Title 7 › Chapter 57— PLANT VARIETY PROTECTION › Subchapter II— PROTECTABILITY OF PLANT VARIETIES AND CERTIFICATES OF PROTECTION › Part D— Protectability of Plant Varieties › § 2402
Breeders (or the breeder’s successor) can get plant variety protection for a plant variety that is sexually reproduced, tuber-propagated, or asexually reproduced (but not fungi or bacteria) if it meets four requirements. It must be new: on the date you file, material of the variety must not have been sold or given to others for exploitation more than 1 year earlier in the United States, or more than 4 years earlier outside the United States (6 years for trees and vines). There was a special one-year waiver for tuber-propagated varieties that applied until one year after April 4, 1996. It must also be distinct (clearly different from known varieties), uniform (variations are predictable and acceptable), and stable (keeps its key traits when reproduced). If two or more people file on the same effective date for varieties that cannot be clearly told apart, the person who first completes all the required steps gets the certificate and others are excluded. If multiple applicants meet the rules on the same date, each gets a certificate, except when the varieties cannot be distinguished at all—in that case one joint certificate is issued to the applicants.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 2402
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60