Severance agreements should cover pay, benefits, release language, confidentiality, non-disparagement, and return of company property. This guide expl
Key Takeaways: What a Severance Agreement Must Include · Legal Requirements and Compliance Obligations · Negotiation Strategies for Both Parties · Common Severance Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them · Best Practices for Execution and Documentation
Severance agreements are among the most sensitive documents any organization handles. They sit at the intersection of employment law, financial negotiation, employee relations, and organizational reputation — and getting them wrong can expose the company to lawsuits, regulatory penalties, and reputational damage that far exceeds the cost of the severance package itself.
For employees, severance agreements determine their financial runway during a career transition, their ability to work for competitors, and whether they retain or forfeit certain rights. Signing without fully understanding the implications can have lasting consequences.
Despite these high stakes, many organizations still manage severance agreements through informal processes — word-processing documents emailed back and forth, verbal negotiations with no documentation, and execution via wet signatures that take weeks to process.
This guide covers the essential components of a well-structured severance agreement, the legal requirements that vary by jurisdiction, negotiation strategies for both employers and employees, common mistakes that create legal exposure, and the modern execution workflow that protects both parties.
A severance agreement is more than a payment arrangement — it's a comprehensive settlement of the employment relationship. Here are the elements that should be in every agreement:
The core of any severance package is the financial compensation:
The employer's primary legal motivation for offering severance is obtaining a release — the employee agrees not to sue the company for wrongful termination, discrimination, harassment, wage claims, or other employment-related causes of action.
Key considerations for the release:
Many severance agreements include or reinforce post-employment restrictions:
Specifics about returning:
Severance agreements are governed by a patchwork of federal, state, and local laws. Non-compliance can invalidate the entire agreement, exposing the company to the very claims it was trying to settle.
Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (OWBPA) For employees 40 years or older, the OWBPA imposes specific requirements:
WARN Act The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act requires 60 days' advance notice for plant closings and mass layoffs (100+ employees). Severance agreements often address WARN compliance directly.
State laws add additional layers of complexity:
Severance payments are subject to income tax and FICA withholding. Key considerations:
Severance negotiations are delicate — they involve emotions, financial pressure, and legal complexity. Here's how both sides can approach them effectively.
1. Standardize your baseline packages. Having a consistent formula (e.g., 2 weeks per year of service, minimum 4 weeks) reduces negotiation friction and discrimination risk. Departures from the standard should be documented with legitimate business reasons.
2. Calculate the cost of NOT offering severance. The cost of a wrongful termination lawsuit (legal fees, management distraction, potential damages, reputational impact) almost always exceeds the cost of a reasonable severance package with a valid release.
3. Be prepared to negotiate benefits, not just cash. Many employees value extended health insurance, outplacement services, or positive reference agreements as much as additional severance pay. These can be low-cost high-value additions to the package.
4. Get the non-disparagement clause right. Overly broad non-disparagement clauses that prevent employees from discussing their experience in any forum may face legal challenges. Balanced clauses that permit truthful statements while prohibiting malicious or knowingly false public statements are more enforceable.
5. Document everything. Keep records of the performance issues, business restructuring, or other legitimate reasons for the termination. This documentation protects the company if the employee later challenges the termination despite signing the release.
1. Don't sign immediately. You have time — often 21 days by law (OWBPA). Use it to review the full agreement, understand every clause, and consult with an attorney. The pressure to "just sign and move on" is understandable but can be costly.
2. Evaluate the release scope. Understand exactly what claims you're waiving. If you have potential discrimination, harassment, or wage claims, the value of the release should be reflected in the severance amount.
3. Negotiate the non-compete. If the severance agreement includes a non-compete, negotiate the scope (narrow industry vs. broad sector), geography (specific cities vs. nationwide), and duration (6 months vs. 2 years). In many states, courts will narrow overly broad non-competes, but it's better to negotiate upfront.
4. Ask for outplacement and references. A positive reference letter from your direct manager and access to professional outplacement services can be more valuable than an extra week or two of severance pay.
5. Clarify equity treatment. If you have unvested stock options or RSUs, understand exactly how many shares vest at separation, whether the exercise window is extended beyond the standard 90 days, and whether any acceleration applies.
Both employers and employees regularly make mistakes in severance agreements that create unnecessary legal exposure or financial loss.
1. OWBPA non-compliance. The single most common reason severance agreements are invalidated. If an employee over 40 isn't given the required consideration period, revocation window, and attorney consultation advisement, the release of age discrimination claims is void — even if the employee signed voluntarily.
2. Inconsistent treatment. Offering different severance packages to similarly situated employees — especially if the differences correlate with protected characteristics (age, race, gender) — creates discrimination liability. Standardized formulas with documented exceptions are the safest approach.
3. Overly restrictive non-competes. Courts in many jurisdictions are increasingly hostile to broad non-compete clauses, especially when they restrict an employee's ability to earn a living. An unenforceable non-compete provides zero protection while generating legal costs.
4. Forgetting about ongoing obligations. Severance agreements should address the separation date, benefits termination date, final paycheck timing (many states have specific requirements), and the process for returning company property. Missing any of these creates post-separation disputes.
5. No consideration for already-at-will employees. In at-will employment states, the "consideration" for the release is the severance payment itself. If the employee receives nothing beyond what they're already owed (final wages, accrued PTO), the release may lack consideration and be unenforceable.
1. Signing under emotional distress. The days after a termination are emotionally charged. Making binding legal decisions in this state leads to unnecessary concessions. Take the full consideration period.
2. Ignoring the non-compete scope. Many employees sign non-competes bundled into severance agreements without understanding the restrictions. A 24-month non-compete in a niche industry could effectively prevent you from working in your field for two years.
3. Not calculating the total value. Severance isn't just cash — it includes benefits continuation, equity treatment, outplacement, and reference value. Evaluate the full package before negotiating individual components.
4. Violating the agreement post-signature. The most common post-signature violations are social media posts that violate non-disparagement clauses and premature work for competitors that violates non-compete provisions. Both can trigger clawback of the entire severance payment.
The execution process for severance agreements must be handled with the same care as the substantive terms. Procedural errors can invalidate an otherwise well-drafted agreement.
1. Draft review and internal approval. Before presenting the agreement to the employee, route it through legal counsel and HR leadership. For executive-level packages, board or compensation committee approval may be required.
2. Present in a private meeting. Deliver the severance agreement in a confidential, professional setting. Provide a physical or digital copy for the employee to take with them. Never pressure for an immediate signature.
3. Document the consideration period. Record the date the agreement was presented and the deadline for signature (21 or 40 days for OWBPA-covered employees). Send a written confirmation noting these dates.
4. Track the revocation window. For employees over 40, the 7-day revocation period starts on the date of signature. The agreement is not enforceable until this window closes. Set a calendar reminder and do not process any severance payments until the revocation period expires.
5. Execute with electronic signature. Modern e-signature platforms provide:
6. Archive securely. Severance agreements contain sensitive personal and financial information. They should be stored in a secure document management system with access controls, retention policies, and compliance with data privacy regulations.
ZiaSign provides HR departments with secure document workflows for severance agreements — including electronic signature with audit trails, multi-party signing, deadline tracking, and encrypted storage — so the most sensitive moments in the employee lifecycle are handled professionally and compliantly.
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