The current state of non-compete and non-solicitation agreements. Covers FTC rulings, state-by-state enforceability, alternatives, and electronic exec
Key Takeaways:
- As of 2026, non-compete and non-solicitation agreements are governed primarily by state law after federal FTC enforcement efforts were stalled by the courts—making jurisdiction-specific drafting non‑negotiable.
- States like California, Minnesota, and Oklahoma effectively prohibit employee non‑competes, while others (Texas, Florida) still enforce them under strict scope and duration limits.
- Non‑solicitation clauses remain enforceable in more states, but courts are scrutinizing customer definitions, timeframes, and electronic execution records more closely than ever.
- Employers are replacing broad restraints with narrower tools—confidentiality, IP assignment, and garden‑leave clauses—signed and tracked digitally to reduce enforcement risk.
TL;DR:
In 2026, non-compete and non-solicitation agreements are legally fragmented across the U.S., with state law—not federal rulemaking—deciding enforceability. Employers must adjust contract language, execution methods, and alternatives to stay compliant and defensible.
In the past two years, few employment contract topics have shifted as quickly—or as publicly—as non-compete and non-solicitation agreements. The FTC’s attempted nationwide ban in 2024 signaled a turning point, but court challenges left employers in 2026 navigating a patchwork of state rules instead of a single federal standard.
This matters now because enforcement mistakes are getting expensive. In 2025 alone, state labor agencies in Washington and Illinois issued penalties exceeding $7 million combined for invalid restrictive covenants tied to employee wage thresholds. At the same time, employees are increasingly challenging agreements based on how—and when—they were signed.
In this guide, we break down where non-compete and non-solicitation agreements actually stand in 2026, how enforceability differs by state, what alternatives courts are accepting, and why clean electronic execution and audit trails are now central to enforceability.
The FTC’s April 2024 final rule sought to ban most employee non‑competes nationwide, with limited exceptions for senior executives. By mid‑2025, however, federal courts in Texas and Florida issued injunctions preventing enforcement, and no Supreme Court resolution had occurred by early 2026.
The practical result: the FTC rule is not enforceable nationwide, and employers must default back to state law. The FTC continues to pursue individual enforcement actions against “unfair methods of competition,” but those cases focus on extreme facts—multi‑year restraints for mid‑wage workers—rather than routine contracts.
For employers, the takeaway is clear: relying on a presumed federal ban or approval is risky. Each non‑compete and non‑solicitation agreement must be evaluated under the employee’s work location, not company headquarters. That reality sets the stage for state‑by‑state complexity.
In 2026, enforceability varies sharply:
Effectively banned states:
California, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Oklahoma prohibit employee non‑competes in almost all circumstances. Courts in these states also invalidate non‑solicitation clauses that function as de facto non‑competes (for example, banning contact with all former clients regardless of relationship).
Wage‑threshold states:
Washington ($116,593 annually in 2026), Illinois ($80,000), and Oregon ($113,241) allow non‑competes only for employees earning above statutory thresholds. Agreements signed before crossing the threshold are often unenforceable.
Reasonableness states:
Texas, Florida, Georgia, and North Carolina still enforce non‑competes and non‑solicitation agreements—but only if narrowly tailored. Courts routinely strike clauses exceeding:
Across all states, judges increasingly demand proof that the employee actually reviewed and accepted the agreement. Missing execution metadata has invalidated otherwise lawful contracts—a trend that leads directly into how agreements are signed.
Non‑solicitation agreements remain more defensible than non‑competes in 2026, but only when drafted precisely. Courts are focusing on three elements:
Defined relationships
Clauses restricting solicitation of “any customer” are frequently struck. Agreements limited to customers the employee worked with in the last 12 months are far more likely to survive.
Employee vs. client solicitation
Many states (including New York and Massachusetts) distinguish between barring employee raiding and customer solicitation. Employee non‑solicits are generally upheld if limited to managerial or team‑lead relationships.
Proof of informed consent
Employers are losing cases because they cannot show when the agreement was signed, whether the final version was delivered, or if revisions were acknowledged.
Platforms like ZiaSign address this by creating time‑stamped execution records tied to the exact document version—evidence courts increasingly expect when non‑solicitation clauses are challenged.
As traditional restraints face higher scrutiny, employers are shifting toward contractual tools with better survival rates:
Confidentiality agreements with defined trade secrets
Courts enforce these when trade secrets are specifically described (pricing formulas, source code, customer segmentation models).
IP assignment clauses
Especially effective for engineering, product, and R&D roles when limited to work created within employment scope.
Garden‑leave provisions
More common in finance and executive contracts, requiring paid notice periods instead of post‑employment restrictions.
Each of these still depends on valid execution. If an employee signs after their start date without additional consideration, several states treat the agreement as void. Digital signing workflows that log offer timing, acceptance, and consideration language—such as those built into ZiaSign—help prevent that failure point.
In 2026, non‑compete and non‑solicitation agreements are not dead—but they are no longer forgiving. Employers who reuse old templates or ignore execution details are seeing agreements invalidated even in traditionally employer‑friendly states. The winning approach combines state‑specific drafting, narrower restraints, and defensible proof of acceptance.
If you’re updating employment contracts this year, start by auditing where your workforce actually sits, replacing overbroad clauses, and standardizing how agreements are signed and stored. ZiaSign helps legal and HR teams execute, track, and retrieve enforceable agreements without adding administrative drag—so when restrictions are challenged, your documentation holds up.
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