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Non-Compete Agreement Colombia (Acuerdo de No Competencia)

Non-Compete Agreement Colombia (Acuerdo de No Competencia)

ACUERDO DE NO COMPETENCIA POST-CONTRACTUAL

Celebrado conforme al Artículo 1602 del Código Civil y al Artículo 44 del Código Sustantivo del Trabajo

PRIMERA. — PARTES

EL EMPLEADOR:

Razón Social: [Employer Name]

NIT: [Employer NIT]

Domicilio: [Employer Address]

Representante Legal: [Employer Representative]

C.C.: [Employer Rep CC]

EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A:

Nombre: [Employee Name]

C.C. / C.E.: [Employee CC]

Dirección: [Employee Address]

Cargo: [Job Title]

Las partes arriba identificadas, actuando libre y voluntariamente, celebran el presente Acuerdo de No Competencia Post-Contractual, el cual se regirá por las disposiciones del Código Civil, el Código Sustantivo del Trabajo, la Decisión 486 de 2000 de la Comunidad Andina (CAN), y la Ley 256 de 1996 sobre Competencia Desleal.

SEGUNDA. — ANTECEDENTES Y JUSTIFICACIÓN

EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A, en virtud de su cargo como [Job Title] dentro de [Employer Name], ha tenido y/o tiene acceso a información confidencial, secretos comerciales y conocimientos estratégicos que constituyen activos protegibles del EMPLEADOR conforme a los Artículos 260 a 266 de la Decisión 486 de 2000 de la CAN y al Artículo 16 de la Ley 256 de 1996.

Interés legítimo del EMPLEADOR que justifica la presente restricción:

[Protected Interest]

TERCERA. — OBLIGACIÓN DE NO COMPETENCIA

EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A se obliga a abstenerse de realizar, directa o indirectamente, por cuenta propia o ajena, las siguientes actividades durante el período de restricción:

[Prohibited Activities]

Duración de la restricción: [Restriction Duration], contados a partir de la fecha efectiva de terminación de la relación laboral.

Ámbito geográfico: [Geographic Scope]

PARÁGRAFO. — La presente restricción se ha pactado conforme al principio de proporcionalidad establecido por la Corte Constitucional (Sentencias C-815/2001 y T-611/2001), limitándose a las actividades específicas que constituyen competencia directa con el negocio del EMPLEADOR y sin impedir al/la TRABAJADOR/A el ejercicio general de su profesión u oficio.

CUARTA. — CONTRAPRESTACIÓN ECONÓMICA

En consideración a la restricción asumida por EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A, EL EMPLEADOR se compromete a pagar la siguiente contraprestación:

Tipo de pago: [Compensation Type]

Monto: [Compensation Amount]

Calendario de pago: [Payment Schedule]

PARÁGRAFO. — La contraprestación es independiente de y adicional a las prestaciones sociales, indemnizaciones y demás derechos laborales a que tenga derecho EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A conforme al CST y la Ley 100 de 1993.

QUINTA. — INCUMPLIMIENTO Y CLÁUSULA PENAL

En caso de incumplimiento por parte del/la TRABAJADOR/A de la obligación de no competencia pactada en la Cláusula Tercera, éste/a deberá pagar al EMPLEADOR a título de cláusula penal (Arts. 1592 a 1601 del Código Civil) la suma de [Penalty Amount], sin perjuicio del derecho del EMPLEADOR a solicitar medidas cautelares ante el Juzgado Laboral del Circuito competente y a ejercer las acciones de competencia desleal ante la Superintendencia de Industria y Comercio (SIC) conforme a la Ley 256 de 1996.

Adicionalmente, EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A deberá restituir la totalidad de la contraprestación recibida conforme a la Cláusula Cuarta.

SEXTA. — ESCENARIOS DE TERMINACIÓN

Aplicabilidad del presente acuerdo según el tipo de terminación de la relación laboral: [Termination Scenarios]

En caso de que el escenario de terminación aplicable excluya la vigencia del presente acuerdo, la obligación de no competencia quedará sin efecto automáticamente, sin perjuicio de las obligaciones de confidencialidad que subsistan conforme a la ley.

SÉPTIMA. — LEY APLICABLE Y JURISDICCIÓN

El presente acuerdo se rige por el Código Civil de la República de Colombia, el Código Sustantivo del Trabajo, la Decisión 486 de 2000 de la Comunidad Andina, y la Ley 256 de 1996. Las controversias se someterán al Juzgado Laboral del Circuito competente del lugar donde se prestaron los servicios, previa conciliación ante el Ministerio del Trabajo o centro de conciliación autorizado conforme a la Ley 640 de 2001.

FIRMAS

En [Execution City], a los [Execution Date].

EL EMPLEADOR:

[Employer Name]

NIT: [Employer NIT]

Representante Legal: [Employer Representative]

C.C.: [Employer Rep CC]

Firma: _________________________

EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A:

[Employee Name]

C.C. / C.E.: [Employee CC]

Firma: _________________________

Employer / Legal Representative (Empleador / Representante Legal)

________________

Signature

Employee (Trabajador/a)

________________

Signature

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What Is a Non-Compete Agreement Colombia (Acuerdo de No Competencia)?

A Non-Compete Agreement Colombia (Acuerdo de No Competencia) is a contractual arrangement between an employer and a worker restricting the worker's ability to engage in competing commercial or professional activities after the termination of the employment relationship, governed by the general principles of contract law under Article 1602 of the Código Civil (CC) — which establishes that lawfully executed contracts are law between the parties — and subject to the employment law limitations of the Código Sustantivo del Trabajo (CST), particularly Article 44 regarding competition restrictions.

The constitutional framework governing non-compete agreements in Colombia derives from the tension between two fundamental rights established in the Constitución Política de 1991. Article 25 guarantees the right to work (derecho al trabajo) as a fundamental right enjoying special State protection, while Article 333 protects economic freedom (libertad económica) and free enterprise (libre competencia). The Corte Constitucional has consistently held — notably in Sentencia C-815 de 2001 and Sentencia T-611 de 2001 — that restrictions on the right to work must satisfy the strict proportionality test: the restriction must pursue a legitimate purpose, be necessary and adequate to achieve that purpose, and be proportional to the interest being protected.

Unlike jurisdictions with specific non-compete statutes, Colombian law does not contain a dedicated legislative framework for post-employment non-compete agreements. The legal basis rests on the general principles of freedom of contract under CC Article 1602, subject to the limitation of CC Article 1518 requiring that the object of the contract be lawful (objeto lícito) and CC Article 1524 requiring a lawful cause (causa lícita). Article 44 of the CST addresses competition during the employment relationship, establishing that a worker may not engage in competing activities without the employer's authorization — but the CST does not expressly regulate post-employment competition restrictions.

The Sala de Casación Laboral of the Corte Suprema de Justicia has addressed non-compete agreements in several decisions, establishing that post-employment competition restrictions are enforceable only when they satisfy specific conditions: the restriction must be limited in time (temporal limitation — Colombian courts have generally accepted periods of up to two years as reasonable), limited in geographic scope (territorial limitation), limited to the specific sector or activities that directly compete with the employer's business, and accompanied by adequate economic compensation (contraprestación) that compensates the worker for the limitation on their right to work during the restricted period.

The enforceability of non-compete agreements in Colombia also intersects with the protection of trade secrets (secretos comerciales) under Decisión 486 de 2000 of the Comunidad Andina (CAN) — the Régimen Común sobre Propiedad Industrial — which protects undisclosed business information in Articles 260 through 266. Under Colombian commercial law, Ley 256 de 1996 (Ley de Competencia Desleal) prohibits acts of unfair competition, including the divulgation of trade secrets obtained through an employment relationship under Article 16. These provisions provide the employer with additional remedies beyond the contractual non-compete, allowing civil actions for unfair competition before the Superintendencia de Industria y Comercio (SIC) or the Juzgado Civil del Circuito.

The Ministerio del Trabajo (MinTrabajo) does not directly regulate non-compete agreements, but labour inspectors under CST Articles 485 through 487 may assess whether non-compete clauses in employment contracts comply with fundamental labour rights. Disputes arising from non-compete agreements executed within the context of an employment relationship fall under the jurisdiction of the Juzgado Laboral del Circuito, with appeals to the Sala Laboral of the Tribunal Superior de Distrito Judicial and cassation review by the Sala de Casación Laboral of the Corte Suprema de Justicia.

When Do You Need a Non-Compete Agreement Colombia (Acuerdo de No Competencia)?

A Non-Compete Agreement Colombia is needed whenever a Colombian employer seeks to protect legitimate business interests by restricting a departing worker's ability to engage in competing activities for a defined period after the termination of the employment relationship. Article 1602 of the Código Civil establishes the binding force of contracts, and the employer must demonstrate a legitimate interest warranting the restriction — the Corte Constitucional requires that non-compete restrictions satisfy the proportionality test under Articles 25 and 333 of the Constitución Política de 1991.

The agreement is needed when an employee has access to trade secrets (secretos comerciales) protected under Decisión 486 de 2000 of the Comunidad Andina (CAN), Articles 260 through 266. Colombian employers in technology, pharmaceuticals, financial services, and manufacturing sectors routinely use non-compete agreements to protect proprietary formulas, algorithms, client databases, pricing strategies, and business methodologies that constitute protectable trade secrets under Ley 256 de 1996 (Ley de Competencia Desleal).

A Non-Compete Agreement is required when an executive, senior manager, or key technical employee holds strategic knowledge that could provide a significant competitive advantage to a direct competitor. Under CST Article 58 numeral 10, workers have an obligation to maintain confidentiality regarding reserved information — but this duty terminates with the employment relationship unless extended through a separate post-employment agreement with adequate compensation.

The document is needed when the employer provides specialized training, investment in professional development, or access to proprietary methodologies that constitute a significant investment in the worker's capabilities. Under CST Article 44, the employer may restrict competition during the employment relationship without additional compensation — but post-employment restrictions require a separate agreement with adequate contraprestación to compensate the worker for the limitation on their fundamental right to work.

A Non-Compete Agreement is also needed when the employer operates in industries regulated by the Superintendencia Financiera de Colombia (financial sector), the Superintendencia Nacional de Salud (healthcare sector), or other sector-specific regulators where client relationships and specialized knowledge create heightened competitive risks upon employee departure.

Parties in Colombia should prepare a Non-Compete Agreement Colombia (Acuerdo de No Competencia) proactively rather than waiting for a dispute to arise. Courts interpret agreements based on the written terms rather than oral representations. Under the Codigo Sustantivo del Trabajo (CST), Colombian employment law governs individual and collective labour relations. The Ministerio del Trabajo enforces compliance and issues regulations. The Sistema General de Seguridad Social (EPS, ARL, Fondo de Pensiones) provides health, occupational risk, and pension coverage. The Unidad de Gestion Pensional y Parafiscales (UGPP) audits employer contributions. The Caja de Compensacion Familiar administers family subsidy benefits. Where the transaction involves regulated activities, prior approval from the relevant authority may be required before execution.

What to Include in Your Non-Compete Agreement Colombia (Acuerdo de No Competencia)

A valid Non-Compete Agreement Colombia under Article 1602 of the Código Civil and the constitutional principles established by the Corte Constitucional must contain the following essential elements to be enforceable before Colombian labour courts.

Identification of Parties: Full legal name, cédula de ciudadanía (or cédula de extranjería), and domicile of both the employer and the worker. Where the employer is a legal entity (persona jurídica), the company's NIT (Número de Identificación Tributaria assigned by the DIAN), Cámara de Comercio matrícula mercantil, and identification of the representante legal must be included. The agreement must reference the underlying employment relationship — the employment contract under CST Article 22 that gives rise to the employer's legitimate interest in protection.

Legitimate Interest: A clear statement of the employer's legitimate business interest that justifies the competition restriction. Under the proportionality test applied by the Corte Constitucional in Sentencia C-815 de 2001, the employer must identify specific protectable interests: trade secrets under Decisión 486 de 2000 of the CAN, proprietary client relationships, specialized training investments, or confidential business strategies. Vague or overly broad interest descriptions weaken enforceability before the Juzgado Laboral del Circuito.

Scope of Restriction: Precise definition of the prohibited activities, identifying the specific sector, market segment, or type of business that constitutes direct competition with the employer. Under Colombian constitutional jurisprudence, restrictions that effectively prevent the worker from exercising their profession entirely are disproportionate and unenforceable. The restriction should be limited to activities that directly compete with the employer's specific business operations.

Temporal Limitation: A defined duration for the non-compete restriction, beginning from the date of termination of the employment relationship. Colombian courts have generally accepted periods of up to two years as reasonable, though the specific duration must be proportional to the employer's legitimate interest and the level of compensation provided. The Sala de Casación Laboral of the Corte Suprema de Justicia evaluates temporal reasonableness on a case-by-case basis.

Geographic Limitation: A defined territory where the competition restriction applies — typically the city, department, or specific market where the employer operates. Under the proportionality analysis, nationwide or international restrictions require stronger justification and higher compensation than local or regional restrictions.

Economic Compensation: Adequate monetary compensation (contraprestación) paid to the worker in exchange for accepting the competition restriction. Colombian courts require that the compensation be meaningful and proportional to the burden imposed on the worker's right to work under Article 25 of the Constitución Política de 1991. The compensation may be structured as a lump sum at termination, periodic payments during the restricted period, or enhanced severance beyond the statutory minimum under CST Article 64.

Consequences of Breach: The contractual remedies available if the worker violates the non-compete restriction, including contractual penalty clauses (cláusula penal) under CC Articles 1592 through 1601, the obligation to return compensation received, and the employer's right to seek judicial injunctions (medidas cautelares) before the Juzgado Laboral del Circuito. Under Ley 256 de 1996, the employer may also pursue unfair competition remedies before the SIC.

Governing Law and Jurisdiction: Statement that the agreement is governed by the Código Civil, the Código Sustantivo del Trabajo, Decisión 486 de 2000 of the CAN, and Ley 256 de 1996. Labour disputes must be submitted to the Juzgado Laboral del Circuito of the place where services were rendered.

Forms-legal.com provides this Non-Compete Agreement Colombia template as a practical starting point for protecting legitimate business interests. Due to the significant constitutional implications and the evolving jurisprudencia of the Corte Constitucional and Corte Suprema de Justicia, every non-compete agreement should be reviewed by a licensed abogado laboralista to confirm enforceability under current case law.

Under the Codigo Sustantivo del Trabajo (CST), Colombian employment law governs individual and collective labour relations. The Ministerio del Trabajo enforces compliance and issues regulations. The Sistema General de Seguridad Social (EPS, ARL, Fondo de Pensiones) provides health, occupational risk, and pension coverage. The Unidad de Gestion Pensional y Parafiscales (UGPP) audits employer contributions. The Caja de Compensacion Familiar administers family subsidy benefits.

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@misc{formslegal-non-compete-agreement-colombia,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Non-Compete Agreement Colombia (Acuerdo de No Competencia) (Colombia)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/colombia/employment/hr-forms/non-compete-agreement-colombia}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

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