Civil & Administrative

U.S. Copyright Office Inquiry on Alternative Fee Structures for Electronic Registration

🇺🇸United States··Notice·Medium Impact·View source ↗

AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.

🇬🇧 English

The U.S. Copyright Office has launched a formal inquiry to gather public and industry input on alternative fee structures for copyright registration. This initiative is tied to the Office's ongoing modernization of its electronic registration system and aims to explore whether current fee models should be restructured once the new system is fully operational. The inquiry will examine the feasibility of various alternative fee approaches, including potential tiered pricing, volume-based discounts, or flat-rate models. The Office seeks to understand how different fee structures might affect participation rates among individual creators, small businesses, and large rights holders. This proceeding is explicitly separate from a related rulemaking initiated on March 20, 2026, which focuses on updating fees within the existing fee structure. The current inquiry is broader in scope, looking at structural reform rather than incremental adjustments. Public stakeholders, including creators, publishers, law firms, and trade associations, are expected to submit comments and data that will inform a feasibility study. The results could lead to significant changes in how copyright registration costs are assessed in the United States.

AI-generated summary. May contain errors. Refer to official sources for legal decisions.

Key Changes

  • U.S. Copyright Office opens public inquiry into alternative fee structures for copyright registration — comments and data submissions invited from all stakeholders
  • Inquiry is specifically scoped to the post-launch period of the updated electronic registration system, not the current system
  • Feasibility study will assess economic effects of alternative models such as tiered pricing, volume discounts, or flat-rate fees

+ 3 more changes with Pro

Obligations

What this law requires

medium

Submit comments and data to the U.S. Copyright Office regarding alternative fee structures for copyright registration

Public stakeholders including creators, publishers, law firms, and trade associations
reporting
high

Conduct a feasibility study examining alternative fee structures and their impact on participation rates among individual creators, small businesses, and large rights holders

U.S. Copyright Office
operational
medium

Evaluate the potential economic effects of alternative fee structures on the copyright registration system

U.S. Copyright Office
operational
medium

Maintain separate proceedings for the alternative fee structures inquiry (broader structural reform) and the March 20, 2026 rulemaking on updating fees within the existing structure

U.S. Copyright Office
operational

Affected Parties

Individual creators and artists registering copyrightsSmall and independent publishers+5 more…

Tags

copyright registration,fee structure,U.S. Copyright Office