A copyright
registration is effective on the date the Copyright Office receives all the
required elements in acceptable form, regardless of how long it then takes to
process the application and mail the certificate of registration. The time the
Copyright Office requires to process an application varies, depending on the
amount of material the Office is receiving.
If you apply for copyright
registration, you will not receive an acknowledgment that your application has
been received (the Office receives more than 600,000 applications annually),
but you can expect:
1) A letter or a telephone call from a Copyright
Office staff member iffurther information is needed or
2) A
certificate of registration indicating that the work has been registered, or if
the application cannot be accepted, a letter explaining why it has been
rejected.
3) Requests to have certificates available for pickup in the
Public Information Office or to have certificates sent by Federal Express or
another mail service cannot be honored.
4) If you want to know the
date that the Copyright Office receives your material, send it by registered or
certified mail and request a return receipt.















