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BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Non-Compete Clauses: Enforceability Employer Guide

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Fachlich geprüft von Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Zugelassener Verwaltungsberater, JapanAlle MmowW-Inhalte werden von einem staatlich lizenzierten Experten für Regulierungskonformität betreut.
Understand non-compete clause enforceability across 7 countries. MmowW Scrib🐮 helps employers draft legally sound restrictive covenant documents in UK, AU, FR, SE, CA, and US. Post-employment restraints — non-compete, non-solicitation, and non-dealing clauses — are a standard feature of employment contracts for many roles, particularly those involving confidential information, close client relationships, or specialist expertise. However, their enforceability is heavily qualified by the law in every jurisdiction, and employers who draft them carelessly often find.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works: A Practical Overview
  3. Country-by-Country Comparison
  4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  5. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: Non-compete clauses are enforceable only if they go no further than necessary to protect a legitimate business interest. Courts across all jurisdictions scrutinise them closely — badly drafted clauses are struck out entirely, leaving you with no protection at all.

What You Need to Know

Post-employment restraints — non-compete, non-solicitation, and non-dealing clauses — are a standard feature of employment contracts for many roles, particularly those involving confidential information, close client relationships, or specialist expertise. However, their enforceability is heavily qualified by the law in every jurisdiction, and employers who draft them carelessly often find they are unenforceable precisely when they need them most.

The fundamental principle across all seven countries is the same: a restraint of trade is prima facie void and unenforceable unless the employer can demonstrate it protects a legitimate proprietary interest, and it goes no further than is reasonably necessary to do so. This means that a clause that is too wide — in geographic scope, duration, or the activities restricted — will typically be struck down entirely or "blue-pencilled" (reduced) by a court.

This guide explains how non-compete clauses work, how they are treated in each jurisdiction, and what makes them more or less likely to be enforced.

How It Works: A Practical Overview

Types of Restrictive Covenants

Post-employment restraints typically take several forms:

Non-competition clauses: Prevent the employee from working for a competitor, or starting a competing business, for a specified period and in a specified geographic area.

Non-solicitation clauses: Prevent the employee from soliciting clients or customers of the former employer.

Non-dealing clauses: Prevent the employee from dealing with (as opposed to actively soliciting) clients or customers, even if the client contacts the employee first.

Non-poaching clauses: Prevent the employee from recruiting former colleagues.

Garden leave clauses: Require the employee to remain employed (and on the payroll) during their notice period, but not attend work — effectively keeping them out of the market during that time. Garden leave is generally easier to enforce than a post-employment non-compete.

What Makes a Non-Compete Enforceable?

To be enforceable, a non-compete must satisfy three conditions:

  1. Legitimate proprietary interest: The employer must have a genuine interest to protect — typically trade secrets or confidential information, or close customer relationships developed through the employee's role. A desire to prevent competition in itself is not enough.
  2. Reasonable scope: The restriction must be proportionate to the interest — not too wide in geography, duration, or the activities covered. A global non-compete for a sales assistant covering a local area would be disproportionate.
  3. Consideration: The clause must be supported by consideration. If it is included in the original contract, the employment itself is consideration. If it is added later (e.g., at promotion), additional consideration — a pay rise, one-off payment, or promotion — may be required to make it binding.

Duration

The longer the non-compete, the harder it is to enforce. Typical enforceable durations depend on seniority and the nature of the interest:

Garden leave during the notice period may be deducted from the non-compete period in some jurisdictions.

Geographic Scope

Geographic scope should reflect the actual territory in which the employee worked or for which they had responsibility. A national non-compete may be disproportionate for an employee whose clients were all in one city. A global non-compete may be appropriate for a C-suite executive with global responsibilities.

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Country-by-Country Comparison

Country General Approach Max Typical Duration Key Requirement Key Source
🇬🇧 UK Common law restraint of trade; enforceable if reasonable 12 months Legitimate interest + proportionate scope legislation.gov.uk
🇫🇷 France Must be paid (compensation clause obligatoire) 2 years Financial compensation + geographic/activity limits travail-emploi.gouv.fr
🇸🇪 Sweden CBA governs; compensation often required 24 months (max) Via CBA or written agreement arbetsdomstolen.se
🇦🇺 Australia Common law; enforceable if reasonable 12 months (typically) Legitimate interest + proportionate fairwork.gov.au
🇳🇿 New Zealand Common law; enforceable if reasonable 12 months Legitimate interest + proportionate employment.govt.nz
🇨🇦 Canada Common law; strict approach Varies (often 6–12 months) Clear, reasonable in scope and duration canada.ca
🇺🇸 USA Varies enormously by state Varies (CA bans them; others allow 2 yrs) State law determines ftc.gov/noncompetes

France: Critically, in France a non-compete clause is only enforceable if the employer pays financial compensation during the restriction period — typically at least 30–33% of monthly salary per month of restriction. Forgetting this makes the clause void.

USA: Non-competes are banned entirely in California, North Dakota, Minnesota (from 2023), and Oklahoma. The FTC proposed a near-total ban in 2024. Several other states have heavy restrictions. Always check state law.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Using a one-size-fits-all clause across all employees. A non-compete that might be reasonable for a senior partner is almost certainly overbroad for a junior employee. Tailor the clause to the specific role, the legitimate interests at stake, and the geography involved.
  2. Failing to update clauses when employees are promoted. A non-compete drafted for a junior role does not automatically become enforceable in the same form for a much more senior role. Update employment contracts — with proper consideration — at significant promotions.
  3. In France, forgetting the financial compensation. This is a hard requirement in French law, not a soft recommendation. Without it, the clause is void from the outset.
  4. Trying to enforce an overbroad clause. Courts may "blue-pencil" a clause — strike out only the unreasonable part — or may void the entire clause. Enforcing a clearly overbroad clause in a high-profile way can also damage your reputation as an employer.
  5. Relying on non-competes instead of protecting trade secrets. Non-competes should be the last line of defence, not the first. Practical measures — confidentiality agreements, system access controls, need-to-know policies, exit interviews confirming obligations — are often more effective and less legally uncertain.

Next Steps: Get Started Today

Prepare compliant restrictive covenant clauses and employment agreements:

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For advice on specific restrictive covenants, consult a qualified employment solicitor or attorney.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I add a non-compete to an existing employee's contract?

A: Yes, but it must be supported by adequate consideration — something of value given in exchange for the new restriction. Simply telling an employee they must sign a new contract or face dismissal is unlikely to provide consideration and may amount to a variation without consent. A pay rise, promotion, or one-off payment are typical forms of consideration.

Q: What happens if I don't enforce a non-compete against one employee — can I still enforce it against another?

A: Selective enforcement can be used as evidence that the covenant is not truly protecting a legitimate interest, but it does not automatically make the clause unenforceable against others. Courts do not require uniform enforcement. However, it is best practice to apply restraints consistently for employees in similar roles.

Q: Is a non-compete in a settlement agreement enforceable?

A: Non-compete clauses in settlement agreements (or COT3s in the UK) are generally more enforceable than those in employment contracts, because the employee is typically receiving payment in exchange for agreeing to the restrictions. The payment provides clear consideration, and courts are more reluctant to interfere with negotiated commercial settlements.

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