ranking of the top 50 recipients of U.S. patent grants. The shift marks a notable change for Apple at a time when its spending on artificial intelligence, silicon design, and software continues to expand, but it also reflects a wider contraction in patent activity across the United States.

Total U.S. patent grants in 2025 fell to 323,272, a decline of less than 1% from the previous year, while U.S. patent applications dropped more steeply, falling 9% to 393,344. IFI noted that the decline in applications represents the lowest level since 2019, following a record high in 2024. The data is compiled directly from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and forms the basis of IFI's annual Top 50 and Top 10 Fastest Growing Technologies reports.

The slowdown was visible across core technology areas that typically account for a large share of U.S. patents, with filings and grants falling in key categories such as digital data processing and data transmission. The slowdown was not limited to Apple, with other major U.S. technology companies such as Google also falling in the patent rankings in 2025, while Nvidia did not receive enough U.S. patent grants to place in the Top 50 despite its central role in the AI boom.

It also came as the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office continued to work through a backlog of more than 1.2 million applications, which has delayed the pace at which patents are issued. While U.S.-based companies still received the largest number of patents overall, their total fell by more than 5% in 2025, even as companies in several Asian countries increased their patent counts.

Apple's decline occurred as several competitors either held steady or increased their patent output. Samsung retained the top position for the fourth consecutive year with 7,054 U.S. patent grants, accounting for more than 2% of all patents issued in the United States in 2025. Apple chip supplier Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) ranked second with 4,194 grants, followed by Qualcomm in third place with 3,749.

Apple's drop contrasted with gains by companies such as Dell and Toyota, which moved up eight and six places respectively, driven largely by patents related to computing infrastructure, energy storage, and vehicle systems. Key areas of research in 2025 included AI and battery technologies.

Tag: Patent

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Top Rated Comments

attila Avatar
3 weeks ago
I don't know much about patents, but I wouldn't worry about Apple getting "only" 2722 patents. That's a lot!
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
mazz0 Avatar
3 weeks ago
Are we sure the number of patents is a good metric by which to measure "innovation"? I fear that may put too much faith in the patent system.
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
mxrider88 Avatar
3 weeks ago
They should patent bugs… then you see growth
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
neuropsychguy Avatar
3 weeks ago
Treating patent volume as a proxy for innovation is common, but fundamentally misguided. The article even hints at this problem, while still trying to comment on "innovation".

For example, Nvidia is arguably driving the AI revolution, yet it does not even appear in the top 50; this is evidence that market leadership does not require high-volume patent filings. Are market leaders innovators? Not always (and sometimes even rarely), but their actions are driving the market.

Apple’s relatively modest numbers this past year are plausibly explained by a strategic pivot toward trade secrets rather than by any slowdown in R&D (although that's possible). There is little incentive to publish a blueprint (patent) when proprietary control (trade secret) is more valuable. Once the substantial USPTO backlog is factored in, these rankings begin to reflect bureaucratic delay can be a factor.

We also shouldn't assume that quantity of patent applications has to do with quality and innovation. Sometimes companies file all sorts of patents to build a 'wall' of defense or offense to use in lawsuits or to block competitors, rather than to introduce new products. Also, Samsung operates as a massive conglomerate selling thousands of different hardware components, which naturally generates high patent volume. They are creating new things, but quantity shouldn't be linked so closely with "innovation".
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
rappr Avatar
3 weeks ago
I don’t know why, but I expected better from MacRumors. You guys are really reaching for the negativity these days.
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
giggles Avatar
3 weeks ago
Wow a 12% decline, innovation is dead at Apple. ??
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)