Commission-Only Employment Agreement
COMMISSION-ONLY EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT
This Commission-Only Employment Agreement (the "Agreement") is entered into as of [Start Date], by and between:
[Employer Name], located at [Employer Address] (the "Employer"); and
[Employee Name], residing at [Employee Address] (the "Employee").
1. EMPLOYMENT AND POSITION
Employer employs Employee as [Job Title], effective [Start Date]. Employee's employment is at-will, meaning either party may terminate the employment relationship at any time, with or without cause, and with or without notice, subject to applicable state law.
2. COMMISSION COMPENSATION
2.1 Commission-Only. Employee's sole compensation shall be sales commissions as set forth in this Section 2. Employee acknowledges that this is a commission-only position and that no base salary is provided.
2.2 Commission Rate. Employee shall earn a commission of [Commission Rate].
2.3 Commission Trigger. Commissions are earned upon: [Commission Trigger].
2.4 Chargeback Policy. [Chargeback Policy]
2.5 Payment Schedule. Earned commissions shall be paid [Payment Schedule].
2.6 Draw Against Commission. [Draw Against Commission]
2.7 Minimum Wage Compliance. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Employer shall ensure that Employee's total compensation in any workweek meets the applicable federal and state minimum wage requirements for hours worked. If Employee's commissions in any workweek fall below minimum wage for hours worked, Employer shall pay the difference.
3. TERRITORY AND PRODUCTS
3.1 Assigned Territory. Employee is assigned the following sales territory: [Sales Territory].
3.2 Territory Exclusivity. [Exclusive Territory].
4. RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS
4.1 Non-Solicitation. For [Non-Solicit Period] after the termination of employment, Employee shall not directly or indirectly solicit or attempt to solicit any customer or client of Employer with whom Employee had material contact during employment, nor shall Employee solicit any employee or contractor of Employer to leave their employment or engagement.
4.2 Confidentiality. Employee agrees to keep confidential all non-public information about Employer's customers, pricing, products, strategies, and business operations, both during and after employment.
5. TERMINATION AND COMMISSIONS UPON TERMINATION
Upon termination of employment, Employee shall be entitled to receive commissions on sales that fully closed (i.e., the commission trigger event occurred) prior to the termination date, in accordance with the regular payment schedule. Employee shall not be entitled to commissions on sales that had not yet closed as of the termination date, unless otherwise required by applicable state law.
6. GENERAL PROVISIONS
6.1 Governing Law. This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the State of [Governing State].
6.2 Entire Agreement. This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties and supersedes all prior discussions, representations, and agreements.
6.3 Amendment. This Agreement may only be modified by a written instrument signed by both parties.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Commission-Only Employment Agreement as of the date first written above.
EMPLOYER:
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: _______________________________
Title: _______________________________
On behalf of: [Employer Name]
EMPLOYEE:
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: [Employee Name]
Employer
________________
Signature
Employee
________________
Signature
What Is a Commission-Only Employment Agreement?
A Commission-Only Employment Agreement in the United States establishes the conditions of employment, covering role, compensation, leave and notice of termination. It defines duties, remuneration, working hours, leave, and termination procedures binding employer and employee.
Under the FLSA, non-exempt employees must receive at least the federal minimum wage ($7.25 per hour as of 2024, under 29 U.S.C. § 206) for all hours worked in a workweek. If a commission-only employee's total commissions in a workweek are less than the minimum wage multiplied by the number of hours worked, the employer must make up the difference with a supplemental payment. Non-exempt commission-only employees who work more than 40 hours in a workweek must also receive overtime compensation at one and one-half times their regular rate of pay under 29 U.S.C. § 207. The regular rate for overtime purposes is calculated by dividing total weekly compensation (commissions plus any other remuneration) by total hours worked in the week, under 29 CFR § 778.109.
A narrow FLSA exemption for outside sales employees under 29 CFR § 541.500 exempts from both minimum wage and overtime requirements employees whose primary duty is making sales (as defined in 29 U.S.C. § 203(k)) and who customarily and regularly work away from the employer's place of business. The outside sales exemption has no salary minimum requirement — it applies solely based on the nature and location of the work. Employers who misclassify inside sales employees as exempt outside sales employees face FLSA liability for back wages, liquidated damages equal to the amount of back wages, and attorneys' fees under 29 U.S.C. § 216(b).
State-specific commission payment laws impose additional obligations on employers beyond the FLSA. California Labor Code § 2751 requires every employer who pays wages partly or wholly by commission to provide a written commission plan that sets out the method by which commissions are computed and paid. California Labor Code § 204 requires commission wages to be paid at least twice monthly, and California Labor Code § 201 requires earned commissions to be paid at the time of termination (or within 72 hours for employees who resign). New York Labor Law § 191 requires commission wages to be paid in accordance with the agreed terms of employment. Illinois's Wage Payment and Collection Act (820 ILCS 115) requires commissions to be paid as earned under the agreement. Florida, Texas, and most other states follow common law contract principles for commission payment timing without a specific commission payment statute.
The Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016 (DTSA, 18 U.S.C. § 1836 et seq.) provides federal civil remedies for the misappropriation of trade secrets by commission sales employees who gain access to customer lists, pricing strategies, and proprietary sales methods in the course of their employment. Commission employment agreements should include confidentiality and trade secret protection provisions referencing the DTSA and the applicable state trade secret statute (the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (UTSA) as adopted in most states, or the Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act).
When Do You Need a Commission-Only Employment Agreement?
A Commission-Only Employment Agreement is needed whenever an employer hires sales employees on a commission-only basis — without a base salary — and wishes to document the terms of compensation, territory, and post-employment obligations in a legally binding written agreement.
Inside and outside sales roles in real estate, financial services, insurance, technology sales, pharmaceutical sales, and advertising are the most common contexts for commission-only employment arrangements. A real estate brokerage engaging commissioned sales agents must provide a written commission agreement specifying the commission split between the broker and the agent, per National Association of Realtors (NAR) standards and applicable state real estate licensing statutes (such as California Business & Professions Code § 10136 and New York Real Property Law § 442-d).
Insurance sales agents hired on a commission basis — selling life, health, property and casualty, or disability insurance — are subject to state insurance department licensing requirements and must have a written commission agreement that complies with state insurance code provisions governing agent compensation. Texas Insurance Code § 4001.001 et seq. and California Insurance Code § 1621 govern insurance agent compensation in those states.
Technology and SaaS sales roles — account executives, sales development representatives, and enterprise sales managers at software companies — frequently use commission-only or high-commission arrangements with a smaller base salary. These agreements must carefully address the commission trigger (contract execution vs. cash receipt), treatment of multi-year contracts, renewal commissions, account expansion commissions, and the treatment of in-progress deals upon termination.
Employers in California face the highest level of legal scrutiny for commission-only arrangements because of California's strong wage protection laws. Under the California Supreme Court's decision in Peabody v. Time Warner Cable, Inc. (2014) 59 Cal.4th 662, an employer cannot average commissions across pay periods to satisfy minimum wage requirements — each pay period must independently satisfy the minimum wage. The California Labor Code's protections for commissioned employees are enforced by the California Labor Commissioner through wage claims, with civil penalties and private rights of action.
The Federal Trade Commission's 2024 Non-Compete Rule — which would have banned most post-employment non-compete clauses for all employees — was vacated by the US District Court for the Northern District of Texas in Ryan LLC v. FTC (Aug. 2024). State law therefore continues to govern non-compete enforceability, and commission employment agreements should include non-compete and non-solicitation provisions tailored to the specific state's enforceability standards.
What to Include in Your Commission-Only Employment Agreement
A complete US Commission-Only Employment Agreement addresses the following essential provisions to establish clear, legally defensible compensation terms and post-employment obligations.
The employment classification and FLSA status clause specifies whether the employee is classified as exempt or non-exempt under the FLSA, and if non-exempt, acknowledges the employer's obligation to track hours worked, pay minimum wage for all hours in workweeks where commissions fall below minimum wage, and pay overtime at one and one-half times the regular rate for hours over 40 per week. For employees claimed to be exempt under the outside sales exemption, the agreement should describe the employee's primary duty and the customary and regular requirement to work away from the employer's place of business.
The commission structure clause defines in precise mathematical terms how commissions are calculated. Key elements include: the commission rate or rates (e.g., 8% of gross sales receipts, or tiered rates that increase as the employee meets quota thresholds); the definition of gross sales for commission purposes (whether inclusive or exclusive of discounts, returns, cancellations, and bad debts); and whether the commission is based on gross revenue, net revenue, or gross profit. Ambiguity in the commission calculation formula is the most common source of commission disputes and should be eliminated by providing a worked example in the agreement.
The commission trigger and payment timing clause specifies the event that causes a commission to become earned — typically the execution of a sales contract, the shipment of goods, the delivery of services, or the receipt of payment from the customer. California, New York, and Illinois require this to be explicitly stated in writing. The clause must also address chargebacks — circumstances in which a previously paid commission is reversed, such as customer cancellation or return — and whether reversals can be recovered from the employee's future commissions or whether the employer bears the chargeback risk.
The draw against commission clause, if applicable, specifies the amount of any advance payment (recoverable or non-recoverable draw) made to the employee during periods when commissions have not yet been earned, the draw amount per pay period, and whether unrecovered draws carry forward against future commissions or are forgiven if the employee's employment ends.
The sales territory and account assignment clause defines the geographic territory or account list within which the employee earns commissions, whether the territory is exclusive, how territorial disputes between employees are resolved, and whether the employee receives commissions on accounts that were the employee's customers but are now managed directly by the company (house accounts).
The treatment of in-progress deals on termination clause specifies what happens to commissions on transactions that were negotiated or partially closed by the employee but not yet finalized at the time of termination. This is among the most litigated provisions in commission employment disputes. The agreement should specify whether the employee earns commission on deals closed within a specified tail period after termination, the conditions for earning a post-termination commission, and whether any post-termination obligation (such as a non-compete) affects the right to the tail commission.
The non-compete and non-solicitation clause must be tailored to the law of the state where the employee works. California (Business & Professions Code § 16600) broadly prohibits non-compete agreements for employees. Florida (Fla. Stat. § 542.335) and Texas (Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50) enforce reasonable non-competes with specific enforceability requirements. Non-solicitation of customers and employees is more broadly enforceable across states, particularly where the employer can demonstrate that the employee had access to confidential customer information.
Sources & Citations
Statutory citations link to official government sources.
- 29 U.S.C. § 206US – Cornell LII
- 29 U.S.C. § 207US – Cornell LII
- 29 U.S.C. § 203US – Cornell LII
- 29 U.S.C. § 216US – Cornell LII
- 18 U.S.C. § 1836US – Cornell LII
- Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016US – Cornell LII
- DTSAUS – Cornell LII
- 29 CFR § 778.109US – eCFR
- 29 CFR § 541.500US – eCFR
- FLSAUS – Cornell LII
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Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Commission-Only Employment Agreement (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/employment/contracts/commission-only-employment-agreement
"Commission-Only Employment Agreement (United States)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/usa/employment/contracts/commission-only-employment-agreement.
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title = {Commission-Only Employment Agreement (United States)},
year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/usa/employment/contracts/commission-only-employment-agreement}},
note = {Free legal document template. Based on Fair Labor Standards Act (29 U.S.C. §201-219)}
}Frequently Asked Questions
Commission-only compensation arrangements are legal under federal and state law for certain categories of employees, but compliance requires careful attention to wage and hour rules. Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), non-exempt employees must receive at least the federal minimum wage ($7.25 per hour as of 2024) for all hours worked, even if they are paid on a commission basis. If an employee's commissions in any workweek fall below minimum wage for hours worked, the employer must make up the difference. Non-exempt commission employees who work more than 40 hours in a workweek must also receive overtime pay (1.5x their regular rate). However, certain employees — including outside sales employees who customarily and regularly work away from the employer's place of business and earn more than half their compensation from commissions — are exempt from both minimum wage and overtime requirements under the FLSA outside sales exemption. State laws may impose stricter requirements.
A draw against commission (also called a commission advance or draw) is a payment made to a commission-only employee during a pay period as an advance against future commissions. There are two types: a recoverable draw, where the advance must be paid back from future commissions (if the employee earns $2,000 in commissions in a month but received a $3,000 draw, the $1,000 deficit carries forward to the next period); and a non-recoverable draw (also called a guaranteed draw), where the advance is kept by the employee regardless of commissions earned and does not create a repayment obligation. Non-recoverable draws effectively guarantee a minimum payment level and may bring commission employees within minimum wage protection requirements in some states. Recoverable draw agreements must be carefully drafted because some state courts have limited employers' ability to recover draw deficits from departing employees, treating excessive chargebacks as unlawful wage deductions.
The timing of commission earning and payment is one of the most litigated issues in commission employment disputes. The agreement should clearly specify: (1) what event triggers the commission (submission of an order, signing of a contract, delivery of goods, or receipt of payment from the customer); (2) whether the commission is 'charged back' if the customer returns merchandise or cancels an order; (3) the commission payment schedule (typically monthly or bi-monthly, tied to when the triggering event is confirmed); and (4) what happens to commissions on orders that are in progress when employment ends. Many states — including California, New York, and Illinois — have specific statutes governing commission payment timing. California Labor Code § 204 requires commission wages to be paid at least twice monthly, and Labor Code § 2751 requires every employer who pays commission to employees to provide a written commission plan. Failure to pay earned commissions can result in wage claim liability including penalties.
Classifying commission-only salespeople as independent contractors rather than employees is common but carries significant legal risk if the classification is incorrect. The IRS and US Department of Labor use multi-factor tests to determine whether a worker is an employee or independent contractor, focusing on the degree of behavioral and financial control the company exercises over the worker and whether the relationship is permanent. States apply varying tests — California's ABC test under AB 5 creates a strong presumption of employee status for most workers, while other states apply common-law control tests or economic reality tests. Misclassification of employees as independent contractors can result in liability for back payroll taxes, unpaid minimum wage and overtime, failure to provide workers' compensation coverage, and state penalty assessments. Before using a contractor model for commission salespeople, employers should consult with an employment attorney to assess the classification risk in their state.
Commission-only employment agreements commonly include territory provisions that grant the salesperson an exclusive or non-exclusive geographic territory within which they receive commissions on sales. Key territory questions include: whether the territory is exclusive (no other salesperson or direct company sales compete in the territory); whether the employee gets credit for 'house accounts' (major accounts managed directly by the company within the territory); and what happens if the company reassigns, reduces, or eliminates the territory. Non-compete and non-solicitation clauses are common in commission employment agreements, but their enforceability varies dramatically by state. California broadly prohibits non-compete agreements for employees. Other states (such as Florida) enforce reasonable non-competes more readily. The Federal Trade Commission issued a rule in 2024 banning most non-compete clauses for employees, though its enforceability is subject to ongoing litigation. Non-solicitation of customers and employees provisions are generally enforced more broadly than strict non-competes.
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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