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PatentCliff

Updated June 2026 · USPTO PatentsView

When Does Rinvoq Patent Expire?

Rinvoq is protected by 45 US patents in the USPTO records tracked here. The earliest patent expires on Jan 15, 2031 (4.5 years from now), opening the door to potential generic or biosimilar competition for that specific composition. Full portfolio protection extends to Mar 9, 2038. Overall Patent Strength Score: 58/100 (Grade C, "moderate").

Reviewed by PatentCliff Editorial Team · Updated

Rinvoq Patent Snapshot

Total US Patents45
Earliest Patent ExpirationJan 15, 2031
Latest Patent ExpirationMar 9, 2038
Years Until First Expiry4.5 yr
Patent HolderAbbVie Inc.
Generic Nameupadacitinib
Patent Strength ScoreC58/100

When the Rinvoq Patent Cliff Hits

Rinvoq's earliest patent expiration is in 2031, roughly 4.5 years out. That places this drug in the medium-term cliff window — most pharmaceutical analysts begin modeling generic erosion 3 to 5 years before the first composition-of-matter expiry, because that is when the FDA's 30-month stay clock starts ticking after the first ANDA filing. Latest portfolio expiration: 2038.

Because Rinvoq's earliest patent expiry is more than three years out, generic competition is not imminent. ANDA filings can occur as early as four years after NDA approval (the so-called "5-year exclusivity wall"), but actual market entry is gated by the latest unexpired patent. For clinicians and payers, the planning horizon for generic substitution on Rinvoq is 2031 at the earliest.

For the authoritative listing of patents tied to a specific drug — the patents an ANDA filer is legally required to address under 21 USC § 355(j) — consult the FDA Orange Book. Underlying utility patent data on this page is sourced from USPTO PatentsView, the federal government's free public patent API.

Inside the Rinvoq Patent Portfolio

Rinvoq is protected by 45 US patents — a large portfolio that signals an aggressive lifecycle management strategy. Mega-portfolios of 15+ patents are characteristic of top-selling drugs (Humira famously had over 130) where the manufacturer has built layered protection across composition, multiple formulations, dosing schedules, drug-device combinations, and method-of-use claims for individual indications. These layered portfolios typically face Paragraph IV litigation under the Hatch-Waxman framework as generic challengers test secondary patents one by one.

All 45 patents in the Rinvoq portfolio are assigned to AbbVie Inc., indicating consolidated ownership. Single-assignee portfolios are simpler to litigate and easier to license — generic challengers face one negotiating counterparty, and any settlement or pay-for-delay arrangement involves only that holder.

The Rinvoq portfolio scores 58/100 (Grade C, "moderate") on the PatentCliff Strength index. The strongest signal is portfolio size (100/100), and the weakest is technology diversity (9/100). The four factors are weighted by how well they predict real-world resilience to generic challenge: portfolio size 30%, claims breadth 25%, time remaining 25%, and technology diversity 20%.

Earliest Patents in the Portfolio

Patent #TitleExpiresYears Left
8962629Drug substance (composition of matter) patent20314.6
RE47221Drug substance (composition of matter) patent20337.1
10550126Orange Book listed patent203610.3
11512092Orange Book listed patent203610.3
11365198Orange Book listed patent203610.3
11773106Orange Book listed patent203610.3
11976077Orange Book listed patent203610.3
11524964Orange Book listed patent203610.3

Rinvoq vs Other Branded Drugs

Rinvoq's 45-patent portfolio is 536% larger than the average drug tracked here (7 patents) — heavier-than-typical lifecycle protection. Among the 40 drugs in this database, Rinvoq ranks #2 by patent count. For broader context, the earliest expiration in the data set is Ozempic (2026) and the longest-protected drug is Mounjaro (latest expiry 2041).

Expiration Timeline

Looking at the 45 dated patents in the portfolio, the largest cluster (42 patents) falls in the "5–10 years (2032–2036)" bucket. That distribution matters because generic entry is gated by the latest unexpired blocking patent, not the earliest — even one late-expiring formulation patent can delay biosimilar launch by years if it survives a Paragraph IV challenge.

The 20-year patent term in the United States runs from the earliest non-provisional filing date, not the grant date. That means a patent granted in 2015 from a 2010 filing has only 15 years of life left at grant — a feature of US patent law that creates the layered "cliff" pattern visible in most branded drug portfolios. Patent Term Extension under 35 USC § 156 can add up to 5 years for time lost to FDA review, and pediatric exclusivity can add 6 months on top.

How the Patent Strength Score Is Calculated

The PatentCliff Strength Score combines four signals from USPTO data into a single 0-100 grade. Portfolio size (30%) measures the number of patents covering the drug — a proxy for litigation depth and the count of independent challenges a generic must clear. Claims breadth (25%) is the average number of claims per patent, an indicator of how broadly each patent attempts to cover the underlying invention. Time remaining (25%) measures average years until expiration across the portfolio. Technology diversity (20%) measures the number of distinct CPC (Cooperative Patent Classification) classes the portfolio touches — diverse portfolios are harder to design around. Read the full PatentCliff methodology, including how scores compare to citation-weighted academic measures.

Related Questions About Rinvoq

Sources: Patent records — USPTO PatentsView API (public domain). Drug-to-patent mapping cross-referenced against the FDA Orange Book. Expiration dates calculated as application date plus 20 years per 35 USC § 154.

Cite as: "PatentCliff, June 2026 reading. Source: USPTO PatentsView." Last updated 2026-06-24.

This answer pulls from the FDA Orange Book and USPTO patent records, the authoritative federal source for U.S. pharmaceutical patent expirations. The headline number above is the direct answer; what follows is the additional context most readers need to use the answer for a real decision rather than just a fact lookup.

For readers turning this answer into action: cross-reference against the underlying the FDA Orange Book and USPTO patent records record before acting on time-sensitive decisions. The site renders the data as it was published; subsequent revisions can shift the picture, and the live federal data is always the authoritative current reference.