Title 17CopyrightsRelease 119-73

§409 Application for copyright registration

Title 17 › Chapter CHAPTER 4— - COPYRIGHT NOTICE, DEPOSIT, AND REGISTRATION › § 409

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Apply on the form the Register of Copyrights provides. The form must include the claimant's name and address; the author(s)' identity and their nationality or where they live (and death dates if any; for anonymous or pen-name works give nationality or residence only); whether the work was made for hire; if the claimant isn't the author, how they got the copyright; the title, year finished, and first publication date and country if published; for compilations or derivative works, the earlier work(s) used and a short note of the new material; and any other information the Register needs to identify the work or its ownership.

Full Legal Text

Title 17, §409

Copyrights — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

The application for copyright registration shall be made on a form prescribed by the Register of Copyrights and shall include—
(1)the name and address of the copyright claimant;
(2)in the case of a work other than an anonymous or pseudonymous work, the name and nationality or domicile of the author or authors, and, if one or more of the authors is dead, the dates of their deaths;
(3)if the work is anonymous or pseudonymous, the nationality or domicile of the author or authors;
(4)in the case of a work made for hire, a statement to this effect;
(5)if the copyright claimant is not the author, a brief statement of how the claimant obtained ownership of the copyright;
(6)the title of the work, together with any previous or alternative titles under which the work can be identified;
(7)the year in which creation of the work was completed;
(8)if the work has been published, the date and nation of its first publication;
(9)in the case of a compilation or derivative work, an identification of any preexisting work or works that it is based on or incorporates, and a brief, general statement of the additional material covered by the copyright claim being registered; and
(10)any other information regarded by the Register of Copyrights as bearing upon the preparation or identification of the work or the existence, ownership, or duration of the copyright.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Historical and Revision Notes

house report no. 94–1476

The various clauses of section 409, which specify the information to be included in an application for copyright registration, are intended to give the Register of Copyrights authority to elicit all of the information needed to examine the application and to make a meaningful record of registration. The list of enumerated items was not exhaustive; under the last clause of the section the application may also include “any other information regarded by the Register of Copyrights as bearing upon the preparation or identification of the work or the existence, ownership, or duration of the copyright.” Among the enumerated items there are several that are not now included in the Copyright Office’s application forms, but will become significant under the life-plus-50 term and other provisions of the bill. Clause (5), reflecting the increased importance of the interrelationship between registration of copyright claims and recordation of transfers of ownership, requires a statement of how a claimant who is not the author acquired ownership of the copyright. Clause (9) requires that, “in the case of a compilation or derivative work” the application include “an identification of any preexisting work or works that it is based on or incorporates, and a brief, general statement of the additional material covered by the copyright claim being registered.” It is intended that, under this requirement, the application covering a collection such as a song-book or hymnal would clearly reveal any works in the collection that are in the public domain, and the copyright status of all other previously-published compositions. This information will be readily available in the Copyright Office. The catch-all clause at the end of the section will enable the Register to obtain more specialized information, such as that bearing on whether the work contains material that is a “work of the United States Government.” In the case of works subject to the manufacturing requirement, the application must also include information about the manufacture of the copies.

Editorial Notes

Amendments

2010—Par. (9) to (11). Pub. L. 111–295 inserted “and” after semicolon at end of par. (9), redesignated par. (11) as (10), and struck out former par. (10) which read as follows: “in the case of a published work containing material of which copies are required by section 601 to be manufactured in the United States, the names of the persons or organizations who performed the processes specified by subsection (c) of section 601 with respect to that material, and the places where those processes were performed; and”. 1992—Pub. L. 102–307 inserted at end “If an application is submitted for the renewed and extended term provided for in section 304(a)(3)(A) and an original term registration has not been made, the Register may request information with respect to the existence, ownership, or duration of the copyright for the original term.”

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Effective Date

of 1992 AmendmentAmendment by Pub. L. 102–307 effective
June 26, 1992, but applicable only to copyrights secured between
January 1, 1964, and
December 31, 1977, and not affecting court proceedings pending on
June 26, 1992, with copyrights secured before
January 1, 1964, governed by section 304(a) of this title as in effect on the day before
June 26, 1992, except each reference to forty-seven years in such provisions deemed to be 67 years, see section 102(g) of Pub. L. 102–307, as amended, set out as a note under section 101 of this title.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

17 U.S.C. § 409

Title 17Copyrights

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73