Revenue Sharing Policy

Royalty sharing

K-State Innovation Partners takes the financial risk in protecting and commercializing K-State-owned IP. When successful, the returns are shared with the inventors/creators, their department or administrative unit, and the university. In addition, Innovation Partners, shares in the return when they facilitate commercialization of the technology.

All K-State inventors/creators must agree upon how they will split the inventor/creator share of licensing revenue prior to any distribution.

For patented IP, the inventors/creators must also agree upon the department split if more than one department or administrative unit is involved. For non-patented IP, the University will determine the division of funds remaining after creator distributions are made.

These allocations are documented through the Intellectual Property Assignment and Royalty Agreement which is signed by all inventors/creators, the respective department/administrative unit head(s) and dean(s). No distributions are made until the agreement is completed and the inventors/creators have completed an IRS Form W-9 or equivalent.

Royalty distribution

Innovation Partners distributes licensing revenue according to the Kansas Board of Regents' IP Policy and the K-State Intellectual Property Policy along with certain policies enacted by the Innovation Partners Board of Directors. Distributions are based on licensing revenue less direct out-of-pocket costs such as legal fees. In general, distributions are made according to the following schedules.

PATENT LICENSING REVENUE DISTRIBUTION SCHEDULE

Annual Licensing Revenue

Inventor

Dept/Admin Unit(s)

K-State Innovation Partners

Licensing Revenue

 

 

 

< $100,000

25%

10%

65%

> $100,000

35%

10%

55%

 

NON-PATENTABLE LICENSING REVENUE DISTRIBUTION SCHEDULE

Annual Licensing Revenue

Creator

Dept/Admin Unit(s)

K-State Innovation Partners

Ongoing Licensing Revenue

 

 

 

< $100,000

25%

50%

25%

> $100,000

35%

40%

25%

Agreement Signing Fees

 

 

 

< $100,000

25%

40%

35%

> $100,000

35%

30%

35%

Beginning in 2008, the K-State Innovation Partners (KSURF) Board increased the inventor/creator share to 35% of annual royalty revenue for agreements that generate $100,000 and above annually. The increase is intended to reward those inventors/creators with high value technologies.

K-State Innovation Partners issues distributions quarterly on April 1, before the June fiscal year-end, October 1, and before the December winter break. Inventors/creators are paid when their cumulative share reaches at least $500 per agreement per quarter.

While K-State Innovation Partners prefers cash payments from licensees, equity may be accepted as consideration for a license or option. When equity is received, it is held by K-State Innovation Partners until it becomes liquid (e.g. the company goes public or is sold). Upon liquidation, equity is distributed to the inventors/creators according to policy.

Distributions are not affected should the inventor leave the university. The inventor will continue to receive his/her share as will the appropriate department or administrative unit.

Tax treatment

Royalty distributions are considered personal income and as such, inventors are responsible for any taxes owed. According to the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), royalties from copyrights, patents, and oil, gas, and mineral properties are taxable as ordinary income. However, IRC Section 1235 permits an inventor of a patent right to receive capital gains treatment for income derived from the patent right if he/she transfers substantially all rights to the patent to a third party, e.g. when an inventor assigns ownership of their rights to K-State Innovation Partners. Heirs, estates, trusts, relatives, corporations, and partnerships cannot qualify for capital gains treatments, so unless other sections apply, the payments would be treated as ordinary income. Payments relating to patents are reported as "Other Income" in Box 3 of IRS Form 1099-MISC.

Special rules apply to non-resident aliens that may require a different form of reporting or even tax withholding, depending on the individual's country of residence. Most payments to non-resident aliens will be reported as "Industrial Royalties" on IRS Form 1042-S.

This information does not constitute tax advice; recipients of distributions should consult a tax professional for advice on their specific situation.

Non-K-State inventors/creators

In some instances, inventions are co-owned with other institutions. Co-inventors at other institutions will receive revenue under their institutions' policies. K-State Innovation Partners will enter into an Inter-Institutional Agreement with that institution under which expenses and income will be shared and responsibility for patenting and commercialization will be assigned.