Are employee non-compete agreements enforceable in Puerto Rico?
Sometimes. Puerto Rico has no statute that governs non-competes. As a civil-law jurisdiction, it enforces post-employment covenants only when they satisfy the strict three-part reasonableness test the Puerto Rico Supreme Court announced in Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega III .
Puerto Rico is not a per se ban jurisdiction like California or North Dakota, and it is not a statutory-reasonableness jurisdiction either. Enforceability rests on freedom of contract under the Puerto Rico Civil Code, as constrained by case law. Arthur Young is the controlling decision, and it frames every non-compete question that follows.
The threshold framing matters for in-house counsel. Because the limits are judge-made rather than statutory, a covenant that would survive in a blue-pencil state can be void here, and the analysis turns on a single line of Supreme Court and federal authority rather than on a code section.
In plain English, the covenant must protect a legitimate employer interest, must not impose too onerous a burden on the employee, and must not unduly harm the public. The sections below break those principles into the operating requirements Puerto Rico courts actually apply.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 1994-05-24
A.1 Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega IIIPDFArthur Young establishes Puerto Rico's three-part reasonableness test: a non-compete must protect a legitimate employer interest, must not impose too onerous a burden on the employee, and must not unduly harm the public.
Para ser razonable, un acuerdo de no competir debe reunir los siguientes requisitos: (1) debe ser necesario para proteger un interés legítimo del patrono, (2) no debe imponer al empleado una carga demasiado onerosa, (3) y no debe afectar demasiado al público.
See Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega III, 136 D.P.R. 157 (1994).
What requirements must a Puerto Rico non-compete satisfy?
A federal court applying Puerto Rico law restated Arthur Young as a five-element checklist: a legitimate employer interest, a scope that fits that interest and does not exceed twelve months, consideration beyond mere job tenure, a valid underlying contract, and a writing .
The duration ceiling is unusually concrete. Arthur Young holds that a non-competition term must not exceed twelve months, and that any additional time is excessive and unnecessary to protect the employer . That is a bright-line public-policy ceiling, not a starting point for negotiation, so a two-year covenant is exposed even if the rest of the terms are modest.
Two formal requirements round out the test. The covenant must protect a real employer interest and be limited to activities similar to the employee's work, and it must be in writing . An oral understanding or a covenant aimed at ordinary competition rather than a protectable interest does not qualify.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 1999-03-19
B.1 Smarte Carte, Inc. v. ColónSmarte Carte restates the Arthur Young elements of a valid Puerto Rico non-compete, including that the scope not exceed twelve months and that consideration be other than mere job tenure.
The elements of a valid non-competition agreement in Puerto Rico as set forth in Arthur Young are: (1.) The employer must have a legitimate interest in the agreement; (2.)the scope of the prohibition must fit the employer's interest but not exceed twelve months; (3.) The employer shall offer a consideration in exchange for the employee signing the non-competition covenant other than mere job tenure; (4.) Non-competition agreements must be valid contracts; (5.) Non-competition covenants must be in writing.
See Smarte Carte, Inc. v. Colón, 47 F. Supp. 2d 183 (D.P.R. 1999).
Case law · 1994-05-24
B.2 Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega IIIPDFArthur Young sets a twelve-month ceiling on the duration of a non-competition term and treats any longer period as excessive and unnecessary to protect the employer.
El término de no competencia no debe exceder de doce meses, entendiéndose que cualquier tiempo adicional es excesivo e innecesario para proteger adecuadamente al patrono.
See Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega III, 136 D.P.R. 157 (1994).
Case law · 1994-05-24
B.3 Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega IIIPDFArthur Young requires that a non-competition agreement be set out in writing.
Finalmente, es indispensable que los pactos de no competencia consten por escrito.
See Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega III, 136 D.P.R. 157 (1994).
Will Puerto Rico courts narrow an overbroad non-compete?
No. Arthur Young directs courts to declare an overbroad covenant null rather than modify the parties' agreement to make it reasonable .
Puerto Rico rejects the blue-pencil and partial-enforcement approaches that many states allow. The Supreme Court reaffirmed in PACIV, Inc. v. Pérez Rivera that once any one of the requirements is breached, the agreement is null in its entirety . There is no judicial salvage of a covenant that reaches too far.
Federal courts apply the same rule. In TLS Management & Marketing Services, LLC v. Rodríguez-Toledo, the First Circuit refused to narrow overbroad agreements to a reasonable scope under Puerto Rico law , echoing the instruction in Smarte Carte that courts may not apply a common-law reasonableness rule to modify the provision .
“We decline to rewrite the nondisclosure agreements by narrowing their scope to be reasonable.”
Do not rely on a court to rescue an aggressive covenant. In Puerto Rico, a single overbroad term voids the entire non-compete, so drafting to the twelve-month ceiling and to a genuine protectable interest is the only protection.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 1994-05-24
C.1 Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega IIIPDFArthur Young directs courts to declare null any non-compete that fails the requirements, rather than modifying the parties' agreement to make it reasonable.
Por tal razón, en vez de modificar la voluntad de las partes para ajustarla a normas razonables, se declarará nulo todo pacto de no competir que no cumpla con las anteriores condiciones.
See Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega III, 136 D.P.R. 157 (1994).
Case law · 2003-05-19
C.2 PACIV, Inc. v. Pérez RiveraPACIV holds that once any one of the established requirements is breached, the non-competition agreement is null in its entirety.
Una vez se incumple con alguno de los requisitos establecidos en nuestra jurisprudencia, el acuerdo es nulo en su totalidad.
See PACIV, Inc. v. Pérez Rivera, 159 D.P.R. 523 (2003).
Case law · 2020-07-21
C.3 TLS Management & Marketing Services, LLC v. Rodríguez-ToledoTLS Management shows the First Circuit declining to rewrite overbroad agreements to a reasonable scope under Puerto Rico law.
We decline to rewrite the nondisclosure agreements by narrowing their scope to be reasonable.
See TLS Mgmt. & Mktg. Servs., LLC v. Rodríguez-Toledo, 966 F.3d 46 (1st Cir. 2020).
Case law · 1999-03-19
C.4 Smarte Carte, Inc. v. ColónSmarte Carte explains that Puerto Rico's invalidation rule is strictly enforced and courts may not apply a common-law reasonableness rule to modify the provision.
This invalidation is strictly enforced, and courts are instructed not to apply the common law rule of reasonableness in order to modify the provision.
See Smarte Carte, Inc. v. Colón, 47 F. Supp. 2d 183 (D.P.R. 1999).
What consideration supports a Puerto Rico non-compete?
Real consideration is required, and continued employment alone does not count. Arthur Young holds that mere continued employment will not be accepted as the consideration for a non-compete .
Timing is the practical trap. In Cherena v. Coors Brewing Co., the federal court held that consideration must be given when the agreement is signed, not at the moment of discharge . A covenant imposed on an existing employee therefore likely needs new and distinct consideration, for example a promotion or a bonus, beyond simply keeping the job, although Puerto Rico courts have not spelled out what qualifies.
The consideration rule is specific to non-competes. In Soto v. State Industrial Products, Inc., the First Circuit declined to extend Arthur Young's special consideration requirement to an arbitration agreement , a reminder that the Arthur Young line is a targeted restrictive-covenant doctrine rather than a general contract rule.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 1994-05-24
D.1 Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega IIIPDFArthur Young holds that mere continued employment will not be accepted as the consideration for a non-competition agreement.
Sin embargo, no se admitirá como causa del acuerdo de no competencia la mera permanencia en el empleo.
See Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega III, 136 D.P.R. 157 (1994).
Case law · 1998-08-07
D.2 Cherena v. Coors Brewing Co.Cherena holds that consideration for a Puerto Rico non-compete must be given when the agreement is entered into, not at the moment of discharge.
Such a consideration in this jurisdiction must be forthcoming at the moment the agreement was entered into and not at the moment of discharge from employment.
See Cherena v. Coors Brewing Co., 20 F. Supp. 2d 282 (D.P.R. 1998).
Case law · 2011-04-15
D.3 Soto v. State Industrial Products, Inc.Soto declines to expand Arthur Young's special non-compete consideration rule to hold that continued employment cannot constitute valid consideration for an arbitration agreement.
For these reasons, we reject Soto's invitation to expand the scope of Arthur Young to hold that continued employment cannot constitute valid consideration for an arbitration agreement.
See Soto v. State Indus. Prods., Inc., 642 F.3d 67 (1st Cir. 2011).
How does Puerto Rico treat NDAs, non-solicits, and confidentiality clauses?
A confidentiality or non-solicitation clause that operates like a disguised non-compete is judged by the same Arthur Young standard. In TLS Management, an overbroad nondisclosure agreement was unenforceable because it functioned as a de facto non-compete .
The drafting lesson is precision. A confidentiality clause that effectively bars the employee from working in the field will be treated as a non-compete and subjected to the twelve-month ceiling and the reasonableness requirements, rather than escaping review because it is labeled an NDA.
A genuinely separate covenant can survive, however, even when the non-compete fails. In Cherena, the court voided the non-compete but enforced the distinct non-disclosure provisions in the same agreement . A severability clause does not save the non-compete itself, but it can preserve an independent and reasonable NDA.
Draft confidentiality and non-solicitation covenants as standalone, narrowly tailored restraints. If an NDA sweeps so broadly that it stops the employee from competing, a Puerto Rico court will analyze it as a non-compete and may void it .
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2020-07-21
E.1 TLS Management & Marketing Services, LLC v. Rodríguez-ToledoTLS Management treats an overbroad nondisclosure agreement as a de facto non-compete and declines to rewrite it to a reasonable scope.
We decline to rewrite the nondisclosure agreements by narrowing their scope to be reasonable.
See TLS Mgmt. & Mktg. Servs., LLC v. Rodríguez-Toledo, 966 F.3d 46 (1st Cir. 2020).
Case law · 1998-08-07
E.2 Cherena v. Coors Brewing Co.Cherena voids the non-compete but holds the agreement's separate non-disclosure provisions valid and enforceable.
Thus, although the non-competition clause is null and void, the rest of the provisions contained in the Agreement, including the non-disclosure provisions, are valid and enforceable.
See Cherena v. Coors Brewing Co., 20 F. Supp. 2d 282 (D.P.R. 1998).
How specific must the geographic and customer scope be?
A covenant does not need both a geographic limit and a customer limit; one of them suffices. In Reyes Ramis CPA Group, P.S.C. v. Serra Torres, the Supreme Court held that it is not correct to require every non-compete to contain both a territorial and a client restriction .
This is a meaningful clarification of Arthur Young. The Court explained that it never made a combined geographic-and-client limitation a constitutive requirement of a valid covenant . A covenant that is tightly limited to the customers an employee actually served can be reasonable even without a geographic radius, and vice versa.
Reyes Ramis also confirms that the strict Arthur Young requirements are an employment-law doctrine. The Court held that a non-compete tied to a stock-redemption arrangement among owners did not have to conform fully to the strict conditions established in Arthur Young . Covenants ancillary to the sale of a business or an ownership exit are analyzed more flexibly than employer-employee restraints.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2016-06-17
F.1 Reyes Ramis CPA Group, P.S.C. v. Serra TorresReyes Ramis holds that a non-compete need not contain both a territorial and a client restriction; one of them suffices.
Por lo tanto, no es correcto afirmar que todo contrato de no competencia debe contener una restricción territorial y de clientela, basta con una de ellas.
See Reyes Ramis CPA Group, P.S.C. v. Serra Torres, 194 D.P.R. ___ (2016).
Case law · 2016-06-17
F.2 Reyes Ramis CPA Group, P.S.C. v. Serra TorresReyes Ramis clarifies that the Court did not make a combined geographic-and-client limitation a constitutive requirement of a valid non-compete.
No obstante, es importante destacar que esta Curia no estableció como requisito constitutivo de un acuerdo de no competencia el que se limite geográficamente las restricciones impuestas y los clientes que estarán comprendidos.
See Reyes Ramis CPA Group, P.S.C. v. Serra Torres, 194 D.P.R. ___ (2016).
Case law · 2016-06-17
F.3 Reyes Ramis CPA Group, P.S.C. v. Serra TorresReyes Ramis holds that a non-compete tied to a stock-redemption arrangement did not have to conform fully to the strict Arthur Young conditions that govern employer-employee covenants.
Por lo tanto, contrario a la conclusión a la que llegaron los foros inferiores, la cláusula de no competencia bajo análisis no tenía que ajustarse íntegramente a las estrictas condiciones establecidas en Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega III , supra.
See Reyes Ramis CPA Group, P.S.C. v. Serra Torres, 194 D.P.R. ___ (2016).
Does the restricted period toll or extend if the employee breaches?
Puerto Rico primary law is silent. No Puerto Rico Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, federal district, or First Circuit decision squarely approves or rejects either a contractual extension-on-breach clause or a court-ordered equitable extension of a Puerto Rico non-compete. The safest assumption is that a court will hold the employer to the twelve-month ceiling .
Because there is no Puerto Rico authority on point, the question is genuinely open, and an employer should not assume a court will pause the clock while litigation runs. The nearest guidance comes from outside Puerto Rico. In EMC Corp. v. Arturi, the First Circuit, applying Massachusetts law, refused to equitably extend a covenant after its term had expired and observed that the employer could have contracted for tolling instead .
A tolling clause carries a Puerto Rico-specific risk. EMC v. Arturi is Massachusetts law, not Puerto Rico law, and a contractual extension that pushes actual enforcement past Arthur Young's twelve-month ceiling could itself render the covenant void under Puerto Rico's bright-line rule. Treat tolling as an unsettled question and weigh a shorter base term against an extension mechanism.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2011-08-26
G.2 EMC Corp. v. ArturiEMC v. Arturi, applying Massachusetts law, declines to equitably extend a non-compete after its term expired and notes the employer could have contracted for tolling during litigation. It is persuasive authority only, not Puerto Rico law.
Being forewarned, EMC could have contracted, as the district judge noted, for tolling the term of the restriction during litigation, or for a period of restriction to commence upon preliminary finding of breach.
See EMC Corp. v. Arturi, 655 F.3d 75 (1st Cir. 2011).
Case law · 1994-05-24
G.1 Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega IIIPDFArthur Young's twelve-month ceiling treats any additional time as excessive, which is why a tolling clause that extends enforcement past twelve months is risky in Puerto Rico.
El término de no competencia no debe exceder de doce meses, entendiéndose que cualquier tiempo adicional es excesivo e innecesario para proteger adecuadamente al patrono.
See Arthur Young & Co. v. Vega III, 136 D.P.R. 157 (1994).
What recent developments should employers monitor?
As of June 2, 2026, the governing framework remains the Arthur Young line of cases. The Supreme Court last restated and refined that test in Reyes Ramis in 2016, and no Puerto Rico statute has displaced it .
Two background developments matter for monitoring but do not change the Puerto Rico rule. Puerto Rico's labor reform legislation did not codify a non-compete standard, so the judge-made Arthur Young test still controls. And the federal FTC Non-Compete Rule was challenged and, as of this review, has been treated as unenforceable, so it is not an operative Puerto Rico rule either.
The practical takeaway is stability with a narrow margin. Because the framework is judicial, the most reliable signal of change would be a new Supreme Court decision rather than a bill, and Reyes Ramis remains the most recent word: the strict requirements apply to employer-employee covenants, with a single territorial or customer limit sufficing .
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2016-06-17
H.1 Reyes Ramis CPA Group, P.S.C. v. Serra TorresReyes Ramis is the most recent Puerto Rico Supreme Court restatement of the Arthur Young test and remains the governing framework as of 2026.
Por lo tanto, no es correcto afirmar que todo contrato de no competencia debe contener una restricción territorial y de clientela, basta con una de ellas.
See Reyes Ramis CPA Group, P.S.C. v. Serra Torres, 194 D.P.R. ___ (2016).