List of prolific inventors


was widely known as the America's most prolific inventor, even after his death in 1931. He held a total of 1,093 U.S. patents. In 2003, his patent count was exceeded by Japanese inventor Shunpei Yamazaki. On February 26, 2008, Yamazaki's patent count was exceeded by Australian inventor Kia Silverbrook. In 2017, Silverbrook's patent count was exceeded by Yamazaki.

Worldwide utility patents

Inventors with 200 or more worldwide utility patents are shown in the following table. While in many cases this is the number of utility patents granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office, it may include utility patents granted by other countries, as noted by the source references for an inventor.
This table is usually updated every Tuesday evening in US Eastern time, and is current as of 2020.
The columns are defined as follows:
As the average number of patents per inventor is around 3, some sources define prolific inventors as five times above the average, leading to a threshold of 15 patents. However, this table currently has an arbitrary cut-off limit for inclusion of 200 patents. This is purely for practical reasons – there are tens of thousands of inventors with more than 15 patents. The threshold of 200 patents means that some famous prolific inventors such as Nikola Tesla are not included in this list, as Tesla had 111 patents.

Significance of inventions

This table is a sortable list of the most prolific inventors as measured by utility patents granted. It does not include other types of invention, such as inventions that were never applied for nor granted, for which there is no known source. Nor does the table attempt to measure the significance of an inventor and their inventions. The significance of inventions is often not apparent until many decades after the invention has been made. For recent inventors, it is not yet possible to determine their place in history.
The common symbol for inventiveness, the light bulb, is an example. The first incandescent light bulb was invented by British chemist Sir Humphry Davy in 1802. Many subsequent inventors improved Davy's invention prior to the successful commercialization of electric lighting by Thomas Edison in 1880, 78 years later. Electric lighting continued to be developed. Edison's carbon filament light bulb was made obsolete by the tungsten filament light bulb, invented in 1904 by Sándor Just and Franjo Hanaman. It is this that forms the popular conception of a light bulb, though there are other major forms of lighting. The principle of fluorescent lights was known since 1845, and various inventors, including Edison and Nikola Tesla worked on them without commercial success. Various improvements were made by many other inventors, until General Electric introduced "fluorescent lumiline lamps" commercially in 1938, first available to the public at the 1939 World's Fair. LED lamps also have a long history, with the first light-emitting diode invented in 1927 by Oleg Losev. LEDs were initially of low brightness, and have been used as indicator lamps and seven-segment displays since 1968. It wasn't until the development of high efficiency blue LEDs by Shuji Nakamura in the 1980s that white LEDs for lighting applications became practical. Although higher cost than incandescent light bulbs, LEDs have higher efficiency and longer life and may finally displace light bulbs in general lighting applications. In each case, more than 50 years passed between the initial invention and commercial success in general lighting applications.

Various published lists

Rankings of prolific inventors have been published at various times. However, until the patent records were digitized, these lists were very tedious to prepare, as many thousands of patent records had to be checked manually. Even after digitization, it is still not a simple process. While the USPTO keeps statistics for annual rankings of inventions assigned to companies, it no longer publishes rankings of individual inventors. The last such list was published by the USPTO in 1998. Also, patents predating 1976 have not yet been digitized in the USPTO records. This means that patents before 1976 will not be included in a USPTO search by inventor name, and the number of patents granted before 1976 must be added to current searches.

''Popular'' ''Science'' (1936)

In January 1936, Popular Science published a list of the "most prolific living inventors to be found in America today".
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1John F. O'Connor949
2Elihu Thomson696
3Carleton Ellis648
4Henry A. Wise Wood434
5John Hays Hammond Jr.360
6Clyde C. Farmer344
7Ethan I. Dodds321
8Edward Weston309

Thomas Edison was not included in the list, as he died in 1931, five years earlier.

''Time'' ''Magazine'' (2000)

On December 4, 2000, Time Magazine published a list of the "top five inventors".
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Thomas Edison1,093
2Melvin De Groote925
3Francis H. Richards894
4Elihu Thomson696
5Jerome Lemelson554

This list only included U.S. inventors, so omitted Canadian inventor George Albert Lyon, with 993 U.S. patents at the time of publication, Japanese inventor Shunpei Yamazaki, with 745 U.S. patents, and Béla Barényi, with 595 German patents. Also omitted were John F. O'Connor with 949 U.S. patents, and Carleton Ellis, with 753 U.S. patents at the time of publication.

''USA'' ''Today'' (2005)

On December 13, 2005, USA Today published a list of "the top 10 living U.S. patent holders":
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Shunpei Yamazaki1,432
2Donald Weder1,322
3Kia Silverbrook810
4George Spector723
5Gurtej Sandhu576
6Warren Farnworth547
7Salman Akram527
8Mark Gardner512
9Heinz Focke508
10Joseph Straeter477

This research was performed by ipIQ of Chicago and 1790 Analytics of New Jersey. This list only considered living inventors, and thus did not include prolific inventors such as Thomas Edison, Melvin De Groote, and Elihu Thomson. This list included design patents, which are not patents for inventions.

''Condé Nast Portfolio'' (2007)

On October 15, 2007, Condé Nast Portfolio Magazine published a list of "the world's most prolific inventors alive":
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Shunpei Yamazaki1,811
2Kia Silverbrook1,646
3Donald Weder1,350
4George Spector722
5Gurtej Sandhu674
6Leonard Forbes671
7Warren Farnworth635
8Salman Akram612
9Mark Gardner515
10Joseph Straeter485

This research was performed by The Patent Board, a Chicago patent research and advisory firm.
As with the USA Today list, the Portfolio list only considered living inventors, and thus did not include such prolific inventors as Thomas Edison. This list also included design patents, which are not patents for inventions.

''Business'' ''Insider'' (2011)

On May 6, 2011, Business Insider published an article titled: "The Ten Greatest Inventors In The Modern Era" containing the following list:
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Kia Silverbrook3,847
2Shunpei Yamazaki2,061
3Thomas Edison1,084
4George Albert Lyon993
5Paul Lapstun969
6Donald Weder951
7John F. O'Connor949
8Leonard Forbes948
9Melvin De Groote925
10Francis H. Richards894

This list included living and dead inventors, and only included granted utility patents.

Strutpatent.com (2012)

Strutpatent.com publishes a list of the "Top 10 Inventors" listing inventors ranked by US patents issued since 1990:
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Kia Silverbrook4,279
2Shunpei Yamazaki1,664
3Donald Weder1,310
4Paul Lapstun1,098
5Leonard Forbes959
6Gurtej Sandhu728
7Warren Farnworth685
8Salman Akram653
9Jay Walker644
10Chang-Hwan Hwang634

This list included only patents granted since 1990, and includes design patents as well as utility patents.

Annual lists (2007–2012)

Strutpatent.com publishes weekly, monthly, and annual lists of the top ten categories, inventors and assignees of US patents since 2007. These lists include all patent types, not just patents for inventions.
The top ten inventors of US patents for 2007:
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Kia Silverbrook502
2Audrey Goddard232
3William I. Wood232
4Austin L. Gurney225
5Chang-Hwan Hwang203
6Paul J. Godowski193
7Shunpei Yamazaki139
8Paul Lapstun129
9Leonard Forbes120
10Victoria Smith112

The top ten inventors of US patents for 2008:
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Kia Silverbrook576
2Chang-Hwan Hwang198
3Audrey Goddard168
4Austin L. Gurney167
5William I. Wood166
6Paul J. Godowski153
7Shunpei Yamazaki143
8Paul Lapstun137
9Chang-Soo Lee129
10Victoria Smith122

The top ten inventors of US patents for 2009:
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Kia Silverbrook444
2Shunpei Yamazaki137
3Paul Lapstun113
4Bartley K. Andre92
5Daniele De Iuliis92
6Jonathan Ive92
7Matthew Rohrbach92
8Richard P. Howarth91
9Duncan Robert Kerr91
10Leonard Forbes91

The top ten inventors of US patents for 2010:
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Kia Silverbrook709
2Paul Lapstun191
3Shunpei Yamazaki162
4Simon Walmsley115
5Bartley K. Andre114
6Matthew Rohrbach109
7Richard P. Howarth108
8Jonathan Ive108
9Duncan Robert Kerr108
10Daniel J. Coster106

The top ten inventors of US patents for 2011:
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Kia Silverbrook754
2Paul Lapstun268
3Shunpei Yamazaki163
4Hideo Ando162
5You Yoshioka153
6Scott H. Wittkopp126
7James M. Hart125
8Edward Jung112
9Simon Walmsley112
10Jay S. Walker99

The top ten inventors of US patents for 2012:
RankInventorU.S. Patents
1Kia Silverbrook220
2Edward Jung180
3Shunpei Yamazaki172
4Lowell Wood169
5Roderick Hyde140
6Bin Li124
7Royce Levien122
8Mark Malamud119
9Shunpei Yamazaki118
10John Rinaldo117

This table omitted Rick Allen Hamilton II. The USPTO database shows Hamilton was an inventor or co-inventor of 128 US patents granted in 2012, which would place Hamilton at 6th rank for 2012.

Differences between lists

Differences in patent numbers between the various lists are due to several reasons: