The autonomous vehicle sector is moving into a more mature phase focused on commercialization and intellectual property strategy, even as widespread deployment timelines extend, according to a recent report.
The 2026 Autonomous Vehicle Industry Report from global consulting firm J.S. Held. examined the AV landscape through innovation, investment and IP activity. The report found that while early expectations for broad Level 3 and higher deployment by the mid‑2020s have not materialized, the economic opportunity tied to autonomous technology remains substantial.
The report expects the market to centre primarily on Level 2+ systems through 2035, rather than fully autonomous vehicles. Even so, the global AV market is projected to grow from $24 billion in 2021 to $62 billion in 2026, with passenger vehicles alone forecast to generate between $300 billion and $400 billion in revenue by 2035.
“Despite extended deployment timelines, the economic opportunity in autonomous vehicles remains transformative,” said Dan Principe, director and chair of the industry analyst review committee at Ocean Tomo, which developed the report. “What we’re seeing now is a shift from pure R&D to commercialization, where IP strategy is no longer optional — it’s existential.”
The report pointed to signs of market maturation between 2022 and 2024, when total innovation filings declined for the first time. Ocean Tomo analysts interpret that slowdown as evidence that companies are moving beyond early experimentation and focusing on bringing technologies to market, elevating the strategic importance of patents, trade secrets and defensive IP positioning.
“The industry is moving past its initial life cycle stage,” said Tatiana Feka, industry analyst at Ocean Tomo. “This makes IP positioning even more critical.”
The reports also highlighted a more complex legal environment as autonomous systems increasingly integrate technologies from telecommunications, cloud computing, artificial intelligence and mobility. As a result, cross‑industry IP conflicts are expected to rise, prompting companies to adopt more proactive legal strategies, including pre‑emptive patent filings and stronger trade secret protections.
“As both established players and new entrants deepen their AV technology investments, trade secret enforcement has become an essential component of IP strategy,” said John A. Hudson, senior managing director at Ocean Tomo.
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