Provisionally

Pricing

What it costs.

Provisionally is priced along the inventor’s actual timeline: file cheaply, work the 12-month window, then route the protected package to the right buyer-side owner. Buyer desks and organizations subscribe to the sealed side.

For inventors

You pay when the work happens, at the moments the 12-month window actually demands it. Between those moments the countdown is free. USPTO fees are paid to the USPTO directly and stay yours — a provisional is $65 at micro entity under the current schedule.

Pay what you want

Tomorrow Kit. Six Claude Code skills carry an invention from raw idea to filed provisional — prior-art prospecting, multi-LLM claim drafting, adversarial stress-testing, a built-in figure editor, and filing prep. Runs locally, in your own AI accounts. Get the kit or read how it works.

Free

The Countdown. A filed provisional buys you 12 months, and the clock runs whether you work it or lose track of it. Tell us your filing date and we track your conversion deadline, flagging each decision point in time to act — when to run an assay, when to draft the brief, when conversion prep has to start. Start your countdown below.

$149 each

Deep assay. A fresh prior-art and field-motion pass over your claim territory: what published, what filed, what moved, and what it means for your claims. Most inventors run two or three across the window — after a development push, and always before conversion.

$490 once

Fit brief. The non-confidential document that starts a commercial conversation without disclosing the invention: problem category, maturity, protection status, and the likely buyer-side owner. Usually worth drafting around month six.

$990 once

Conversion prep. Months nine to twelve are the crunch. We harvest everything you invented during the window, harden the claim ladder, and prepare filing-ready artifacts for the nonprovisional or PCT. USPTO filing fees (about $400 at micro entity) are paid to the USPTO directly.

$1,900 once

Package & Route. A counsel-ready packet, a commercial route map, the fit brief (included), and a first routing pass to three plausible buyer-side owners. Built from your existing readiness record. Start with the inventor intake.

For buyer desks and organizations

The sealed side is a subscription. Feeds stay non-confidential until your own process invites more.

From $2,500 / month

Buyer Desk. A screened feed of non-confidential fit briefs matched to your declared categories and maturity floors, routed to the intake owner you name, with rejection-with-reasons and a quarterly landscape brief. Annual agreement. Tell us what your team can screen.

$7,500 / month pilot

Invention Foundry. For TTOs, accelerators, and R&D groups: an AI-assisted invention supply engine — opportunity briefs, expert matching, co-invention sessions, and the full Tomorrow Kit pipeline licensed org-wide. Pilot terms, two slots. Write to tyler@provisionally.xyz with your program context.

Rev-share

Scouts. Routing partners earn a share of first-year fees on invitations they source. There is no fee to scout. Scout intake.

The Countdown

Start your countdown. Free.

For inventors with a filed provisional — from the Kit or anywhere else. We track your deadline and flag each decision point. You buy an assay, a brief, or conversion prep only when you want one.

Free countdown
The clock is already running. Work it.

What no price includes.

Every tier stays on the preparation-and-routing side of the line. Legal review, ownership questions, confidentiality terms, patent valuation, and deal decisions belong to the parties and their counsel at every price.

Do I need the Kit first?

The countdown and every milestone accept any qualifying readiness record: a filed provisional or nonprovisional, a published technical paper, or a documented prototype/lab trail.

What happens at month 12?

The provisional window closes. If you convert — nonprovisional or PCT — a new clock starts and the countdown continues against it. If you let it lapse, the countdown ends with the window.

Why is the Kit pay-what-you-want?

Filing pro se should be survivable on a micro-entity budget. The Kit earns its keep downstream: inventors who file well have something worth working, packaging, and routing.