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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Surge in Patent Filings Across Indian Higher Education
India's higher education sector has witnessed a remarkable boom in intellectual property activity, particularly in patent applications. In the financial year 2024-25, the country recorded over 110,375 patent filings, marking a significant 19.75% increase from the previous year.
What drives this enthusiasm? National frameworks such as the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) emphasize intellectual property rights (IPR) metrics, encouraging universities to prioritize patent publications. However, beneath the numbers lies a critical disparity: while filings soar, especially among private institutions, the conversion to actual grants tells a different story. This phenomenon highlights deeper questions about quality, sustainability, and true innovation in Indian academia.
Private Universities Dominate Filing Volumes
Private and deemed universities have emerged as frontrunners in patent filings, often outpacing prestigious public institutions. Data from the Indian Patent Office reveals that nine out of the top 10 academic filers in recent years are private entities.
This surge aligns with internal incentives at these institutions, where faculty receive monetary rewards—ranging from Rs 5,000 to Rs 15,000 per published patent—and academic credits for promotions. Students also benefit by listing themselves as inventors on resumes. Low filing costs (Rs 1,600 initially) combined with government reimbursements up to Rs 2 lakh per application create a lucrative model, amplified by NIRF's focus on published patents.
| Institution | Patent Publications (2020-2025) |
|---|---|
| Lovely Professional University | 7,096 |
| Chandigarh University | 5,318 |
| Galgotias University | 2,233 |
| IITs (Collective) | 6,558 |
IITs and IISc: Champions of Granted Patents
In contrast, the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) and Indian Institute of Science (IISc) exemplify quality-driven innovation. Collectively, the 23 IITs filed 6,558 patents from 2020-2025, securing 2,806 grants—a robust 43% success rate. IISc Bengaluru achieved even higher, with grant rates around 46.5% to 68% depending on the period analyzed.
National Institutes of Technology (NITs) mirror this trend, with a 41% overall grant rate. These public institutions invest heavily in research infrastructure, dedicated IP cells, and legal expertise to navigate prosecution, ensuring higher viability. For example, IIT Madras and IIT Bombay frequently license technologies to industry, demonstrating real-world impact.

The Alarming Gap in Grant Success Rates
The disparity becomes stark when examining grant rates. Private heavyweights like LPU boast a mere 2.3% conversion (164 grants from 7,096 publications), Chandigarh University at 0.8% (45 grants), and Galgotias at 0.1% (2 grants).
| Institution Type | Avg. Grant Rate (2020-2025) |
|---|---|
| IITs | 43% |
| IISc | 46-68% |
| NITs | 41% |
| Private Universities (Top Filers) | 0.1-2.3% |
This gap underscores a volume-vs-quality divide, with many private filings abandoned post-publication due to insufficient follow-through.Indian Patent Office Annual Report 2024-25 highlights overall grants at 33,504, but institutional breakdowns reveal academia's low commercialization—under 15% of grants lead to licenses or startups.
NIRF Rankings: Fueling the Quantity Rush
The National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) allocates 15 marks to IPR, with granted patents weighted double (10 marks for grants vs. 5 for publications over three years). Yet, the emphasis on publications incentivizes filings before examination.
Experts argue for reform: reimburse fees only post-grant and prioritize societal impact metrics. This would align incentives with genuine innovation, reducing frivolous applications that burden examiners.
Galgotias University: A Spotlight on Controversy
Galgotias University's presentation of a Chinese robot dog as indigenous tech at the India AI Impact Summit 2026 ignited scrutiny. With 2,297 filings but only 24 grants (1%), questions arose on patent quality. Analyzed applications revealed overlaps with prior art and rejections for lacking inventive step.
The incident, viral on X (formerly Twitter), exposed how metrics overshadow substance, prompting calls for transparency in university IP claims.Related AI Summit Coverage
Other Private Contenders and Their Challenges
LPU leads filings but struggles with prosecution, likely due to resource gaps in legal support. Chandigarh and others follow suit. VIT and Sathyabama fare slightly better (2-22% in subsets), thanks to stronger R&D ecosystems. Public institutions succeed via technology transfer offices (TTOs) that guide from lab to market.
- Invest in IP prosecution teams
- Partner with industry for validation
- Focus on high-impact domains like AI, biotech
Unpacking the Reasons Behind the Divide
Public institutions benefit from sustained funding, world-class labs, and experienced faculty. Private ones, often newer, prioritize metrics for accreditation and enrollment. Cultural context: India's NEP 2020 aims for research universities, but implementation lags in privates. Step-by-step patent process—filing, publication (18 months), examination (12-30 months expedited), grant—demands persistence privates lack.
Implications for Innovation and Academia
Low grants erode trust in India's innovation narrative, despite ranking 6th in AI publications. Wasted resources divert from core research. For stakeholders: Students gain superficial credentials; faculty chase numbers; nation misses commercialization. Explore research jobs driving real patents.
Pathways to Reform and Balanced Growth
Recommendations include:
- NIRF shift to grant/commercialization ratios
- Fee reimbursements tied to grants
- Mandatory TTOs in universities
- Incentives for licensing revenue
Photo by Rana Shehryar on Unsplash
Looking Ahead: Fostering Genuine Innovation
As India eyes Atmanirbhar Bharat, bridging this disparity is crucial. With ANRF and IndiaAI Mission, targeted investments could elevate privates. Universities must evolve from filers to innovators. Check Rate My Professor, higher ed jobs, and university jobs for opportunities in patent-driven research.
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