Duration
1 year full time / 3.5 years part time
Mode (Location)
On campus (Parkville)
Intake
March, June, July, August, December
Key dates
Key dates
Fees
AUD $49,984 (2026 indicative first year fee). Commonwealth Supported Places (CSPs) are not available
Learn more
Learn more
Course structure
Overview
Course structure
Students must complete 100 credit points in total.
Students with a law degree from a common law jurisdiction complete:
- a minimum of 50 credit points of IP subjects; AND
- up to 50 credit points of IP-relevant subjects.
Students without a law degree from a common law jurisdiction complete:
- 12.5 credit point foundation subject Fundamentals of the Common Law; AND
- a minimum of 50 credit points of IP subjects; AND
- up to 37.5 credit points of IP-relevant subjects.
Subject timing and format
The Melbourne Law Masters program has been designed around the busy schedules of working professionals. Subjects are offered from February to December each year. Most subjects are taught intensively over five days, with some subjects taught for two hours each week during the semester.
Subjects will be delivered either online, on campus, or as a hybrid of both. Subjects delivered online will have a combination of pre-recorded lecture content, live sessions and discussion boards among other resources. On-campus subjects involve interactive, seminar-style classes in the Law Building in Melbourne.
Duration
Full-time students enrol in 50 credit points per semester (or half-year period) and have an expected course duration of one year. Part-time* students enrol in 25 credit points per semester (or half-year period) and have an expected course duration of two years. Semesters without enrolments require a student to apply for a leave of absence.
*Part-time enrolment is for domestic students only. Part-time students may reduce their study load to 12.5 credit points per half-year period and thus have a maximum course duration of four years.
Overview of Intellectual Property
Overview of Intellectual Property is a two-day seminar that provides a general survey of the various regimes comprising intellectual property (IP). It is accredited by the Trans-Tasman IP Attorneys Board (TTIPAB) as satisfying part of its accreditation requirements for Topic Group A.
Professional accreditation
Completing the appropriate subjects in the Master of Intellectual Property Law may qualify you to register as a trade marks attorney and a patent attorney under the Trans-Tasman regime. In order to qualify you should first seek advice from the Trans-Tasman IP Attorneys Board and consult with Melbourne Law School on subject selection.
TTIPAB Accreditation
- TTIPAB Accreditations for Groups A, B, C, D, E, F, H and I are valid through to 10 April 2030.
- TTIPAB Accreditation for Group G is valid through to 16 November 2028.
| TTIPAB Topic Group | Satisfied by |
|---|---|
| A: Legal process and overview of intellectual property | and either |
| B: Professional conduct | Trade Mark Practice |
| C: Trade mark law | Trade Marks and Unfair Competition |
| D: Trade mark practice | Trade Mark Practice |
| E: Patent law | Patent Law |
| F: Patent system | Patent Practice |
| G: Drafting patent specifications | Fundamentals of Patent Drafting |
| H: Interpretation and validity of patent specifications | Interpretation and Validity of Patent Specifications |
| I: Designs law | Designs Law and Practice |
*This subject is not available for academic credit in the Melbourne Law Masters program.
For detailed course and subject information, see the Handbook: Master of Intellectual Property Law.
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Explore the subjects you could choose as part of this degree.