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How Are IP and Tech Valuation Determined in Infringement Disputes?


Intellectual property and technology valuation forms the foundation of any infringement claim, determining both liability exposure and potential damages at stake.

Courts and expert witnesses rely on established methodologies to quantify the economic value of patents, software, trade secrets, and other tech assets when infringement occurs. Understanding how courts assess damages, what assumptions drive expert opinions, and where methodological defects can undermine the opposing party's case is essential for defendants facing valuation challenges. This article examines the core valuation methodologies, reasonable royalty standards, procedural vulnerabilities, and defense strategies in IP infringement disputes.

Contents


1. Core Valuation Methodologies and Burden of Proof


The party claiming infringement bears the burden of proving both the existence of the IP right and its economic value with reasonable certainty. Valuation does not rest on speculation or inflated projections; courts require credible economic data and defensible assumptions. Understanding which methodology the opposing expert uses and where it may overreach is your first line of defense.

Valuation MethodPrimary UseKey Vulnerability
Cost ApproachR&D expenses, development costsDoes not reflect market demand or competitive value
Market ApproachComparable licensing deals, royalty ratesCherry-picked comparables inflate value; truly comparable transactions are rare
Income ApproachProjected revenue, profit margins, market share attributable to IPSpeculative forecasts, unjustified assumptions, failure to isolate IP contribution
Relief of RoyaltyLicensing-based damagesAssumes willing licensor-licensee negotiation that may never have occurred

Each method has legitimate applications, but courts scrutinize the underlying assumptions. If the opposing expert relies on projected revenue without evidence of actual market demand, or on a comparable license bearing little resemblance to your technology, you have grounds to challenge the valuation. The cost approach often overstates value because development expenses do not equal market worth; a technology can be expensive to build and still have minimal commercial value.

In practice, IP and Tech Valuation disputes often turn on whether the expert properly isolated the infringing product's profits or revenue attributable to the IP itself, rather than to other factors such as brand, distribution, or complementary technology. If the opposing expert conflates total product revenue with IP-specific contribution, that methodological flaw becomes a key defense argument.



2. Damages Frameworks and Reasonable Royalty Standards


Courts award damages based on either the infringer's profits or a reasonable royalty, the amount a willing licensor and licensee would have negotiated at the time infringement began. The reasonable royalty standard is the more common framework in federal patent cases and technology disputes. Your defense hinges on whether the opposing expert's royalty rate is grounded in real licensing data or is purely speculative.

The hypothetical negotiation framework requires the expert to identify the parties' relative bargaining power, industry standard royalty rates for similar technologies, the extent to which the IP contributed to product success, and the licensor's available alternatives. If the expert skips any of these steps or assumes a royalty rate without comparable licensing precedent, the valuation becomes vulnerable to challenge. Courts have repeatedly rejected royalty rates lacking anchor points in real-world licensing practice.

Focus discovery on whether the opposing party actually licensed similar technology before or during the infringement period and at what rates. If no such licenses exist, the expert's royalty assumption rests on pure speculation. Examine whether the expert properly accounted for the licensor's alternatives, the strength of the patent or trade secret claim itself, and whether the infringing product actually depends on the IP or merely uses it as one of many possible design choices.



3. Procedural Challenges and Expert Qualification Defects


Valuation disputes are often won or lost on procedural grounds before trial. Courts require timely disclosure of expert reports, detailed methodologies, and sufficient data to allow meaningful challenge. Delays in producing valuation analysis, vague expert reports, or failure to disclose key assumptions can result in exclusion of the expert's opinion entirely.

Under New York state court procedure and federal discovery rules, an expert's report must set forth qualifications, facts and assumptions underlying the opinion, and the expert's reasoning in sufficient detail for the opposing party to understand and rebut the analysis. If the opposing expert's report is sparse, conclusory, or omits critical assumptions, you have grounds for a motion to strike. Courts are increasingly strict about enforcing disclosure requirements; a delayed or incomplete valuation report may be barred from evidence regardless of the expert's credentials.

Challenge the expert's qualifications directly if they lack specific experience in valuing technology similar to yours, or if their prior testimony reveals methodological inconsistencies. An expert who has testified in similar cases but used conflicting methodologies can be impeached. If the expert lacks financial or economic credentials and is simply a technical expert offering speculation about market value, that cross-examination point weakens the valuation substantially.



4. New York Court Practice and Disclosure Timing


In New York state courts, expert disclosure deadlines are set by case management orders and court rules. Failure to timely disclose valuation methodology can result in preclusion, even if the expert is otherwise qualified. Courts have shown little tolerance for late-disclosed valuation analyses, particularly where the opposing party has already incurred costs preparing rebuttal.

A common procedural vulnerability arises when the party claiming infringement delays producing its valuation expert report until after the opposing party has disclosed its damages expert. If you receive a late valuation report, immediately notify opposing counsel in writing and preserve your objection in the record. Request a protective order or motion to strike if the disclosure violates the case schedule. Document all communications regarding timing of expert disclosures and make clear that you are not waiving your right to challenge late disclosure.



5. Defense Strategy and Record Preservation


Your defense should begin with document preservation focused on the actual development, licensing, and commercialization history of the technology in dispute. Gather all prior licensing discussions, royalty rates offered to or by your company, competitive products and their market performance, and evidence of the technology's actual contribution to product success.

Preserve emails, meeting notes, and business records showing whether your company considered licensing the IP before infringement began, what royalty rates your company typically negotiates in similar technology deals, the commercial success of products using the disputed IP, and any alternative technologies or design-arounds available in the market. If the opposing expert claims a 5% royalty rate but your company's actual licensing history shows rates of 1–2% for comparable technology, that contemporaneous business record is your strongest rebuttal.

Gather technical evidence showing the degree to which the infringing product actually depends on the disputed IP. If your product uses the patented feature as an optional component, or if the same functionality is available through non-infringing alternatives, that technical reality directly undermines the opposing expert's assumption that entire product profit is attributable to the IP. Asset valuation in infringement contexts requires isolating the specific contribution of the disputed IP; courts reject global product valuations that ignore design-around possibilities.

Before finalizing your expert's opinion, ensure your valuation expert has reviewed all comparable licensing data, challenged the opposing methodology in writing, and clearly articulated why the opposing valuation overstates the IP's economic contribution. A well-reasoned rebuttal report identifying specific methodological flaws is far more persuasive than a bare denial.



6. Next Steps


Upon receiving notice of an infringement claim, undertake a thorough audit of your company's licensing history, competitive intelligence, and technical documentation. If your company has no formal valuation analysis in place, commission one now, before the opposing expert's report is finalized. Ensure your legal team and technical team work closely with your valuation expert to identify the strongest factual anchors for your defense: real licensing comparables, evidence of design-around alternatives, technical documentation showing limited dependence on the disputed IP, and market data on competitive products.

Preserve all communications with your expert in work-product protected form and do not disclose your expert's preliminary opinions or strategy discussions to the opposing party. Once your expert report is finalized and disclosed, your strategic communications become discoverable, so ensure your written instructions to the expert remain confidential and protected.


01 Jun, 2026


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