North Carolina Intellectual Property Case Value Calculator
An North Carolina intellectual property case can involve a patent, trademark, copyright, or trade secret — each with its own rules. Patent and copyright disputes are federal; trademark and trade-secret claims can proceed under both federal and North Carolina law. Which type of IP is at stake drives the damages and the prerequisites for suing.
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In North Carolina, you generally have 3 years to file a intellectual property claim. What your case is worth depends on your specific damages and North Carolina's laws — use the calculator below for a free estimate of your low-to-high range.
Key North Carolina Laws
| Filing Deadline | 3 years shorter than the national average of 3.9 years |
|---|---|
| Negligence System | Contributory Negligence One of only 5 jurisdictions with this strict rule |
How North Carolina Law Affects Your Intellectual Property Case
IP damages are typically measured as your lost profits, the infringer's profits, or a reasonable royalty — what you would have charged to license the work. For willful infringement, patent and trademark law allow enhanced damages up to three times the actual damages, plus attorney fees in exceptional cases, which makes willfulness a major value driver.
Deadlines vary by IP type: patent damages reach back 6 years, copyright claims run 3 years from discovery, and trademark and trade-secret claims generally follow a 3-year period in North Carolina. Registration matters too — copyright registration is required before suing and unlocks statutory damages and fees, and a patent must have issued.
How Does North Carolina Compare?
North Carolina Intellectual Property FAQs
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Legal Disclaimer
This calculator uses North Carolina's statutes as of 2026-03-06. Laws change frequently. This tool provides estimates for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Verify current rules with a North Carolina-licensed attorney before making decisions about your case. Learn about our methodology.
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