in
Washington, D.C., in which the Federal Circuit is located. The Federal Circuit is unique among the courts of appeals in that its jurisdiction is based wholly upon
subject matter, not
geographic location. The Federal Circuit is an
appellate court with jurisdiction generally given in . The court hears certain appeals from all of the
United States District Courts, appeals from certain administrative agencies, and appeals arising under certain statutes. Among other things, the Federal Circuit has exclusive jurisdiction over appeals from: •
Article I tribunals: •
United States Court of Federal Claims •
United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims •
United States Trademark Trial and Appeal Board •
United States Patent Trial and Appeal Board (formerly known as the United States Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences) • Boards of contract appeals (for Government contract disputes pursuant to the
Contract Disputes Act of 1978): •
Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals •
Civilian Board of Contract Appeals •
Postal Service Board of Contract Appeals •
United States Merit Systems Protection Board (federal employment and employment benefits) •
United States International Trade Commission •
Article III tribunals: •
United States Court of International Trade •
United States district courts relating to: •
Patents, including appeals arising from an action against the Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks under • The
Little Tucker Act, • Section 211 of the
Economic Stabilization Act of 1970; • Section 5 of the
Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act of 1973; • Section 523 of the
Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975; and • Section 506(c) of the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978 •
Office of Congressional Workplace Rights Although the Federal Circuit typically hears all appeals from any United States District Court where the original action included a complaint arising under the patent laws, the
Supreme Court decided in
Holmes Group, Inc. v. Vornado Air Circulation Systems, Inc. (2002) that the Federal Circuit did not have jurisdiction if the patent claims arose solely as
counterclaims by the defendant. However, the force of law of
Holmes ended following passage of the
America Invents Act of 2011, which requires the Federal Circuit to hear all appeals where the original action included a complaint or compulsory counterclaim arising under the patent laws. The decisions of the Federal Circuit, particularly in regard to
patent cases, are unique in that they are
binding precedent throughout the U.S. within the bounds of the court's subject-matter jurisdiction. This is unlike the other courts of appeals as the authority of their decisions is restricted by geographic location and thus there may be
differing judicial standards depending on location. Decisions of the Federal Circuit are only superseded by decisions of the Supreme Court or by applicable changes in the law. Also, review by the Supreme Court is discretionary, so Federal Circuit decisions are often the final word, especially since there are no
circuit splits given the Federal Circuit's exclusive subject-matter jurisdiction. In its first decision, the Federal Circuit incorporated as binding precedent the decisions of its predecessor courts, the
United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals and the appellate division of the
United States Court of Claims. Because the Court is one of national jurisdiction, panels from the court may sit anywhere in the country. Typically, once or twice a year, the court will hold oral arguments in a city outside of its native Washington, D.C. The panels may sit in Federal courthouses, state courthouses, or even at law schools.
International Trade Cases On August 29, 2025, the court in
V.O.S. Selection v. United States upheld the May 2025
Court of International Trade (CIT) ruling that the
tariffs of the second Trump administration were wrongfully invoked as an
emergency law. ==Composition==