Are employee non-compete agreements enforceable in Kentucky?
Yes, sometimes. Kentucky is a reasonableness state, not a general ban state. A non-compete is enforceable only if it is supported by valid consideration and is reasonable — affording fair protection to a legitimate employer interest without being so broad as to harm the public or impose undue hardship on the employee.
The common-law standard traces to Ceresia v. Mitchell and is restated in later cases such as Kegel v. Tillotson. In practice the recurring questions are duration, geography, the employer's protectable interest, the burden on the employee, and the effect on the public .
Kentucky has not enacted a general non-compete statute for the ordinary workforce. The enforceability analysis is judge-made, with one narrow statutory exception for temporary health care staffing covered later in this note.
Do not treat Kentucky as either a free-for-all or a ban state. Confirm there is valid consideration first, then test the restraint for reasonableness in time, territory, and scope before assuming a Kentucky covenant is enforceable.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2009-10-30
A.1 Kegel v. TillotsonKegel restates Kentucky's common-law rule that a non-compete is reasonable only if it affords fair protection to the employer's interest without being so broad as to harm the public or impose undue hardship on the employee.
agreements on restraint of trade are reasonable if, “on consideration of the subject, nature of the business, situation of the parties and circumstances of the particular case, the restriction is such only as to afford fair protection to the interests of the covenan-tee and is not so large as to interfere with the public interests or impose undue hardship on the party restricted.
See Kegel v. Tillotson, 297 S.W.3d 908 (Ky. App. 2009).
Is continued at-will employment enough consideration for a Kentucky non-compete?
No, not by itself, for an existing employee. Since Charles T. Creech, Inc. v. Brown, requiring a current employee to sign a non-compete without giving anything new — no raise, promotion, or other benefit — fails for lack of consideration.
In Creech, a sixteen-year employee was asked to sign a conflicts-of-interest agreement containing a non-compete and received nothing in exchange. The Kentucky Supreme Court held the covenant unenforceable because the employer gave up no legal right and the employee gained no new benefit, so there was no mutuality of obligation .
The practical rule that emerges is a split between new hires and incumbents. An offer of employment at the outset of the relationship is itself adequate consideration, but an employer that introduces a covenant mid-employment must provide independent, new consideration such as a bonus, a raise, a promotion, or specialized training .
Do not rely on continued at-will employment alone when an existing Kentucky employee signs a new covenant. Tie the signature to identifiable new consideration and document it, because a bare recital of consideration did not save the agreement in Creech.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2014-06-19
B.1 Charles T. Creech, Inc. v. BrownCreech supports the rule that a non-compete fails for lack of consideration when the employer gives up no legal right and the employee receives nothing of value.
Because the Agreement did not require Creech to forbear the exercise of some legal right or otherwise result in some detriment to Creech, there was no consideration.
See Charles T. Creech, Inc. v. Brown, 433 S.W.3d 345 (Ky. 2014).
Case law · 2014-06-19
B.2 Charles T. Creech, Inc. v. BrownCreech supports that an existing employee who signs a covenant after hire must receive new consideration; continued employment with nothing more is insufficient.
In short, Brown received no consideration from Creech in exchange for signing the Agreement or after he signed the Agreement.
See Charles T. Creech, Inc. v. Brown, 433 S.W.3d 345 (Ky. 2014).
What legitimate business interests can support a Kentucky non-compete?
Trade secrets, confidential information, and customer goodwill are the core interests that can justify a tailored Kentucky restraint, and the Kentucky Uniform Trade Secrets Act supplies the statutory trade-secret overlay.
A covenant cannot exist only to suppress ordinary competition. It must protect something the employer is entitled to guard, such as trade secrets, confidential business information, or customer goodwill, rather than a general wish to keep a former employee out of the market .
The Kentucky Uniform Trade Secrets Act, codified at KRS 365.880 through 365.900, runs alongside contractual restraints. It defines a trade secret by the twin tests of independent economic value from secrecy and reasonable efforts to keep the information secret . A non-solicitation covenant is often easier to enforce than a trade-secret claim, because it requires proving contact with protected customers rather than meeting the statutory trade-secret threshold.
Do not use a Kentucky non-compete to block competition disconnected from a protectable interest. Tie the restraint to specific confidential information, trade secrets, or customer goodwill, and keep trade-secret remedies in a separate confidentiality and KUTSA strategy.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
C.1 Ky. Rev. Stat. § 365.880KRS 365.880 supports Kentucky's statutory trade-secret definition that operates alongside contractual restraints.
“Trade secret” means information, including a formula, pattern, compilation, program, data, device, method, technique, or process, that: (a) Derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use, and (b) Is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy.
See Ky. Rev. Stat. § 365.880(4).
What duration and geographic scope are reasonable for a Kentucky non-compete?
There is no statutory cap. Kentucky courts weigh duration, geography, the employer's protectable interest, the burden on the employee, and the public effect as a whole, rather than applying fixed numbers.
During the Creech litigation, the Kentucky Court of Appeals proposed a six-factor reasonableness test — covering the nature of the industry, the employer's characteristics, the history of the employment relationship, the protectable interest, the hardship on the employee, and the effect on the public . Trial courts often look to that framework, but its status is limited: the Kentucky Supreme Court resolved Creech on consideration grounds alone and expressly addressed only that issue, so it never adopted the six-factor test .
Because the standard is holistic, geography and duration are evaluated together against the employer's actual footprint. A restraint limited to the area where the employer does business and to a duration that matches the time needed to protect the relationship is far easier to defend than a long, open-ended, statewide ban .
Do not copy a fixed term or radius from another form. Match the duration and territory to the employee's role and the employer's real market, because a Kentucky court evaluates the restraint as a whole and there is no safe-harbor number.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2014-06-19
D.2 Charles T. Creech, Inc. v. BrownCreech notes that the Kentucky Court of Appeals proposed a six-factor reasonableness test for non-compete enforceability.
In doing so, the Court proposed a six factor test that should be applied by the trial court in determining whether the non-compete portion of the Agreement is enforceable.
See Charles T. Creech, Inc. v. Brown, 433 S.W.3d 345 (Ky. 2014).
Case law · 2014-06-19
D.3 Charles T. Creech, Inc. v. BrownCreech supports that the Kentucky Supreme Court resolved the case on consideration alone and did not adopt the Court of Appeals' six-factor test.
Because we hold that this Agreement was not supported by adequate consideration, that is the only issue we address.
See Charles T. Creech, Inc. v. Brown, 433 S.W.3d 345 (Ky. 2014).
Case law · 2009-10-30
D.1 Kegel v. TillotsonKegel supports evaluating duration and territory under the general fair-protection standard rather than against fixed statutory caps.
agreements on restraint of trade are reasonable if, “on consideration of the subject, nature of the business, situation of the parties and circumstances of the particular case, the restriction is such only as to afford fair protection to the interests of the covenan-tee and is not so large as to interfere with the public interests or impose undue hardship on the party restricted.
See Kegel v. Tillotson, 297 S.W.3d 908 (Ky. App. 2009).
Will a Kentucky court blue-pencil or reform an overbroad non-compete?
Often, yes. Kentucky is a reformation jurisdiction: its courts have a blue-pencil power to reform or amend overly broad restrictions, and in some cases to supply a missing reasonable limit, rather than voiding the covenant outright.
Kegel v. Tillotson states the rule directly: Kentucky courts are empowered to reform or amend restrictions in a non-compete clause when the initial terms are overly broad or burdensome . Hodges v. Todd shows how far that power can reach — there, in the sale-of-a-business context, the court held that a trial court could enforce a covenant that omitted any geographic limit by establishing a reasonable one based on the parties' intent .
That equitable power is not a license to overreach. Reformation is discretionary, and an employer that drafts an abusively broad covenant cannot assume a court will simply rewrite it into something enforceable.
Do not rely on Kentucky's blue-pencil power as a safety net for an aggressive covenant. Draft tiered, severable, reasonable restraints, because reformation is discretionary and a court may decline to rescue a covenant it views as overreaching.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2009-10-30
E.1 Kegel v. TillotsonKegel supports Kentucky's blue-pencil rule empowering courts to reform or amend overly broad non-compete restrictions.
our courts have adopted a “blue pencil” rule, whereby we are empowered to reform or amend restrictions in a non-compete clause if the initial restrictions are overly broad or burdensome.
See Kegel v. Tillotson, 297 S.W.3d 908 (Ky. App. 2009).
Case law · 1985-05-03
E.2 Hodges v. ToddHodges supports that a Kentucky court may supply a reasonable geographic limitation to enforce a covenant that omitted one, at least in the sale-of-business context.
we hold that the trial court had the authority to enforce the covenant by establishing a reasonable geographical limitation based on the intention of the parties at the time the contract was executed.
See Hodges v. Todd, 698 S.W.2d 317 (Ky. App. 1985).
Does a Kentucky non-compete toll or extend during breach or litigation?
This is an open Kentucky question. No staged Kentucky statute or appellate decision squarely endorses automatically tolling or extending the restricted period while the former employee is in breach or while litigation is pending.
Kentucky law gives two signals rather than a rule. First, any clause that extends the restricted period must still satisfy the ordinary reasonableness standard, so an extension that turns a fixed covenant into an open-ended restraint risks being found unreasonable . Second, Kentucky courts reform restraints toward reasonableness rather than mechanically enlarging them, which cuts against assuming a court will tack on extra time for a breach .
A contractual extension-on-breach clause is therefore unsettled and fact-dependent in Kentucky. It is most defensible when it is tied to the duration of an actual breach and a legitimate interest, rather than written as an automatic, indefinite extension.
Open question: Kentucky law is unsettled on whether an extension-on-breach or tolling clause is enforceable after the original restricted period expires. Draft any such clause as a separate, reasonable restraint tied to the breach, and do not assume a Kentucky court will automatically extend an expired covenant.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2009-10-30
F.1 Kegel v. TillotsonKegel supports applying Kentucky's reasonableness standard to any clause that extends the restricted period.
agreements on restraint of trade are reasonable if, “on consideration of the subject, nature of the business, situation of the parties and circumstances of the particular case, the restriction is such only as to afford fair protection to the interests of the covenan-tee and is not so large as to interfere with the public interests or impose undue hardship on the party restricted.
See Kegel v. Tillotson, 297 S.W.3d 908 (Ky. App. 2009).
Case law · 2009-10-30
F.2 Kegel v. TillotsonKegel supports that Kentucky courts reform overbroad restraints toward reasonableness rather than mechanically enlarging them, leaving tolling-on-breach unsettled.
our courts have adopted a “blue pencil” rule, whereby we are empowered to reform or amend restrictions in a non-compete clause if the initial restrictions are overly broad or burdensome.
See Kegel v. Tillotson, 297 S.W.3d 908 (Ky. App. 2009).
Which Kentucky workers have special non-compete limits?
Kentucky's one categorical statutory ban targets temporary health care staffing. KRS 216.724 voids non-compete and contract buy-out provisions between a health care services agency and its temporary direct care staff.
The statute bars a health care services agency from restricting the employment opportunities of temporary direct care staff, including through non-compete or buy-out clauses . A contract that violates the rule is treated as an unfair trade practice and is void . A 2023 amendment narrowed the ban so it does not reach the placement of permanent direct care staff.
Outside that carve-out, Kentucky has no broad occupational exemptions for non-competes. Ordinary employees — including most professionals — fall back on the common-law reasonableness and consideration analysis described above rather than an industry-specific statute.
Do not use ordinary reasonableness analysis to rescue a covenant that KRS 216.724 voids. For a temporary direct care staffer at a health care services agency, the statutory ban controls and the covenant is void regardless of how reasonable it looks.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
G.1 Ky. Rev. Stat. § 216.724KRS 216.724 bars a health care services agency from restricting the employment of temporary direct care staff through non-compete or buy-out clauses.
Restrict in any manner the employment opportunities of any temporary direct care staff that is contracted with or employed by the agency, including but not limited to contract buy-out provisions or contract non-compete clauses;
See Ky. Rev. Stat. § 216.724(1)(a).
Primary law
G.2 Ky. Rev. Stat. § 216.724KRS 216.724 makes a non-complying health care services agency contract an unfair trade practice and void.
Any contract between a health care services agency and temporary direct care staff that does not comply with subsection (1) of this section shall be considered an unfair trade practice and be void pursuant to KRS 365.060.
See Ky. Rev. Stat. § 216.724(2).
Will a choice-of-law clause selecting Kentucky law be enforced?
Often, yes. Kentucky's moderate reformation approach makes Kentucky law a common pick for multi-state covenants, and courts — even in states that reject blue-penciling — have applied a contractual Kentucky choice-of-law clause and found Kentucky's rule not contrary to the forum's public policy.
In Senture, LLC v. Dietrich, a Virginia federal court applied Kentucky law to a non-compete pursuant to the agreement's choice-of-law and forum-selection clause . In Edwards Moving & Rigging, Inc. v. W.O. Grubb Steel Erection, Inc., another Virginia federal court enforced a Kentucky choice-of-law clause and held that applying Kentucky law — which allows blue-penciling, unlike Virginia — was not repugnant enough to Virginia public policy to override the parties' choice .
The limit is public policy. A court applies the chosen law only when doing so does not offend the forum's own public policy, and both decisions are federal trial-court rulings rather than binding Kentucky Supreme Court authority.
Do not treat a Kentucky choice-of-law clause as automatically dispositive. It is strongest when paired with a real connection to Kentucky and a covenant that is reasonable on its own terms, because a forum court will still test the clause against its own public policy before applying Kentucky law.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2008-09-08
H.1 Senture, LLC v. DietrichSenture supports that a court will apply Kentucky law to a non-compete under the agreement's choice-of-law and forum-selection clause.
With respect to the first issue, this Court will apply Kentucky law to this case.
See Senture, LLC v. Dietrich, 575 F. Supp. 2d 724 (E.D. Va. 2008).
Case law · 2012-04-23
H.2 Edwards Moving & Rigging, Inc. v. W.O. Grubb Steel Erection, Inc.Edwards Moving supports enforcing a Kentucky choice-of-law clause because Kentucky's blue-penciling rule is not so repugnant to the forum's public policy as to override the parties' choice.
Applying the law of a state that allows “blue penciling” is not so repugnant to Virginia public policy as to overcome Virginia's preference for enforcing choice-of-law and forum-selection clauses.
See Edwards Moving & Rigging, Inc. v. W.O. Grubb Steel Erection, Inc., No. 3:12CV146-HEH (E.D. Va. Apr. 23, 2012).
Did the FTC's federal non-compete rule change Kentucky non-compete law?
No. The FTC's 2024 nationwide Non-Compete Rule was set aside by a federal court before it took effect, so Kentucky non-competes remain governed by Kentucky common law and the state's narrow statutory carve-out .
Ryan LLC v. FTC held that the FTC lacked statutory authority to issue the rule and that the rule was arbitrary and capricious . The court set the rule aside with nationwide effect so that it would not be enforced or take effect .
That outcome does not make every Kentucky covenant enforceable. It simply removes the FTC rule as a nationwide overlay and leaves Kentucky's reasonableness and consideration requirements in control.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2024-08-20
I.1 Ryan LLC v. Federal Trade CommissionRyan supports the rule that the FTC Non-Compete Rule was set aside and did not take effect.
The Non-Compete Rule, 16 C.F.R. § 910.1–.6, is hereby SET ASIDE and shall not be enforced or otherwise take effect on September 4, 2024, or thereafter.
See Ryan LLC v. Fed. Trade Comm'n, 746 F. Supp. 3d 369 (N.D. Tex. 2024).
Case law · 2024-08-20
I.2 Ryan LLC v. Federal Trade CommissionRyan supports the federal court's holding that the FTC lacked statutory authority and that the rule was arbitrary and capricious.
In sum, the Court concludes that the FTC lacks statutory authority to promulgate the Non- Compete Rule, and that the Rule is arbitrary and capricious.
See Ryan LLC v. Fed. Trade Comm'n, 746 F. Supp. 3d 369 (N.D. Tex. 2024).
What recent Kentucky non-compete reform efforts should employers watch?
None is currently law. Kentucky's most recent reform efforts, House Bill 690 and Senate Bill 234 in the 2025 session, would have restricted non-competes for lower-wage and other workers, but both died without enactment.
House Bill 690 would have barred non-competes against a covered employee — defined as a worker earning less than two thousand dollars per week — and let affected workers sue . A broader companion proposal, Senate Bill 234, also failed that session. Neither bill passed before the 2025 session adjourned, and the 2026 session likewise ended without enacting a general non-compete restriction.
The enacted baseline therefore remains common-law reasonableness and consideration, plus the narrow health care staffing ban. These bills matter as a signal of likely future direction, not as current law.
Treat House Bill 690 and Senate Bill 234 as monitoring items, not present Kentucky law. Recheck the Kentucky General Assembly bill status each session before changing forms or telling workers that Kentucky has enacted a wage-threshold or general non-compete ban.
Sources for this answer
Primary law · 2025-02-19
J.1 An Act relating to contracts (H.B. 690)PDFHB 690, the 2025 reform bill that did not pass, would have barred non-competes against lower-wage covered employees.
No employer shall enter into, enforce, or threaten to enforce a covenant not to compete with any covered employee.
See H.B. 690, 2025 Reg. Sess. (Ky. 2025).