The transition phrase—that small word or phrase between the preamble and body of a claim—has enormous impact on claim scope. Per MPEP 2111.03, the transition determines whether your claim covers only what's recited or also covers implementations with additional elements.
Get this wrong and you might draft claims that competitors easily avoid, or claims so broad they're invalid over prior art.
The Three Types of Transitions
Open Transitions: "Comprising"
✓ Open = Broadest Scope
"Comprising" means "including but not limited to." A claim using "comprising" covers accused devices that have all recited elements plus additional elements.
Open transition language includes:
comprising(most common)includingcontaininghavingcharacterized by
Example: "A device comprising: a display; a processor." This claim covers devices with a display, processor, AND a battery, speaker, camera, etc. The additional elements don't matter.
Effect on infringement: Adding components doesn't avoid infringement. If you have all recited elements, you infringe, regardless of what else you add.
Closed Transitions: "Consisting Of"
✗ Closed = Narrowest Scope
"Consisting of" excludes any elements not specified. A claim using "consisting of" covers only accused devices that have exactly the recited elements—nothing more.
Closed transition language includes:
consisting ofcomposed ofbeing(in some contexts)
Example: "A composition consisting of: water and ethanol." This claim covers ONLY water + ethanol mixtures. Add any third ingredient? Non-infringement.
Effect on infringement: Adding any element defeats infringement. This makes closed claims easy to design around.
Hybrid Transitions: "Consisting Essentially Of"
~ Hybrid = Middle Ground
"Consisting essentially of" allows additional elements that don't materially affect the basic and novel characteristics of the invention.
Example: "A composition consisting essentially of: active ingredient X and carrier Y." This excludes other active ingredients that would change the therapeutic effect, but allows inactive fillers, binders, or colorants.
Effect on infringement: Adding elements that don't materially affect basic characteristics = still infringes. Adding elements that do materially affect = non-infringement. This requires case-by-case analysis of what "basic and novel characteristics" means for your invention.
Comparison Table
| Transition | Type | Additional Elements | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Comprising | Open | Allowed (still infringes) | Most mechanical, electrical, software claims |
| Consisting of | Closed | Excluded (defeats infringement) | Chemical compositions where purity matters |
| Consisting essentially of | Hybrid | Allowed if immaterial | Pharmaceutical/biotech compositions |
Strategic Considerations
Default to Open
For most mechanical, electrical, and software claims, use "comprising." There's rarely a good reason to limit yourself to closed transitions. Open claims:
- Capture products with additional features
- Can't be designed around by adding components
- Cover future implementations you didn't anticipate
When to Use Closed
Closed transitions ("consisting of") make sense when:
- Purity is the invention: Your innovation is a specific combination without contaminants
- Prior art forces it: Open claims would read on prior art; closing narrows to patentability
- Negative limitation strategy: You need to exclude specific components
When to Use Hybrid
"Consisting essentially of" works well for:
- Pharmaceutical compositions: Exclude other active ingredients but allow excipients
- Material compositions: Exclude components that change material properties
- Balancing scope: Broader than closed, narrower than open, when you need the middle ground
Ambiguous Transitions
Per MPEP 2111.03.IV, some phrases are ambiguous and courts interpret them based on specification context:
having— usually open, but depends on contextcomposed of— can be open or closed depending on usagemade of— typically closed for compositions
Avoid ambiguity. Use "comprising" for open claims. Use "consisting of" for closed. Don't rely on the examiner or court to interpret ambiguous language the way you want.
Impact on Our Analysis
Our Claim Analyzer detects transition type and scores accordingly:
- Open transitions increase design-around resistance (harder to avoid by adding elements)
- Closed transitions decrease design-around resistance (easy to avoid by adding anything)
- Ambiguous transitions generate warnings about interpretation uncertainty
The transition phrase is weighted heavily in our design-around score because it fundamentally determines how easily competitors can escape claim scope.
Check Your Transitions
See how your claim transitions affect scope and design-around resistance.
Analyze Claims →Strategic claim drafting requires attention to every word. IP Services crafts claims with precision at every level—including the transition phrase.