The Finnish company said it would also get a one-off payment, although it did not disclose any of the sums involved. The companies had started the arbitration in 2015.
“We believe that this award confirms the quality of Nokia’s patent portfolio. We continue to see potential for additional licensing opportunities,” said Nokia Chief Legal Officer Maria Varsellona in a statement.
The ruling was made by the International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce. Nokia has recently signed deals with larger phone makers Samsung and Apple and Xiaomi.
Nokia’s patent unit had sales of 616 million euros in the first half of the year - just six percent of the group’s total revenue. However, licensing payments are highly profitable while Nokia’s core business, telecom networks, is suffering an industry-wide slump.
The revenue of the LG deal will be clearly smaller than that from the Apple agreement, which he estimated to bring around 250 million euros annually.
Nokia sold its once-dominant phone business to Microsoft in 2014 but retained its patent catalog covering technology that reduces the need for hardware components in a phone, conserves battery life and increases radio reception, among other features.
LG has a global market share of around four percent in smartphones, according to Strategy Analytics.