As of March 2026, the Geyser Patent Attorney Directory contains 1085 patent practitioners with verified filing records in Semiconductor Devices & Technology (CPC H10). These practitioners have filed a combined 62 patent applications, of which 38 have been granted, a 61.3% allowance rate.
How 1085 Semiconductor Devices & Technology practitioners score on PatentFit
Annual patent filings in CPC H10
Firms with the most Semiconductor Devices & Technology patent filings
Search the full Geyser directory to see individual practitioners ranked by PatentFit Score for your specific technology.
Search Semiconductors Attorneys on GeyserPatent filings in integrated circuits, semiconductor fabrication, chip architecture, and solid-state device technology.
View CPC definition ↗As of March 2026, the Geyser Patent Attorney Directory database contains 1085 patent practitioners with verified filing records in Semiconductor Devices & Technology (CPC H10). These practitioners have filed a combined 62 patent applications in this technology area, with 38 granted (61.3% allowance rate).
The allowance rate for patent applications classified under Semiconductor Devices & Technology (CPC H10) is 61.3% 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 1085 practitioners with proven filing records in Semiconductor Devices & Technology. Of these, 0 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.