Nadia Soboleva and John Hayes have published an article titled Aggregate Royalty for Cellular SEPs in Recent Court Decisions, 11/2025 GRUR Patent 546. Here is the abstract:
Standards organizations developing cellular communication standards typically require participants to disclose standard essential patents (SEPs) and agree to license such patents on fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms. When courts are asked to adjudicate license disputes involving SEPs, they often calculate the implied aggregate royalty for all SEPs in the relevant standard associated with a potential license. We review five recently litigated FRAND cases and report the aggregate royalty per mobile device in most of these decisions falls in a range from $3 to $16, with an average of $9.25. The aggregate royalty by the UK Court of Appeal in Optis/Apple is an outlier of $39.47.
The five cases are the U.S. TCL v. Ericsson decision, Unwired Planet, InterDigital v. Lenovo, Optis v. Apple, and the Chinese Oppo v. Nokia decision. The authors write that these cases “encompass the only publicly available decisions that set a worldwide FRAND royalty for the 4G or 5G cellular standards.”
A few quick things to note. First, the authors are both from Charles River Associates, and they note that they “have worked on multiple projects involving SEPs, including some of the matters discussed in” their article. Second, I haven’t endeavored to check the authors’ analysis against the decisions they discuss. I have no reason too question their analysis, but for now I am just reporting what they state. Third, a range of $3 to $16 seems pretty broad to me, even without Optis/Apple (the appeal from which is pending before the U.K. Supreme Court). Fourth, as noted previously on ip fray, the Munich Regional Court recently suggested in its decision involving Wilus and Asus that a rate of 10-18% for all SEPs reasonably necessary for operation of a mobile device would be within the FRAND range (see decision here, para. 294: “Ausgehend von diesem Wert für den wichtigsten Standard (Mobilfunk) liegt die Gesamtbelastung für ein Mobiltelefon für alle für einen sinnvollen Betrieb erforderlichen Standards (Mobilfunk, Wi-Fi, Streaming, etc.) bei ca. 10% bis 18%.”). For a mid-priced phone, that would be substantially higher than the aggregate royalty the above authors report, assuming that they and the Munich court are talking about the aggregate royalty burden for the same combinations of technologies. Fifth, even if these are the only decisions available for the purpose of the study, five cases are a small sample, and whether the derived amounts accurately reflect FRAND rates depends on whether the courts in these cases got their numbers right; and some commentators have critiqued the methodology employed in, e.g., Unwired Planet. Even so, one might be inclined to think that the Munich court’s range seems rather high, all things considered.
