Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 57— - PLANT VARIETY PROTECTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - PLANT VARIETY PROTECTION AND RIGHTS › Part Part K— - Infringement of Plant Variety Protection › § 2541
You must not use a protected plant variety without the owner’s permission. That includes selling, offering, shipping, importing or exporting it; giving it away or letting others have it in a form that can be grown; multiplying it (by seed, cuttings, tubers, or other means) as part of marketing; using it to make hybrids or new varieties; using seed labeled to forbid unauthorized multiplication; conditioning or stocking seed for planting; or encouraging others to do any of these things. The owner can allow use under whatever limits they set. A seed grower with a contract to produce certain lawn, turf, forage grasses, alfalfa, or clover seed is treated as allowed to sell the seed if the grower follows the contract, the owner refuses delivery or payment within 30 days of the contract payment date, and after notifying the owner the owner still fails to pay and take delivery within 30 days. The rules also cover varieties that are essentially derived from, not clearly different from, or that require repeated use of a protected variety, and harvested material grown from unauthorized propagating material unless the owner had a reasonable chance to act. Actions are allowed when the owner consented to marketing, when done privately and not for business, or when exported only for final consumption to a country that gives no plant variety protection. States and their officials are treated the same as private parties.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 2541
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73