Figure 3: SEP litigation heat map
Key recommendations for implementers across industries
As SEP litigation shifts to standards that have a higher percentage of undeclared SEPs, implementers are at higher risk of aggressive enforcement. Unburdened by FRAND commitments, undeclared SEP holders may attempt to assert their patents without offering FRAND rates. Companies that have products implementing standards should keep the following recommendations in mind to reduce their risk.
- Consider global company policy on approaches to using standardized technology (e.g., contracts, intellectual property, supply chain).
- Include indemnity and/or defense provisions for infringement in supplier contracts.
- Review any SEP demand letters to make sure the accused product practices the feature of the specification. Many specifications have optional features that accused products do not practice. If you don’t need the optional feature, consider requesting removal before hardware is shipped.
Industry-specific recommendations for implementers
Mobile and telecommunications
Although litigation involving cellular standards has declined from 2020 through 2025, enforcement activity by SEP holders remains an ongoing risk. Phone manufacturers, component suppliers, and network operators continue to face exposure from both cellular and WiFi SEP portfolios. To manage this risk, document standardcompliant functionality to specific products and include licensing and indemnity provisions in contracts with suppliers.
Automotive
Connected vehicles increasingly implement cellular (ETSI) and WiFi standards, drawing automakers and suppliers into SEP disputes that historically focused on mobile phones. Prioritize licenses and indemnities with component suppliers while documenting standardcompliant functionality at the billofmaterials level. Additionally, if possible, legal and engineering should assess whether products implement features that are optional or mandatory to standards.
Consumer electronics and IoT
Consumer electronics and IoT products — including laptops, wearables, and smart home devices — routinely implement WiFi and Qi wireless charging standards, significantly expanding the universe of SEP implementers. To mitigate exposure, confirm whether supplier licenses extend downstream. Consider negotiating licenses and indemnities in supplier agreements and assess whether products implement only baseline or mandatory standard features.
Streaming, media, and devices
Streaming services, smart TVs, gaming consoles, and connected media devices rely heavily on standardized audio and video codecs such as AVC (H.264), HEVC (H.265), and newer standards. Consider diligence related to which codec profiles are implemented, with particular attention to optional or advanced features that may not be essential to the standard. Disabling or avoiding nonmandatory tools can materially reduce exposure.
Retail and payment services
Retailers and financial services providers increasingly implement standardized technologies through pointofsale terminals, instore WiFi networks, and mobile payment applications. To minimize risk, consider SEPspecific representations and indemnities in contracts. Also consider document configuration and deployment choices to avoid optional or nonessential standard features. As with other implementers, tracing standardcompliant functionality and understanding licensing coverage across the supply chain are key to reducing unexpected SEP exposure.
Takeaways
SEP litigation is diversifying across industries, with SEP holders targeting filings wherever standards are embedded in everyday products and services. Cellular standards have experienced a steady decline in litigation while video codec standards have seen an increase, reflecting the growing importance of multimedia technologies. Wi-Fi SEP litigation continues to rise, indicating ongoing disputes in connectivity technologies. Whether launching a 5G handset, rolling out connected vehicles, scaling smart home devices, or operating a streaming platform, it is important to understand the litigation risk and trends in SEPs.
Notes about the dataset
Data was sourced from IPlytics and includes only SEPs asserted in U.S. district courts. The period analyzed was from 2020 to 2025 and includes the following standards: ETSI (2G, 3G, 4G, LTE, 5G), Wi-Fi (IEEE), Qi1 and Qi2, HEVC, AVC, AV1, VVC, and VP9. Note that in the rare instance a patent is essential to more than one standard (e.g., a patent declared to both cellular and Wi-Fi standards), it is counted as litigated for each category.