Remote and hybrid work arrangements are no longer temporary accommodations — they're permanent features of the modern workforce. By 2026, an estimated 40% of the global knowledge workforce operates under some form of remote or hybrid arrangement. Yet fewer than half of these arrangements are governed by formal written agreements.
This gap between practice and policy creates significant legal, operational, and compliance risks. Without a written remote work agreement, questions about work hours, expense reimbursement, equipment ownership, data security, tax obligations, and termination conditions exist in a gray area that benefits no one.
The stakes are higher than many employers realize. A 2025 SHRM survey found that companies without formal remote work agreements were 3.4x more likely to face disputes over expense reimbursement, 2.7x more likely to encounter data security incidents originating from remote workers, and 2.1x more likely to face wage-and-hour claims related to overtime tracking.
This guide covers everything you need to include in a remote work agreement, the compliance challenges most organizations overlook, data security requirements for distributed workforces, and how to build a scalable policy framework that works for companies of any size.
Why Every Remote Arrangement Needs a Formal Agreement
Many organizations operate remote arrangements on informal understandings. The thinking goes: "We trust our employees. We don't need a contract for this." But trust and legal clarity aren't substitutes for each other. Here's why formal agreements are essential:
Legal Protection for Both Parties
A written agreement establishes:
- Work location: Critically important for tax jurisdiction, workers' compensation coverage, and applicable employment law. An employee who works from another state or country can trigger unexpected legal obligations.
- Equipment and expenses: Who pays for the home office setup? Internet? Electricity? In some states (California, Illinois, New Hampshire, and others), employers are legally required to reimburse employees for necessary business expenses — including a portion of home internet and cell phone costs.
- Work hours and availability: For non-exempt employees, remote work doesn't eliminate overtime requirements. Without a defined schedule, companies face wage-and-hour claims for untracked work performed outside normal hours.
- Insurance coverage: Workers' compensation applies regardless of where an employee works. If an employee is injured during work hours in their home office, the claim is valid — but the process for reporting and documenting the injury should be addressed in the agreement.
Consistency and Fairness
When remote work arrangements are informal, different managers set different expectations. Some employees get full flexibility while others are required to be online 9-5. This inconsistency breeds resentment, creates discrimination risk (if flexibility correlates with demographic factors), and makes it impossible to enforce standards.
Organizational Scalability
A remote work agreement template that can be customized and reissued as roles change is far more scalable than individual verbal arrangements. When the company grows from 20 to 200 employees, having a standard template with role-specific addenda ensures every remote worker operates under consistent, compliant terms.
Essential Clauses for Remote Work Agreements
A comprehensive remote work agreement should cover the following areas:
Work Location and Jurisdiction
This is the most consequential clause in any remote work agreement:
- Primary work location: The employee's designated remote work address (home office, co-working space, etc.)
- Notification requirements: The employee must notify the company before working from a different location for more than a defined period (typically 30 days) to avoid triggering new tax or compliance obligations
- International work: Specific prohibition or approval process for working from countries outside the company's registered jurisdictions
- State registration: Some states require employer registration if even one employee works there, with payroll tax withholding obligations
Work Schedule and Availability
- Core hours: The hours during which the remote employee must be available (e.g., 10am-3pm local time, regardless of overall schedule flexibility)
- Response time expectations: Expected turnaround for messages and emails during core hours
- Time zone alignment: If the employee is in a different time zone, specify which time zone governs scheduling
- Overtime tracking: For non-exempt employees, mandate specific time-tracking methods and prohibit unauthorized overtime
- Meeting attendance: Expectations for camera-on participation, in-person meeting frequency, and travel to the office
Equipment and Technology
- Company-provided equipment: Laptop, monitor, keyboard, mouse, headset — who provides what?
- Stipends: Monthly or one-time home office setup allowances ($500-$2,500 is typical for one-time; $50-$150/month for recurring)
- Personal device use (BYOD): If employees use personal devices, what security requirements apply? What happens when they leave the company?
- Internet requirements: Minimum bandwidth specifications (e.g., 50 Mbps download) and who covers the cost
- Equipment return: Process and timeline for returning company equipment upon termination
Expense Reimbursement
- Mandatory reimbursements: In states with statutory requirements (California, Illinois, New Hampshire, Iowa, Montana, and others), the agreement must address business expense reimbursement
- Covered expenses: Internet, phone, office supplies, ergonomic furniture, software subscriptions
- Approval process: How to submit expenses, approval thresholds, and reimbursement timelines
- Documentation requirements: Receipts, statements, and expense report formats
Performance and Accountability
- Deliverables and metrics: Define how performance is measured (output-based is more appropriate for remote work than hours-based)
- Check-in frequency: Regular 1:1 meetings, standups, or weekly status updates
- Performance review process: How remote employees are evaluated, and how being remote affects (or doesn't affect) career advancement
- Probationary period: A trial period for the remote arrangement (common: 90 days) during which either party can revert to in-office work
Compliance Challenges for Distributed Teams
Distributed workforces create compliance complexity that most HR departments underestimate. Here are the biggest challenges:
Multi-State Tax Obligations
When employees work in states other than where the company is headquartered, the company may be required to:
- Register as a foreign entity in the employee's state
- Withhold state income tax according to the employee's work state
- File quarterly payroll tax returns in each state where an employee works
- Pay state unemployment insurance in the employee's state
Some cities (New York City, San Francisco, Philadelphia) have additional local income taxes that apply to employees working within their boundaries. The compliance cost per additional state can range from $500-$5,000 annually in registration fees, payroll software configuration, and filing requirements.
Wage and Hour Law Variations
Remote employees are governed by the employment laws of their work location, not the company's headquarters:
- Minimum wage: A remote employee in Washington state ($16.66/hour in 2026) has a different minimum wage than one in Texas ($7.25/hour, federal minimum)
- Overtime rules: Some states (California, Alaska) have daily overtime thresholds, not just weekly
- Meal and rest breaks: Requirements vary significantly — California mandates a 30-minute meal break for every 5 hours worked
- Pay frequency: Some states require semi-monthly payments, others allow monthly
- Final paycheck timing: Ranges from "immediately upon termination" (California) to "next regular payday" (many states)
Workers' Compensation
Remote employees are covered by workers' compensation in their state of residence, not the company's state. This means:
- The company may need separate workers' comp policies in each state where employees work
- Home office injuries during work hours are compensable — but proving the injury occurred "in the course of employment" at home is more complex
- The remote work agreement should define the designated workspace and require the employee to maintain a safe work environment
Data Privacy and Cross-Border Compliance
For international remote workers, data privacy regulations add another layer:
- GDPR (EU): Employee data processing must comply with GDPR, including explicit consent, data minimization, and the right to erasure
- Data localization: Some countries require employee data to be stored within their borders
- Cross-border data transfers: Transferring employee data from the EU to the US requires specific legal mechanisms (Standard Contractual Clauses, adequacy decisions, etc.)
Security and Data Protection Requirements
Remote work inherently increases the organization's attack surface. A remote work agreement must address security comprehensively:
Network Security
- VPN requirement: All access to company systems must go through the company VPN
- Wi-Fi standards: Prohibition on using public/open Wi-Fi for work; minimum WPA3 encryption for home networks
- Home network segmentation: Recommendation (or requirement) to separate the work device network from other household devices
Device Security
- Endpoint protection: Antivirus, anti-malware, and endpoint detection and response (EDR) software must be installed and updated
- Disk encryption: Full-disk encryption on all devices used for work (BitLocker for Windows, FileVault for Mac)
- Automatic updates: Operating system and application updates must be applied within a defined timeframe
- Screen lock: Automatic screen lock after 5 minutes of inactivity
- Password policy: Minimum length, complexity requirements, and mandatory multi-factor authentication (MFA)
Data Handling
- Classification compliance: Remote employees must follow the same data classification and handling policies as in-office workers
- Printing restrictions: Sensitive documents should not be printed on personal printers; if printing is necessary, the agreement should address document disposal (cross-cut shredding)
- Screen visibility: When working in shared spaces (coffee shops, co-working spaces), employees must use privacy screens and ensure sensitive information isn't visible to others
- Cloud storage: Only company-approved cloud storage and file-sharing services should be used for work documents
Incident Reporting
- Required reporting: Any suspected security incidents (phishing attempts, lost devices, unauthorized access) must be reported to IT within 24 hours
- Lost or stolen devices: Immediate notification to IT for remote wipe capabilities
- Data breach procedures: Employee responsibilities in the event of a data breach, including preservation of evidence and cooperation with investigations
Building a Scalable Remote Work Policy
Rather than creating individual agreements from scratch for each employee, build a framework that scales:
Policy Hierarchy
- Company-wide remote work policy: The overarching document that establishes remote work eligibility, general expectations, and universal requirements
- Role-specific remote work agreement: A template customized for each role category (fully remote, hybrid 2-3 days, flexible/occasional remote)
- Individual addenda: Employee-specific details like approved work location, schedule, equipment allocation, and any accommodation requirements
Template Design
Build templates with fillable fields for:
- Employee name, location, and role
- Work schedule and core hours
- Equipment allocation and stipend amounts
- Specific performance metrics and check-in cadences
- Approval date and review/renewal date
Execution and Renewal Workflow
- New hire onboarding: Remote work agreement is part of the onboarding document package, signed alongside the offer letter and employment agreement
- Existing employee transitions: When an in-office employee moves to remote, issue the agreement within 2 weeks of the approved transition date
- Annual renewal: Remote work agreements should be reviewed and re-signed annually to confirm the employee's location, ensure ongoing compliance, and update any terms that have changed
- Termination: The agreement should automatically terminate with the employment relationship, triggering the equipment return process
Administrative Best Practices
- Centralized storage: All remote work agreements should be stored in a secure, searchable document management system
- Compliance dashboard: Track which employees have current agreements, which are due for renewal, and which states/countries are represented in your workforce
- Legal review triggers: Flag agreements for legal review when an employee moves to a new state, crosses an international border, or when relevant laws change
ZiaSign enables HR teams to build standardized remote work agreement templates, send them for electronic signature during onboarding or transitions, track renewal dates, and maintain a secure archive of all executed agreements — so your distributed workforce operates on a foundation of clarity and compliance.
Manage remote work agreements with ZiaSign →