Are employee non-compete agreements enforceable in New Jersey?
Yes, when reasonable. New Jersey has no general non-compete statute for the ordinary workforce, so enforceability turns on the common-law Solari/Whitmyer test: a covenant is enforced only where it protects the employer's legitimate interests, imposes no undue hardship on the employee, and is not injurious to the public.
The standard comes from two early-1970s New Jersey Supreme Court decisions, Solari Industries, Inc. v. Malady and Whitmyer Bros., Inc. v. Doyle. A post-employment covenant is scrutinized more closely than a covenant tied to the sale of a business, because of the countervailing policy in favor of employee mobility, but it is still given effect when it is reasonable on the facts .
The three prongs — legitimate interest, undue hardship, and public interest — are weighed together, and the New Jersey Supreme Court restated them in the modern physician case Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. More .
A covenant tied to the sale of a business is treated more leniently. Whitmyer explains that a seller's covenant protecting the goodwill sold to the buyer is freely enforceable, whereas an employee's post-employment covenant is scrutinized more closely because of the policy favoring employee mobility .
Do not treat New Jersey as either a free-for-all or a ban state. Test the restraint against all three Solari/Whitmyer prongs — legitimate interest, undue hardship, and public interest — before assuming a New Jersey covenant is enforceable.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 1970-04-20
A.1 Solari Industries, Inc. v. MaladySolari holds that an employee non-compete, though scrutinized for countervailing policy reasons, is given effect when reasonable in all the circumstances.
And while a covenant by an employee not to compete after the termination of his employment is not, because of the countervailing policy considerations, as freely enforceable, it will nonetheless be given effect if it is reasonable in view of all the circumstances of the particular case.
See Solari Industries, Inc. v. Malady, 55 N.J. 571 (1970).
Case law · 1970-04-20
A.2 Solari Industries, Inc. v. MaladySolari states the three-prong reasonableness test: legitimate employer interest, no undue hardship, and no injury to the public.
It will generally be found to be reasonable where it simply protects the legitimate interests of the employer, imposes no undue hardship on the employee, and is not injurious to the public.
See Solari Industries, Inc. v. Malady, 55 N.J. 571 (1970).
Case law · 2005-04-05
A.3 Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. MoreMore restates the New Jersey three-part reasonableness test for restrictive covenants.
That test requires us to determine whether (1) the restrictive covenant was necessary to protect the employer’s legitimate interests in enforcement, (2) whether it would cause undue hardship to the employee, and (3) whether it would be injurious to the public.
See Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. More, 183 N.J. 36 (2005).
Case law · 1971-03-08
A.4 Whitmyer Bros., Inc. v. DoyleWhitmyer distinguishes a seller's freely enforceable sale-of-business covenant from an employee's more closely scrutinized post-employment covenant.
we pointed out that while a seller’s noncompetitive covenant designed to protect the good will of the business for the buyer is freely enforceable, an employee’s covenant not to compete after the termination of his employment is not as freely enforceable because of well recognized countervailing policy considerations.
See Whitmyer Bros., Inc. v. Doyle, 58 N.J. 25 (1971).
Is continued employment enough consideration for a New Jersey non-compete?
Often, yes. New Jersey is comparatively employer-friendly on consideration: Hogan v. Bergen Brunswig Corp. holds that adequate consideration for a post-employment restraint can be found in the original employment contract or in continued employment after the covenant is signed.
This distinguishes New Jersey from states that require independent, new consideration whenever an existing employee signs a covenant. Under Hogan, an employer need not promise a raise or bonus or even threaten discharge; the continuation of the employment relationship can itself supply the consideration .
That latitude is not unlimited. The covenant must still be reasonable under Solari/Whitmyer, and a court evaluating undue hardship may weigh how the consideration and the restraint actually balanced out for the particular employee.
Do not assume the New Jersey consideration rule excuses an unreasonable restraint. Continued employment can support the covenant, but the restraint itself must still pass the Solari/Whitmyer reasonableness test on duration, territory, and scope.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 1977-09-29
B.1 Hogan v. Bergen Brunswig Corp.Hogan holds that consideration for a post-employment restraint may come from the original employment contract or from continued employment after signing.
The existence of sufficient consideration to support a post-employment restraint may be found in either the original contract of employment or in a post-employment contract, where the supporting consideration is at least, in part, the continuation of employment.
See Hogan v. Bergen Brunswig Corp., 153 N.J. Super. 37 (App. Div. 1977).
Case law · 1977-09-29
B.2 Hogan v. Bergen Brunswig Corp.Hogan finds that continued employment after the covenant was acknowledged supplied consideration, without any threat of discharge.
The continuation of plaintiff's employment for approximately three years after he signed the letter which acknowledges the covenant also provides consideration for the restrictive covenant.
See Hogan v. Bergen Brunswig Corp., 153 N.J. Super. 37 (App. Div. 1977).
What legitimate business interests can support a New Jersey non-compete?
Trade secrets, confidential business information, and customer relationships are the recognized protectable interests, and the New Jersey Trade Secrets Act supplies the statutory trade-secret overlay.
Whitmyer identifies the employer's legitimate interests as its trade secrets, confidential business information, and customer relationships . Ingersoll-Rand Co. v. Ciavatta repeats that employers may protect those same interests, while making clear that a covenant cannot exist merely to suppress ordinary competition or to keep an employee from using general skill and knowledge .
The New Jersey Trade Secrets Act, codified at N.J.S.A. 56:15-1 and following, runs alongside contractual restraints. It defines a trade secret by independent economic value derived from secrecy and reasonable efforts to maintain that secrecy .
Do not use a New Jersey non-compete to block competition disconnected from a protectable interest. Tie the restraint to specific trade secrets, confidential information, or customer relationships, and keep trade-secret remedies in a separate confidentiality and Trade Secrets Act strategy.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 1971-03-08
C.1 Whitmyer Bros., Inc. v. DoyleWhitmyer identifies trade secrets, confidential business information, and customer relationships as the employer's legitimate protectable interests.
But the employer has a patently legitimate interest in protecting his trade secrets as well as his confidential business information and he has an equally legitimate interest in protecting his customer relationships.
See Whitmyer Bros., Inc. v. Doyle, 58 N.J. 25 (1971).
Case law · 1988-06-22
C.3 Ingersoll-Rand Co. v. CiavattaIngersoll-Rand confirms that employers may protect trade secrets, confidential information, and customer relations through a restrictive covenant.
Employers, therefore, have the right to protect their trade secrets, confidential information, and customer relations.
See Ingersoll-Rand Co. v. Ciavatta, 110 N.J. 609 (1988).
Primary law
C.2 New Jersey Trade Secrets ActPDFThe New Jersey Trade Secrets Act defines a trade secret by its independent economic value from secrecy and reasonable efforts to keep it secret.
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;
See New Jersey Trade Secrets Act, N.J.S.A. 56:15-2.
What duration and geographic scope are reasonable for a New Jersey non-compete?
There is no statutory cap. New Jersey courts test duration and territory as part of the undue-hardship and public-interest analysis, and durations in the one-to-two-year range are commonly upheld when the geography is tailored to where the employee actually worked.
In More, the New Jersey Supreme Court found that, on its face, a two-year restriction was a reasonable period for the hospital to replace and train a successor . Geography is judged against the employer's real footprint and the public's access to the service: in the same case the Court held that limiting the covenant to a radius small enough to exclude a nearby hospital would remove the covenant's harmful impact on the public .
Because the analysis is holistic, a restraint matched to the employee's actual territory and to 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 New Jersey court weighs the restraint as a whole and there is no safe-harbor number.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2005-04-05
D.1 Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. MoreMore holds that, on its face, a two-year restriction is a reasonable period for the employer to replace and train a successor.
On its face two years appears to be a reasonable period for JFK to replace and train a person to assume Dr. More’s prior role.
See Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. More, 183 N.J. 36 (2005).
Case law · 2005-04-05
D.2 Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. MoreMore reduces the geographic scope so a covenant no longer harms the public, illustrating territory analysis tied to public access.
We are satisfied that if the covenant were limited to a distance less than thirteen miles so that Somerset was not within the restricted area, the covenant would not have the same adverse impact on the public that it presently has.
See Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. More, 183 N.J. 36 (2005).
Will a New Jersey court blue-pencil or reform an overbroad non-compete?
Yes. Solari abandoned the old void-per-se rule in favor of total or partial enforcement to the extent reasonable, so New Jersey courts narrow overbroad covenants rather than striking them down outright.
Solari is the foundational statement: New Jersey rejected the rule that an overbroad covenant is wholly void and adopted partial enforcement to the extent reasonable under the circumstances . Applying New Jersey law, the Third Circuit in ADP, LLC v. Rafferty described curtailing an overbroad covenant's scope as the approach prescribed by the New Jersey Supreme Court .
That reformation power is not a license to overreach. Reformation is an equitable remedy, and an employer that drafts an abusively broad covenant cannot assume a court will rewrite it into something enforceable.
Do not rely on New Jersey's reformation power as a safety net for an aggressive covenant. Draft tiered, severable, reasonable restraints, because a court narrows in equity and may decline to rescue a covenant it views as overreaching.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 1970-04-20
E.1 Solari Industries, Inc. v. MaladySolari abandons the void-per-se rule in favor of total or partial enforcement of a covenant to the extent reasonable.
We are entirely satisfied that the time is well due for the abandonment of New Jersey’s void per se rule in favor of the rule which permits the total or partial enforcement of noncompetitive agreements to the extent reasonable under the circumstances.
See Solari Industries, Inc. v. Malady, 55 N.J. 571 (1970).
Case law · 2019-04-26
E.2 ADP, LLC v. RaffertyRafferty describes curtailing an overbroad covenant's scope as the approach prescribed by the New Jersey Supreme Court.
Accordingly, we will remand for the District Court to consider whether and to what extent it is necessary to curtail the restrictive covenants’ scope, which is the approach prescribed by the New Jersey Supreme Court when confronted with overbroad restrictive covenants such as these.
See ADP, LLC v. Rafferty, 923 F.3d 113 (3d Cir. 2019).
How does New Jersey treat customer and employee non-solicitation covenants?
Non-solicitation covenants are analyzed under the same Solari/Whitmyer reasonableness framework as non-competes, and overbroad ones are blue-penciled to a reasonable scope rather than discarded.
In ADP, LLC v. Kusins, the Appellate Division reviewed customer and employee non-solicitation provisions and applied blue-penciling — a court's modification or tailoring of a restrictive covenant — to narrow them to what reasonably protected the employer's interests . In related ADP litigation, the Third Circuit, applying New Jersey law, concluded that ADP's tiered restrictive covenants furthered legitimate business interests and complied with New Jersey public policy .
A narrowly drawn non-solicitation clause — limited to customers the employee actually served or learned about — is generally easier to enforce than a broad covenant against all competition.
Do not draft a customer non-solicit that reaches every client regardless of the employee's contact with them. Limit it to customers the employee actually served or learned about, because New Jersey courts blue-pencil overbroad non-solicitation clauses and may narrow yours for you.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2019-07-26
F.1 ADP, LLC v. KusinsKusins describes blue-penciling as a court's modification or tailoring of a restrictive covenant, the remedy applied to overbroad non-solicitation provisions.
The term "blue pencil[ing]" refers to a court's modification or tailoring of a restrictive covenant.
See ADP, LLC v. Kusins, 460 N.J. Super. 368 (App. Div. 2019).
Case law · 2019-04-26
F.2 ADP, LLC v. RaffertyRafferty concludes that ADP's tiered restrictive covenants furthered legitimate business interests and complied with New Jersey public policy.
Applying New Jersey law, we conclude that both tiers of ADP’s restrictive covenants further legitimate business interests and otherwise comply with the state’s public policy.
See ADP, LLC v. Rafferty, 923 F.3d 113 (3d Cir. 2019).
Does a New Jersey non-compete toll or extend during breach or litigation?
It can. In ADP, LLC v. Kusins, the Appellate Division enforced contractual tolling and remanded for the trial court to toll the restricted period during the time the former employees were violating their covenants.
Kusins shows that a well-drafted clause suspending the restricted period during an actual, court-determined violation can be given effect, so the employer realizes the benefit of its bargain rather than losing protection to delay . But the extension is tied to a real breach, not to the mere passage of time. More cautions that restrictive covenants are not favored and refused to extend a covenant beyond its stated period absent justification .
The safer course is to draft any tolling clause so that it runs only for the duration of an actual breach, rather than as an automatic, open-ended extension that could itself be attacked as unreasonable.
Draft a tolling clause to run only while the former employee is actually violating the covenant, as determined by a court. New Jersey will enforce tolling tied to a real breach, but a covenant disfavors gratuitous extension, so an automatic, indefinite extension risks being found unreasonable.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2019-07-26
G.1 ADP, LLC v. KusinsKusins remands for the trial court to toll the restricted periods during the time the defendants were violating their covenants.
In all of the matters other than Kusins, we remand for a determination of the appropriate remedy for each defendant's breach of the RCA, including a tolling of the time limitations of the RCAs during the period of defendants' violations.
See ADP, LLC v. Kusins, 460 N.J. Super. 368 (App. Div. 2019).
Case law · 2005-04-05
G.2 Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. MoreMore declines to extend a covenant beyond its stated period because restrictive covenants are not favored in the law.
Because restrictive covenants are not favored in the law, we find no justification to extend the agreement beyond that period.
See Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. More, 183 N.J. 36 (2005).
How does New Jersey treat physician and health-care non-competes?
Physician covenants are enforceable when reasonable, but the public-interest prong gets close scrutiny. In More, the New Jersey Supreme Court applied the three-part test to a neurosurgeon's covenant and reduced its geographic reach to protect public access to care.
New Jersey has long declined to treat physician covenants as per se void — the New Jersey Supreme Court established in Karlin v. Weinberg that a physician covenant is enforceable to the extent it is reasonable — but it weighs the community's access to medical care heavily. More reduced the radius of a hospital's covenant rather than voiding it, illustrating how the public-interest prong drives the remedy . Its companion decision, Pierson v. Medical Health Centers, P.A., frames the same inquiry for the trial court: whether the covenant protects a legitimate interest, imposes no undue hardship, and is not adverse to the public interest .
For shortage specialties and on-call coverage, expect courts to scrutinize whether enforcement would deprive the community of needed care.
Do not assume a physician covenant fails or succeeds on duration and territory alone. In New Jersey the public-interest prong can shrink or defeat a health-care covenant where enforcement would limit patient access to needed care.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2005-04-05
H.1 Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. MoreMore applies the three-part reasonableness test to a physician covenant.
That test requires us to determine whether (1) the restrictive covenant was necessary to protect the employer’s legitimate interests in enforcement, (2) whether it would cause undue hardship to the employee, and (3) whether it would be injurious to the public.
See Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. More, 183 N.J. 36 (2005).
Case law · 2005-04-05
H.2 Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. MoreMore reduces a physician covenant's geographic reach to protect the public rather than voiding it.
We are satisfied that if the covenant were limited to a distance less than thirteen miles so that Somerset was not within the restricted area, the covenant would not have the same adverse impact on the public that it presently has.
See Community Hospital Group, Inc. v. More, 183 N.J. 36 (2005).
Case law · 2005-04-05
H.3 Pierson v. Medical Health Centers, P.A.Pierson directs the trial court to test a physician covenant for legitimate interest, undue hardship, and public interest.
Rather, the trial court must determine whether the restrictive covenant protects the legitimate interests of the employer, imposes no undue hardship on the employee, and is not adverse to the public interest.
See Pierson v. Medical Health Centers, P.A., 183 N.J. 65 (2005).
Which New Jersey professions have special non-compete limits?
Psychologists are the clearest example. A New Jersey regulation bars a licensed psychologist from entering a business agreement that restricts a client's ability to keep seeing the therapist of choice, and Comprehensive Psychology System, P.C. v. Prince treated that rule as controlling.
The Board of Psychological Examiners rule, N.J.A.C. 13:42-10.16, prohibits a licensee from entering any business agreement that interferes with or restricts a client's access to the therapist of choice . In Prince, the Appellate Division read that rule as a restriction on psychologist covenants and emphasized that the uniquely personal patient-psychologist relationship forbids restraints that interfere with ongoing treatment . The court explained the rule shifts the focus from the psychologist's rights to the patient's rights .
Attorneys are the other clear example, and here the limit is stricter than ordinary reasonableness. RPC 5.6 prohibits a lawyer from making a partnership or employment agreement that restricts the right to practice law after the relationship ends, apart from retirement benefits . In Jacob v. Norris, McLaughlin & Marcus, the New Jersey Supreme Court held that this rule reaches not only outright bans but also indirect financial-disincentive provisions — clauses that strip compensation from a departing lawyer who keeps serving firm clients — because they violate the language and spirit of RPC 5.6 . Such a provision is unenforceable as against public policy .
The analysis does not soften for in-house counsel. The Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics concluded in Opinion 708 that corporate and in-house counsel practicing in New Jersey must follow the Rules of Professional Conduct, including RPC 5.6, whether or not they are admitted in the State . An employer therefore cannot bind its in-house lawyers with a covenant that RPC 5.6 would forbid for outside counsel.
Do not analyze a psychologist's covenant under ordinary reasonableness alone. N.J.A.C. 13:42-10.16 can bar enforcement where the covenant would interfere with a client's access to the therapist of choice, regardless of how reasonable the time and territory look.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
I.1 N.J.A.C. 13:42-10.16N.J.A.C. 13:42-10.16 bars a psychologist from any business agreement that restricts a client's ability to keep seeing the therapist of choice.
A licensee shall not enter into any business agreement that interferes with or restricts the ability of a client to see or continue to see his or her therapist of choice.
See N.J.A.C. 13:42-10.16.
Case law · 2005-02-07
I.2 Comprehensive Psychology System, P.C. v. PrincePrince reads the psychologist regulation as shifting the focus from the psychologist's rights to the patient's rights.
We are satisfied that the new regulation merely articulates the same restriction in language that shifts the focus of concern from the rights of the psychologist to the rights of the patient.
See Comprehensive Psychology Sys., P.C. v. Prince, 375 N.J. Super. 273 (App. Div. 2005).
Case law · 2005-02-07
I.3 Comprehensive Psychology System, P.C. v. PrincePrince holds the patient-psychologist relationship forbids restraints that interfere with ongoing treatment.
We also are persuaded that, apart from the existence of the regulations, the nature of the practice of psychology and the uniquely personal patient-psychologist relationship forbid any restrictions which might interfere with an ongoing course of treatment.
See Comprehensive Psychology Sys., P.C. v. Prince, 375 N.J. Super. 273 (App. Div. 2005).
Primary law
I.4 N.J. Ct. R., RPC 5.6PDFRPC 5.6 bars a lawyer from a partnership or employment agreement that restricts the right to practice after the relationship ends, except for retirement benefits.
A lawyer shall not participate in offering or making: (a) a partnership or employment agreement that restricts the rights of a lawyer to practice after termination of the relationship, except an agreement concerning benefits upon retirement; or (b) an agreement in which a restriction on the lawyer's right to practice is part of the settlement of a controversy between private parties.
See N.J. Ct. R., RPC 5.6.
Case law · 1992-05-28
I.5 Jacob v. Norris, McLaughlin & MarcusJacob holds that indirect financial-disincentive provisions, not just outright bans, violate RPC 5.6.
We believe that indirect restrictions on the practice of law, such as the financial disincentives at issue in this case, likewise violate both the language and the spirit of RPC 5.6.
See Jacob v. Norris, McLaughlin & Marcus, 128 N.J. 10 (1992).
Case law · 1992-05-28
I.6 Jacob v. Norris, McLaughlin & MarcusJacob holds an attorney competitive-departure provision that restricts the practice of law is unenforceable as against public policy.
We conclude that the Agreement's competitive departure provision restricts the practice of law in contravention of RPC 5.6 and is therefore unenforceable as against public policy.
See Jacob v. Norris, McLaughlin & Marcus, 128 N.J. 10 (1992).
Agency guidance · 2006-07-24
I.7 ACPE Opinion 708PDFOpinion 708 confirms in-house and corporate counsel in New Jersey must follow the Rules of Professional Conduct, including RPC 5.6, whether or not admitted in the State.
Therefore, it is our opinion that in-house or corporate counsel in New Jersey must abide by the Rules of Professional Conduct, regardless of whether they are members of the bar of our State.
See N.J. Advisory Comm. on Prof'l Ethics, Op. 708 (2006).
Can confidentiality and non-disparagement clauses replace a New Jersey non-compete?
Partly, but watch the discrimination-law trap. Trade-secret and confidentiality protection is available under the New Jersey Trade Secrets Act, yet a 2019 amendment to the Law Against Discrimination makes a clause unenforceable when it conceals the details of a discrimination, retaliation, or harassment claim.
The New Jersey Trade Secrets Act gives employers a statutory remedy for misappropriation, which is often a better fit than a non-compete when the real concern is protecting confidential information . But confidentiality and non-disparagement language has a New Jersey-specific limit: N.J.S.A. 10:5-12.8(a) makes any provision whose purpose or effect is to conceal the details of a discrimination, retaliation, or harassment claim unenforceable . The New Jersey Supreme Court applied that rule in Savage v. Township of Neptune, holding a non-disparagement clause unenforceable and explaining that the label on the clause does not control .
Importantly, the same statute expressly preserves traditional non-competes and proprietary-information agreements, so the discrimination-concealment rule does not bar an ordinary non-compete . Trying to enforce a barred concealment provision also carries a fee-shifting penalty .
Do not draft a confidentiality or non-disparagement clause that would conceal the details of a discrimination, retaliation, or harassment claim. New Jersey makes such a provision unenforceable and exposes the party trying to enforce it to the employee's attorney fees and costs.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
J.1 New Jersey Trade Secrets ActPDFThe New Jersey Trade Secrets Act provides a statutory trade-secret regime that operates as an alternative to a non-compete.
This act shall be known and may be cited as the "New Jersey Trade Secrets Act."
See New Jersey Trade Secrets Act, N.J.S.A. 56:15-1.
Primary law
J.2 N.J.S.A. 10:5-12.8 (P.L.2019, c.39)PDFThe 2019 LAD amendment makes a contract or settlement provision unenforceable when its purpose or effect is to conceal the details of a discrimination, retaliation, or harassment claim.
A provision in any employment contract or settlement agreement which has the purpose or effect of concealing the details relating to a claim of discrimination, retaliation, or harassment (hereinafter referred to as a “non-disclosure provision”) shall be deemed against public policy and unenforceable against a current or former employee (hereinafter referred to as an “employee”) who is a party to the contract or settlement.
See N.J.S.A. 10:5-12.8(a).
Primary law
J.5 N.J.S.A. 10:5-12.8 (P.L.2019, c.39)PDFThe same LAD section expressly preserves agreements not to compete and not to disclose proprietary information.
this section shall not be construed to prohibit an employer from requiring an employee to sign an agreement: (1) in which the employee agrees not to enter into competition with the employer during or after employment;
See N.J.S.A. 10:5-12.8(c).
Primary law
J.6 N.J.S.A. 10:5-12.9 (P.L.2019, c.39)PDFA party that enforces or attempts to enforce a barred concealment provision is liable for the employee's attorney fees and costs.
A person who enforces or attempts to enforce a provision deemed against public policy and unenforceable pursuant to P.L.2019, c.39 (C.10:5-12.7 et seq.) shall be liable for the employee’s reasonable attorney fees and costs.
See N.J.S.A. 10:5-12.9.
Case law · 2024-05-07
J.3 Savage v. Township of NeptuneSavage holds a non-disparagement clause unenforceable as against public policy under the LAD concealment rule.
The non-disparagement clause in the agreement is against public policy and cannot be enforced.
See Savage v. Township of Neptune, 257 N.J. 204 (2024).
Case law · 2024-05-07
J.4 Savage v. Township of NeptuneSavage explains that the label on a clause does not control whether the LAD concealment rule applies.
As a result, labels like "non-disclosure," which is in the text, or "non-disparagement," which is not, do not control the meaning of section 12.8.
See Savage v. Township of Neptune, 257 N.J. 204 (2024).
What pending New Jersey non-compete legislation should employers watch?
None is law yet. Bills S1407 and A1829, introduced in the 2026 session, would prohibit non-compete clauses for most workers, void no-poach agreements, and leave only a narrow senior-executive carve-out that itself requires full pay during the restricted period.
As introduced, S1407 would bar an employer from seeking, requiring, demanding, or accepting a non-compete clause from a worker who is not a senior executive . Both bills define a senior executive as a worker in a policy-making position paid at least the statutory compensation threshold — the only category of worker for whom a prospective covenant could survive . Both bills also declare no-poach agreements contrary to public policy and void .
Even for that narrow carve-out, a surviving senior-executive covenant would have to pay the worker an amount equal to 100 percent of pay during the restricted period — a garden-leave condition . The bills also leave the ordinary commercial exception intact: a non-compete entered as part of a bona-fide sale of a business would remain permissible .
These bills follow earlier versions (A5708 and S4385) that advanced in the prior session without enactment. As of this review they remain pending, not enacted, so common-law Solari/Whitmyer analysis still governs.
Treat S1407 and A1829 as monitoring items, not present New Jersey law. Recheck the Legislature's bill status before changing forms or telling workers that New Jersey has banned non-competes, because the enacted baseline is still common-law reasonableness.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
K.1 New Jersey Senate Bill No. 1407 (2026)PDFS1407, as introduced, would prohibit an employer from obtaining a non-compete clause from a worker who is not a senior executive.
With respect to a worker who is not a senior executive, an employer shall not: seek, require, demand, or accept a non-compete clause from the worker after the effective date of this act;
See S1407, 222nd Leg. (N.J. 2026).
Primary law
K.2 New Jersey Senate Bill No. 1407 (2026)PDFS1407 would declare no-poach agreements contrary to public policy and void.
No-poach agreements are hereby declared to be contrary to public policy and any no-poach agreement shall be void.
See S1407, 222nd Leg. (N.J. 2026).
Primary law
K.3 New Jersey Assembly Bill No. 1829 (2026)PDFA1829 defines the narrow senior-executive category by a policy-making role and a compensation threshold.
“Senior executive” means a worker who is in a policy-making position with an employer and is paid total compensation of not less than $151,164 during the year immediately preceding the end of employment, or not less than $151,164 when annualized if the worker was employed during only part of the preceding year.
See A1829, 222nd Leg. (N.J. 2026).
Primary law
K.4 New Jersey Senate Bill No. 1407 (2026)PDFS1407 would require a surviving senior-executive covenant to pay the worker 100 percent of pay during the restricted period.
The non-compete clause provides that during any period after the employment relationship ends in which the worker is prevented from engaging in work or taking employment because of restrictions imposed by the non-compete clause, the employer, unless the worker is terminated for misconduct or there is a breach by the worker, shall pay the worker an amount equal to 100 percent of the pay to which the worker would be entitled for the work during that period; and make any benefit contributions needed to maintain the fringe benefits to which the worker would be entitled during that period.
See S1407, 222nd Leg. (N.J. 2026).
Primary law
K.5 New Jersey Senate Bill No. 1407 (2026)PDFS1407 would exempt a non-compete entered as part of a bona-fide sale of a business from the ban.
To a non-compete clause that is entered into by an employer pursuant to a bona fide sale of a business entity, of the employer's ownership interest in a business entity, or of all or substantially all of a business entity's operating assets;
See S1407, 222nd Leg. (N.J. 2026).
Did the FTC's federal non-compete rule change New Jersey non-compete law?
No. The FTC's 2024 nationwide Non-Compete Rule was set aside by a federal court before it took effect, so New Jersey non-competes remain governed by state common law .
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 leaves New Jersey's Solari/Whitmyer reasonableness analysis in control, and it makes the state-level reform bills, rather than any federal rule, the live question for New Jersey employers.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2024-08-20
L.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
L.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).