Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 57— - PLANT VARIETY PROTECTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - PROTECTABILITY OF PLANT VARIETIES AND CERTIFICATES OF PROTECTION › Part Part H— - Certificates of Plant Variety Protection › § 2483
A plant variety protection certificate gives the breeder or their successor the right to prevent other people from selling, offering for sale, reproducing, importing, exporting, or using the variety to produce a hybrid or different variety while the certificate is in force. The owner can require that seed sold in the United States be sold only as a class of certified seed and can set how many generations that covers. The owner may give up any of these rights, except they cannot drop the certified-seed requirement if they chose it. The Secretary can allow those choices to be changed after the certificate is issued and can update the certificate, but changes do not apply retroactively. Protection usually lasts 20 years from the U.S. issue date of the certificate. For trees and vines it lasts 25 years. For certain tuber-propagated varieties with a special waiver, it lasts 20 years from the date of the original foreign breeder’s grant. If the certificate is not issued within three years of the effective filing date, the Secretary may reduce the term by the delay caused by the applicant. Protection also ends if the owner fails to follow rules about depositing seed or giving a different variety name, but only after the office mails notice to the last recorded owner and the owner then fails to comply within the time allowed (at least three months) and pay an extra fee set by the Secretary.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 2483
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73