As of February 2026, the Geyser Patent Attorney Directory contains 3563 patent practitioners with verified filing records in Checking & Counting Devices (CPC G07). These practitioners have filed a combined 347 patent applications, of which 198 have been granted, a 57.1% allowance rate. Of these, 1 practitioners have PatentFit Scores rated “Strong” or “Exceptional.”
How 3563 Checking & Counting Devices practitioners score on PatentFit
1 practitioners have “Strong” or “Exceptional” PatentFit Scores in Checking & Counting Devices, meaning deep, recent filing history in CPC G07.
Find your top matches on GeyserAnnual patent filings in CPC G07
Firms with the most Checking & Counting Devices patent filings
Search the full Geyser directory to see individual practitioners ranked by PatentFit Score for your specific technology.
Search Vending & Access Attorneys on GeyserPatent filings in vending machines, access control, and automated transaction devices.
View CPC definition ↗As of February 2026, the Geyser Patent Attorney Directory database contains 3563 patent practitioners with verified filing records in Checking & Counting Devices (CPC G07). These practitioners have filed a combined 347 patent applications in this technology area, with 198 granted (57.1% allowance rate).
The allowance rate for patent applications classified under Checking & Counting Devices (CPC G07) is 57.1% in our database. The USPTO-wide average is approximately 61.6%. Practitioners with high PatentFit Scores in this area significantly outperform this average.
The Geyser Patent Attorney Directory analyzes 3563 practitioners with proven filing records in Checking & Counting Devices. Of these, 1 have PatentFit Scores rated "Strong" or "Exceptional," indicating deep specialization. You can search for your specific technology match on our directory.
PatentFit is a composite score (0-100) measuring how well a practitioner's actual filing record aligns with a specific technology area. It combines Specialization Depth (35%), Allowance Rate (25%), Filing Recency (20%), and Experience (20%). Full methodology at https://patentgeyser.com/methodology.
No. Patent practitioners are registered with the USPTO, a federal agency with nationwide jurisdiction. A patent attorney in any U.S. state can file and prosecute patent applications for inventors located anywhere. What matters is their proven expertise in your specific technology area.