Restrictive Covenant Agreement
(Non-Compete, Non-Solicitation, and Confidentiality)
Effective Date: [Effective Date]
This Restrictive Covenant Agreement ("Agreement") is entered into as of [Effective Date] between [Company Name], a company incorporated or formed under the laws of [Company State], with its principal place of business at [Company Address] ("Company"), and [Restricted Name], residing at [Restricted Address], in the capacity of [Restricted Role] ("Restricted Party").
RECITALS
In consideration of [Consideration], and other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the parties agree as follows:
1. NON-COMPETITION
During the term of the Restricted Party's engagement with the Company and for a period of [Non-Compete Duration] following the termination of such engagement for any reason, the Restricted Party shall not, directly or indirectly, within [Non-Compete Geography], engage in, own, manage, operate, control, be employed by, consult for, participate in, or be connected with any business or enterprise engaged in the following competitive activities: [Competitor Description].
The Restricted Party acknowledges that the Company has a legitimate business interest in protecting its customer relationships, trade secrets, and specialized training investments, and that the geographic scope and duration of this restriction are reasonable and necessary to protect those interests.
2. NON-SOLICITATION
During the term of engagement and for [Non-Solicit Duration] following termination, the Restricted Party shall not, directly or indirectly: (a) solicit, induce, or attempt to solicit any customer, client, or prospective customer of the Company with whom the Restricted Party had material contact during their engagement, for the purpose of providing competitive products or services; (b) solicit, recruit, or induce any employee, contractor, or agent of the Company to terminate their relationship with the Company or to accept employment or engagement with a competing enterprise.
3. CONFIDENTIALITY AND NON-DISCLOSURE
The Restricted Party acknowledges that during their engagement with the Company, they will have access to confidential and proprietary information including, without limitation: trade secrets, customer and prospect lists, pricing information, financial data, business strategies, product development plans, software code, and technical know-how (collectively, "Confidential Information"). The Restricted Party agrees to: (a) hold all Confidential Information in strict confidence; (b) not disclose any Confidential Information to any third party without prior written consent of the Company; (c) not use any Confidential Information for any purpose other than the benefit of the Company; and (d) promptly return or destroy all Confidential Information upon termination of engagement. This obligation survives the termination of this Agreement indefinitely for trade secrets and for 5 years for other Confidential Information.
4. REMEDIES; INJUNCTIVE RELIEF
The Restricted Party acknowledges that any breach of this Agreement will cause irreparable harm to the Company for which monetary damages would be an inadequate remedy. Accordingly, the Company shall be entitled to seek injunctive relief and other equitable remedies without the requirement to post bond, in addition to all other remedies available at law. In any action to enforce this Agreement, the prevailing party shall be entitled to recover reasonable attorney's fees and costs.
5. SEVERABILITY; MODIFICATION
If any provision of this Agreement is found to be unenforceable by a court of competent jurisdiction, such provision shall be modified to the minimum extent necessary to make it enforceable, and all other provisions shall remain in full force and effect. The parties authorize any court to reform this Agreement's restrictive provisions (including duration, geography, and scope) to the maximum extent that is enforceable under applicable law.
6. GOVERNING LAW; ENTIRE AGREEMENT
This Agreement is governed by the laws of the State of [Governing State], without regard to conflict of law principles. This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement of the parties regarding restrictive covenants and supersedes all prior agreements on the subject. Any modification must be in writing and signed by both parties.
SIGNATURES
[Company Name]
By: _________________________ Title: _______________ Date: _____________
Restricted Party: [Restricted Name]
Signature: _________________________ Date: _____________
Company Representative
________________
Signature
Restricted Party
________________
Signature
What Is a Restrictive Covenant Agreement?
A Restrictive Covenant Agreement in the United States governs the relationship between the parties by fixing what each must do.
The legal enforceability of restrictive covenants in the United States is governed primarily by state law, and the variation among states is substantial. California Business and Professions Code § 16600 broadly voids employment non-competes as against public policy, making California one of the most employee-friendly jurisdictions in the country. The California Supreme Court's decision in Edwards v. Arthur Andersen LLP, 44 Cal.4th 937 (2008) reaffirmed this prohibition. Minnesota, North Dakota, and Oklahoma similarly prohibit most employment non-competes by statute.
In contrast, states including Texas, Florida, New York, Massachusetts, and most other states apply a reasonableness test derived from the Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 188. Under this test, a non-compete is enforceable if it is ancillary to an otherwise enforceable agreement (employment, sale of business, or partnership), is supported by adequate consideration, and is reasonable in scope of restricted activity, geographic area, and duration. Texas Business and Commerce Code § 15.50 codifies this reasonableness standard and is frequently litigated in the Delaware Court of Chancery and Texas state courts.
The Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016 (DTSA), 18 U.S.C. § 1836, provides federal protection for trade secrets and a federal civil remedy for misappropriation that often accompanies restrictive covenant enforcement actions. Employers who pursue breach of restrictive covenant claims in federal court frequently combine state-law non-compete claims with federal DTSA trade secret misappropriation claims to access federal courts and federal remedies.
When Do You Need a Restrictive Covenant Agreement?
A Restrictive Covenant Agreement is needed by U.S. businesses whenever they share trade secrets, proprietary business methods, customer relationships, or confidential business strategies with employees, contractors, or business partners who could use that information to compete or to solicit the business's customers and employees.
Key employee and executive onboarding is the most common context for restrictive covenant agreements. When a senior sales executive, software engineer, product manager, or business development professional joins a company and gains access to trade secrets, key client relationships, and confidential competitive intelligence, a restrictive covenant agreement protects the employer's investment in that relationship. The agreement should be presented at the start of employment, because an offer of employment itself provides the consideration needed to support the covenant in most states.
Business acquisition transactions routinely include restrictive covenants as a core component of the deal structure. When a buyer acquires a business, part of what they pay for is the seller's goodwill — the value of the seller's customer relationships and market reputation. Without a non-compete signed by the seller and key selling employees, the seller could immediately re-enter the market and compete against the buyer using the very customer relationships and institutional knowledge the buyer just purchased. Business sale non-competes receive substantially more favorable judicial treatment than employment non-competes because the seller is a sophisticated party who negotiated the covenant in exchange for a significant purchase price.
Independent contractor and consulting engagements where the contractor gains access to proprietary business methods, customer lists, or technical trade secrets benefit from restrictive covenant provisions in the independent contractor agreement. Courts generally apply the same reasonableness analysis to contractor non-competes as to employee non-competes, though some states treat contractor restrictions more favorably than employment restrictions.
Partnership agreements and joint ventures where parties share business strategies, customer relationships, and proprietary methods need restrictive covenant provisions covering what each party agrees not to do if the partnership or venture is dissolved.
Equity grant agreements — option grants, restricted stock units, and profits interests — frequently condition the equity on the recipient's agreement to restrictive covenants. Courts in Delaware and most other states have upheld post-employment restrictions tied to equity compensation as sufficient independent consideration.
What to Include in Your Restrictive Covenant Agreement
A complete and enforceable Restrictive Covenant Agreement in the United States must contain specific provisions addressing each type of covenant, the geographic and temporal scope, the consideration provided, and the enforcement mechanism.
The parties identification section must name the employer or acquirer (full legal entity name, state of formation) and the restricted party (employee, contractor, or business seller) by full legal name. For business sale non-competes, the agreement should also identify the acquired business entity and confirm that the covenant runs for the benefit of the buyer.
The non-compete clause defines the scope of prohibited competitive activity. A legally defensible non-compete must specify: (a) the restricted geographic area — defined specifically by named states, counties, metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs), or a radius in miles from the employer's principal place of business or the employee's territory; (b) the restricted activities — defined as performing the same or substantially similar role for a competitor, owning or operating a competing business, or consulting for a competitor in the employee's area of expertise; and (c) the duration — typically 1–2 years for employment non-competes and 3–5 years for business sale non-competes. Courts in Massachusetts, Virginia, and Illinois have enacted salary threshold requirements: in Massachusetts, non-competes are only enforceable against employees earning at least $75,000 per year as of 2023.
The non-solicitation clause prohibits two categories of post-employment solicitation: customer solicitation (contacting the employer's customers or clients to divert their business) and employee solicitation (recruiting or hiring the employer's employees). These provisions are evaluated separately from non-competes in most states — non-solicitation agreements are generally upheld even in states that limit non-competes, because they impose narrower restrictions on the employee's activities. The clause should define 'customers' with sufficient specificity (customers with whom the employee had contact during the last 12 or 24 months of employment) to avoid overbreadth challenges.
The non-disclosure and confidentiality clause protects trade secrets and confidential business information as defined by the Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA), 18 U.S.C. § 1836, and applicable state trade secret statutes (most states have adopted the Uniform Trade Secrets Act). The clause should define confidential information broadly to include customer lists, pricing strategies, product roadmaps, proprietary processes, financial projections, and business strategies, while excluding information in the public domain and information the employee can demonstrate they knew before employment.
The consideration section documents the specific benefit the restricted party receives in exchange for the covenant: the offer of employment, a specific monetary amount, an equity grant, or the purchase price for a business sale. States including Texas and Illinois require that the consideration for a mid-employment covenant be identified as specific and tangible beyond continued employment.
The governing law and blue-penciling clause specifies the state whose law governs the agreement. Many employers use the state of the company's principal place of business, though this may be challenged by employees working in states like California with strong public policy against non-competes. The blue-penciling provision allows a court to narrow an overly broad restriction rather than voiding it entirely — a provision available in Texas, Florida, and most other enforcement states.
The injunctive relief clause acknowledges that breach would cause irreparable harm and authorizes the employer to seek emergency injunctive relief in addition to monetary damages. Without this clause, the employer must prove irreparable harm as an element of the injunction application.
Sources & Citations
Statutory citations link to official government sources.
- 18 U.S.C. § 1836US – Cornell LII
- Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016US – Cornell LII
- DTSAUS – Cornell LII
- Defend Trade Secrets ActUS – Cornell LII
Cite this page
Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Restrictive Covenant Agreement (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/business/contracts/restrictive-covenant-agreement
"Restrictive Covenant Agreement (United States)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/usa/business/contracts/restrictive-covenant-agreement.
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year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/usa/business/contracts/restrictive-covenant-agreement}},
note = {Free legal document template. Based on Defend Trade Secrets Act (18 U.S.C. § 1836)}
}Also available for these jurisdictions:
Frequently Asked Questions
Enforceability of non-compete agreements varies dramatically by state. California, North Dakota, Minnesota, and Oklahoma broadly prohibit employee non-competes and treat them as void as against public policy. Several other states (Colorado, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Virginia) have enacted laws that limit non-competes to higher-earning employees or require advance notice and independent consideration. In states that enforce non-competes, courts apply a reasonableness test: the restriction must be reasonable in scope of prohibited activity, geographic area, and duration; must protect a legitimate business interest (trade secrets, customer relationships, specialized training); and must not impose undue hardship on the employee. The FTC attempted to broadly ban most employee non-competes in 2024, but that rule was blocked by federal courts. Non-competes in the context of the sale of a business receive more favorable treatment than employment non-competes in most states.
The document three types of restrictive covenants serve distinct purposes and have different enforceability profiles. A non-compete (covenant not to compete) prohibits the restricted party from working for competitors or operating a competing business within a defined geographic area and time period. A non-solicitation agreement prohibits the restricted party from soliciting the company's customers, clients, or employees — but does not restrict where the person works. Non-solicitation agreements are generally more enforceable than non-competes because they impose narrower restrictions. A non-disclosure agreement (NDA or confidentiality agreement) prohibits the restricted party from disclosing or using confidential information — trade secrets, customer lists, business strategies. NDAs are the most universally enforceable of the three types and are not subject to the same public policy scrutiny as non-competes. A restrictive covenant agreement typically combines all three types into a single document for complete protection.
Consideration — a legal benefit or detriment exchanged between the parties — is required for any enforceable contract, including a restrictive covenant. For restrictive covenants signed at the start of employment, the offer of employment itself is sufficient consideration in most states. For covenants signed by existing employees after employment has begun, additional consideration beyond continued employment is required in many states: Texas, Illinois, North Carolina, and others require that the employee receive some tangible benefit (a promotion, raise, bonus, or equity grant) in exchange for signing a post-employment non-compete. In states without this requirement, 'continued employment' may be sufficient, but this is evolving. For restrictive covenants signed in connection with the sale of a business, the purchase price itself provides consideration. For independent contractors, the contract and associated payment constitute consideration.
When a former employee violates a restrictive covenant, the employer typically seeks a preliminary injunction — a court order requiring the former employee to immediately stop the prohibited activity (working for a competitor, soliciting customers) while the lawsuit is pending. Courts apply a four-factor test for injunctions: likelihood of success on the merits; irreparable harm to the plaintiff; balance of hardships; and public interest. Because damages for non-compete violations are difficult to quantify, courts are generally willing to grant injunctions if the agreement is facially reasonable. The employer may also sue for: breach of contract damages (lost profits attributable to the violation); disgorgement of profits made by the violating employee or their new employer; and attorney's fees (if the agreement includes a fee-shifting provision). The new employer who hired the restricted person may also be sued for tortious interference with contractual relations if they knew of the restriction.
Yes, and business sale non-competes are treated far more favorably by courts than employment non-competes. When the seller of a business signs a non-compete as part of the sale, they are receiving substantial consideration (the purchase price), voluntarily agreeing to limit their own economic activity, and preventing the seller from immediately competing to destroy the goodwill they just sold. Most states enforce business sale non-competes under a reasonableness standard without the heightened scrutiny applied to employment agreements. The key requirements are: the restriction must be tied to the geographic market and business activities of the sold business; the duration should be reasonable given the type of business (3-5 years is common for small businesses; longer periods may be justified for specialized businesses); and the scope of prohibited activities should match what the acquired business actually did. Business sellers should negotiate the scope carefully, as overly broad restrictions can affect their ability to work in their industry.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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