Are employee non-compete agreements enforceable in Texas?
Yes, within statutory limits. Texas is a reasonableness state: a non-compete is enforceable when it is ancillary to or part of an otherwise enforceable agreement and is limited as to time, geographic area, and scope of activity in a way that is reasonable and no broader than necessary to protect the employer's goodwill or other business interest .
Unlike states that void most worker non-competes outright, Texas enforces them when they satisfy a single statute, the Covenants Not to Compete Act, Tex. Bus. & Com. Code §§ 15.50–15.52. Section 15.50(a) states the core test, combining an ancillary agreement requirement with a reasonableness requirement.
Both halves of that sentence carry weight. A covenant that is reasonable in its limits still fails if it is not tied to an otherwise enforceable agreement, and a covenant that is properly ancillary still fails to the extent its limits are unreasonable. The sections that follow walk through how Texas courts apply each requirement.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
A.1 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(a) supports that a non-compete is enforceable if it is ancillary to or part of an otherwise enforceable agreement and contains reasonable limits as to time, geographic area, and scope of activity that are no greater than necessary to protect the promisee's goodwill or business interest.
a covenant not to compete is enforceable if it is ancillary to or part of an otherwise enforceable agreement at the time the agreement is made to the extent that it contains limitations as to time, geographical area, and scope of activity to be restrained that are reasonable and do not impose a greater restraint than is necessary to protect the goodwill or other business interest of the promisee.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(a).
What framework governs Texas non-competes, and does it displace the common law?
The Covenants Not to Compete Act governs, and it is exclusive. The criteria in §§ 15.50 and 15.501 and the procedures and remedies in § 15.51 preempt other law, including the common law, so a Texas non-compete dispute is decided under the statute rather than under judge-made rules .
Texas once analyzed non-competes under common-law reasonableness doctrine. The Act replaced that body of law with a statutory test and made the replacement explicit in § 15.52.
The preemption clause is more than housekeeping. It is the reason a Texas court will not graft a common-law gloss onto the statutory test, and it sits at the center of the unsettled attorney's-fee question discussed below. When you analyze a Texas covenant, start and end with the statute and the cases construing it.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
B.1 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.52Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.52 supports that the criteria of §§ 15.50 and 15.501 and the procedures and remedies of § 15.51 are exclusive and preempt other law, including common law.
The criteria for enforceability of a covenant not to compete provided by Sections 15.50 and 15.501 and the procedures and remedies in an action to enforce a covenant not to compete provided by Section 15.51 are exclusive and preempt other law, including common law.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.52.
What consideration must support a Texas non-compete?
Consideration that is reasonably related to a business interest the Act protects. Since Marsh USA Inc. v. Cook, the consideration supporting the covenant need only be reasonably related to an interest worthy of protection, such as goodwill, and it need not itself give rise to the employer's interest . The older, stricter framing in Light v. Centel has been relaxed .
The consideration question has a long doctrinal history in Texas. In Light v. Centel Cellular Co. of Texas, the Texas Supreme Court read the ancillary requirement strictly and held that the covenant before it was not tied to the parties' otherwise enforceable agreement .
The court relaxed that approach in Marsh USA Inc. v. Cook, holding that consideration in the form of stock options was reasonably related to the company's interest in protecting its goodwill, which the Act recognizes as worthy of protection .
The practical upshot from these cases is that consideration tied to a protectable interest, such as stock options connected to goodwill or promised confidential information that is actually provided, can support a Texas covenant. What is risky is relying on nothing more than continued at-will employment, because a promise the employer can revoke at any moment raises the illusory-promise problem the next question addresses.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2011-12-16
C.1 Marsh USA Inc. v. CookMarsh USA v. Cook supports that the consideration for a Texas non-compete need only be reasonably related to a business interest the Act protects, such as goodwill, with stock options qualifying.
We hold that, under the terms of the Covenants Not to Compete Act (Act), the consideration for the noncompete agreement (stock options) is reasonably related to the company's interest in protecting its goodwill, a business interest the Act recognizes as worthy of protection.
See Marsh USA Inc. v. Cook, 354 S.W.3d 764 (Tex. 2011).
Case law · 1994-06-02
C.2 Light v. Centel Cellular Co. of TexasLight v. Centel supports the strict early reading of the ancillary requirement, holding the covenant there was not ancillary to the parties' otherwise enforceable agreement; this framing was later relaxed by Marsh.
Although Light and United did have an otherwise enforceable agreement between them, the covenant was not ancillary to or a part of that otherwise enforceable agreement.
See Light v. Centel Cellular Co. of Tex., 883 S.W.2d 642 (Tex. 1994).
When does an at-will employee's non-compete become enforceable?
When the employer performs its side of the bargain. An at-will covenant that looks illusory at signing becomes enforceable once the employer actually delivers the promised consideration, such as confidential information . And where the job by its nature requires confidential information, the employer's promise to provide it can be implied .
The illusory-promise problem arises because an at-will employer can fire the employee at any moment, so a promise tied to continued employment may appear unenforceable when made. In Alex Sheshunoff Management Services, L.P. v. Johnson, the Texas Supreme Court resolved this by focusing on performance rather than the moment of signing .
The court went further in Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding, holding that when the nature of the work necessarily requires the employer to supply confidential information, a promise to provide it can be implied even if the contract does not spell it out .
For drafting, the lesson is to make the consideration concrete and to actually deliver it. An agreement that expressly promises access to confidential information, training, or equity, and that the employer honors, stands on far firmer ground than one resting on continued employment alone.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2006-10-20
D.1 Alex Sheshunoff Management Services, L.P. v. JohnsonSheshunoff supports that an at-will covenant that is illusory at signing becomes enforceable once the employer performs by providing the promised consideration, creating a binding unilateral contract.
The fact that the employer was not bound to perform because he could have fired the employee is irrelevant; if he has performed, he has accepted the employee's offer and created a binding unilateral contract.
See Alex Sheshunoff Mgmt. Servs., L.P. v. Johnson, 209 S.W.3d 644 (Tex. 2006).
Case law · 2009-04-17
D.2 Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. FieldingMann Frankfort supports that where the nature of the work requires confidential information, the employer's promise to provide it can be implied, supplying the consideration that makes the covenant enforceable.
When the nature of the work the employee is hired to perform requires confidential information to be provided for the work to be performed by the employee, the employer impliedly promises confidential information will be provided.
See Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding, 289 S.W.3d 844 (Tex. 2009).
What time, geography, and scope limits are reasonable in Texas?
Limits tailored to the employer's actual protectable interest, no broader than necessary. The Act requires reasonable limits on time, geographic area, and scope of activity, and a restraint greater than needed to protect goodwill or another business interest is unreasonable . There are no fixed numeric ceilings outside the health-care provisions; reasonableness is fact-specific.
Texas does not publish bright-line maximums for ordinary covenants. Instead, § 15.50(a) ties every limit back to the employer's protectable interest, and § 15.51 lets a court cut anything that exceeds it .
Texas publishes no numeric ceiling for ordinary covenants, so reasonableness is assessed case by case against the employer's actual protectable interest. As a practical matter, a restraint keyed to where the employee actually worked or where the employer competes, and a scope tied to the specific customers the employee served or the specific line of business, is easier to defend than a blanket bar on working anywhere in the industry, because the Act requires the restraint to be no greater than necessary . Texas courts generally analyze customer non-solicitation clauses under the same Act and the same reasonableness test rather than a separate, looser standard .
Do not assume a covenant that bars an employee from an entire industry across a wide region will be enforced. The Act requires the restraint to be no greater than necessary to protect a specific business interest, and an overbroad covenant is exposed to reformation down to the minimum a court finds reasonable .
Sources for this answer
Primary law
E.1 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(a) supports that a covenant's time, geographic, and scope limits must be reasonable and no greater than necessary to protect the promisee's goodwill or other business interest.
a covenant not to compete is enforceable if it is ancillary to or part of an otherwise enforceable agreement at the time the agreement is made to the extent that it contains limitations as to time, geographical area, and scope of activity to be restrained that are reasonable and do not impose a greater restraint than is necessary to protect the goodwill or other business interest of the promisee.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(a).
Will a Texas court reform an overbroad non-compete instead of voiding it?
Yes, reformation is mandatory. If a covenant is ancillary to an otherwise enforceable agreement but its limits are unreasonable, the court shall reform it to the minimum reasonable restraint and enforce it as reformed . A federal court applying Texas law has said reformation should be considered even at the preliminary-injunction stage .
Texas is a true reformation state, and the statute uses mandatory language. Under § 15.51(c), a court faced with an overbroad-but-ancillary covenant does not simply void it; it rewrites the limits and enforces the narrowed version .
On timing, in a Fifth Circuit opinion that was later withdrawn as moot after the parties settled, Calhoun v. Jack Doheny Cos. indicated that a district court should consider reformation as part of deciding a preliminary-injunction motion, rather than deferring it to a later stage . Because the opinion was withdrawn, treat it as persuasive context rather than binding precedent.
Because reformation is the default, the strategic calculus in Texas differs from no-reformation states. An overbroad Texas covenant is usually not a total loss for the employer; it is more often trimmed. But, as the next question explains, overbreadth carries its own price in the remedies the employer can recover.
Do not treat reformation as a free safety net for an intentionally overbroad covenant. Section 15.51(c) bars damages for any breach occurring before reformation and limits the employer to injunctive relief, and the same subsection separately lets an employer that knowingly over-enforced an overbroad covenant be charged with the employee's defense fees, as the attorney's-fee question explains.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
F.1 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(c) supports that a court shall reform an overbroad but ancillary covenant to the minimum reasonable restraint and enforce it as reformed, may not award damages for a breach before reformation, and limits relief to injunctive relief.
the court shall reform the covenant to the extent necessary to cause the limitations contained in the covenant as to time, geographical area, and scope of activity to be restrained to be reasonable and to impose a restraint that is not greater than necessary to protect the goodwill or other business interest of the promisee and enforce the covenant as reformed, except that the court may not award the promisee damages for a breach of the covenant before its reformation and the relief granted to the promisee shall be limited to injunctive relief.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(c).
Case law · 2020-08-07
F.2 Calhoun v. Jack Doheny Companies, Inc.Calhoun supports that a court should consider reformation of an overbroad Texas covenant as part of deciding a preliminary-injunction motion. The Fifth Circuit later withdrew this opinion as moot after the parties settled, so it is persuasive rather than binding.
As we shall show, it should have considered reformation of the agreement in the process of deciding the preliminary injunction motion.
See Calhoun v. Jack Doheny Cos., 969 F.3d 232 (5th Cir. 2020) (later withdrawn as moot).
What remedies apply, and who bears the burden of proof?
Damages and injunctive relief, but with limits, and the burden depends on the contract's purpose. A court may award the employer damages, injunctive relief, or both , yet no damages are available for a breach before an overbroad covenant is reformed . In a personal-services contract, the employer bears the burden of proving the covenant meets the § 15.50 criteria .
Section 15.51 sets both the menu of remedies and the allocation of proof. The statute authorizes damages, injunctive relief, or both for breach of an enforceable covenant . The most consequential limit is the pre-reformation damages bar: if a covenant has to be reformed because it was overbroad, the employer cannot recover damages for breaches that happened before the reformation and is confined to injunctive relief .
The burden of proof then turns on what the agreement is mainly for. Under § 15.51(b), if the agreement's primary purpose is to obligate the worker to render personal services, the employer must prove the covenant satisfies § 15.50 .
That allocation matters because most employee covenants are ancillary to personal-services agreements, so the employer carries the burden. Where the agreement has a different primary purpose, such as a sale of a business, § 15.51(b) flips the burden: the promisor must establish that the covenant does not meet the statutory criteria .
Sources for this answer
Primary law
G.1 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(a) supports that a court may award the promisee damages, injunctive relief, or both for a breach of a covenant not to compete by the promisor.
a court may award the promisee under a covenant not to compete damages, injunctive relief, or both damages and injunctive relief for a breach by the promisor of the covenant.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(a).
Primary law
G.4 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(b) supports that when the agreement has a primary purpose other than personal services, the promisor bears the burden of establishing that the covenant does not meet the § 15.50 criteria.
If the agreement has a different primary purpose, the promisor has the burden of establishing that the covenant does not meet those criteria.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(b).
Primary law
G.2 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(c) supports that an employer may not recover damages for a breach occurring before an overbroad covenant is reformed and is limited to injunctive relief in that situation.
the court may not award the promisee damages for a breach of the covenant before its reformation and the relief granted to the promisee shall be limited to injunctive relief.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(c).
Primary law
G.3 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(b) supports that when the agreement's primary purpose is to obligate the worker to render personal services, the employer bears the burden of establishing the covenant meets the § 15.50 criteria.
If the primary purpose of the agreement to which the covenant is ancillary is to obligate the promisor to render personal services, for a term or at will, the promisee has the burden of establishing that the covenant meets the criteria specified by Section 15.50 of this code.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(b).
Can a party recover attorney's fees in a Texas non-compete dispute?
Partly, and only one way. The Act has no general prevailing-party fee rule, but § 15.51(c) lets a court award the employee defense costs and attorney's fees where the employer knew the covenant was overbroad and tried to over-enforce it . Whether the general contract-fee statute can supply fees for enforcing a covenant despite § 15.52's exclusivity is unresolved on the authorities here , and a parallel trade-secret claim has its own fee path .
The Act itself contains one express, one-directional fee rule. Under § 15.51(c), in a personal-services covenant case, if the employee proves the employer knew at signing that the covenant's limits were unreasonable and nonetheless sought to enforce it beyond what was necessary, the court may award the employee its defense costs and reasonable attorney's fees .
What the Act does not supply is a general prevailing-party fee award for the employer that wins enforcement. Because § 15.52 makes the Act's remedies exclusive , whether the general breach-of-contract fee statute, Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code ch. 38, can fill that gap is contested and not resolved by the authorities collected here, so an employer should not count on recovering its fees.
Employers often pair a non-compete claim with a trade-secret claim precisely because the Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act has its own fee-shifting rule. Under § 134A.005, a court may award reasonable attorney's fees to the prevailing party in defined circumstances, including willful and malicious misappropriation .
Do not promise an employer client that it will recover its attorney's fees by winning enforcement of a Texas non-compete. The Act's only express fee rule under § 15.51(c) runs to the employee, and whether chapter 38 supplies fees for enforcement despite § 15.52's exclusivity is unresolved, so employer fee recovery should be treated as uncertain and, where possible, anchored to a separate claim such as trade-secret misappropriation.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
H.1 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(c) supports that, in a personal-services covenant case, the court may award the promisor (the employee) its costs and reasonable attorney's fees where the employee proves the employer knew at execution the covenant was overbroad and nonetheless sought to enforce it beyond what was necessary.
the court may award the promisor the costs, including reasonable attorney's fees, actually and reasonably incurred by the promisor in defending the action to enforce the covenant.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(c).
Primary law
H.2 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.52Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.52 supports that the Act's criteria and remedies are exclusive and preempt other law, which is the source of the unresolved question whether general contract attorney's-fee statutes reach a non-compete claim.
The criteria for enforceability of a covenant not to compete provided by Sections 15.50 and 15.501 and the procedures and remedies in an action to enforce a covenant not to compete provided by Section 15.51 are exclusive and preempt other law, including common law.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.52.
Primary law
H.3 Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.005Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.005 supports that, under the Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act, a court may award reasonable attorney's fees to the prevailing party in defined circumstances, including willful and malicious misappropriation.
The court may award reasonable attorney's fees to the prevailing party if: (1) a claim of misappropriation is made in bad faith; (2) a motion to terminate an injunction is made or resisted in bad faith; or (3) willful and malicious misappropriation exists.
See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.005.
What special rules apply to Texas physician non-competes?
Several statutory conditions, plus a 2025 good-cause rule. A physician covenant is enforceable only if it meets § 15.50(b)'s conditions, including a buyout capped at the physician's total annual salary and wages . As amended by SB 1318, a physician covenant is void if the physician is involuntarily discharged without good cause .
Texas has regulated physician non-competes for decades through § 15.50(b), which layers specific requirements on top of the general test, including patient-list access, medical-record access, continuity-of-care protection, and a buyout option. The buyout cap is a defining feature: the covenant must let the physician buy out of the restraint for no more than the physician's total annual salary and wages at the time of termination .
Senate Bill 1318, effective September 1, 2025, tightened these rules. Among other changes, it added a good-cause condition: a physician non-compete is void and unenforceable if the physician is involuntarily discharged without good cause .
The statute supplies its own definition. Good cause means a reasonable basis for discharge that is directly related to the physician's conduct, job performance, or employment record, so a discharge for genuine performance or conduct problems can leave the covenant intact, while a no-fault termination cannot .
Section 15.50(b) also caps a physician covenant at a one-year duration and a five-mile radius from the physician's primary practice location and requires the terms to be clearly and conspicuously stated in writing . Those are statutory ceilings for the covered physician covenant, not a safe harbor that makes any covenant within them automatically reasonable in other contexts. A separate carve-out protects ownership: the physician requirements do not apply to a physician's business ownership interest in a licensed hospital or licensed ambulatory surgical center . And for integrated-care structures, the statute provides that practicing medicine, for these purposes, does not include managing or directing medical services in an administrative capacity , which preserves room for certain management arrangements.
Do not reuse a general Texas non-compete for a physician. Section 15.50(b) requires patient-list and record access, continuity-of-care terms, and a salary-capped buyout, and since September 1, 2025 the covenant is void if the physician is fired without good cause.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
I.1 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(b) supports that a physician non-compete must provide for a buyout in an amount no greater than the physician's total annual salary and wages at the time of termination.
the covenant must provide for a buyout of the covenant by the physician in an amount that is not greater than the physician's total annual salary and wages at the time of termination of the contract or employment;
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(b)(2).
Primary law
I.2 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(d), as amended by SB 1318 (2025), supports that a physician non-compete is void and unenforceable if the physician is involuntarily discharged without good cause, and defines good cause as a reasonable basis for discharge directly related to the physician's conduct, job performance, or employment record.
a covenant not to compete relating to the practice of medicine is void and unenforceable against a person licensed as a physician by the Texas Medical Board if the physician is involuntarily discharged from contract or employment without good cause. For purposes of this subsection, "good cause" means a reasonable basis for discharge of a physician from contract or employment that is directly related to the physician's conduct, including the physician's conduct on the job or otherwise, job performance, and contract or employment record.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(d).
Primary law
I.3 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(b)(4) supports that a physician covenant must expire no later than one year after termination, limit the geography to a five-mile radius from the physician's primary practice location, and have terms clearly and conspicuously stated in writing.
(A) expire not later than the one-year anniversary of the date the contract or employment has been terminated; (B) limit the geographical area subject to the covenant to no more than a five-mile radius from the location at which the physician primarily practiced before the contract or employment terminated; and (C) have terms and conditions clearly and conspicuously stated in writing.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(b)(4).
Primary law
I.4 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(c) supports that the physician non-compete requirements of § 15.50(b) do not apply to a physician's business ownership interest in a licensed hospital or licensed ambulatory surgical center.
Subsection (b) does not apply to a physician's business ownership interest in a licensed hospital or licensed ambulatory surgical center.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(c).
Primary law
I.5 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(b-1) supports that, for the physician non-compete rules, the practice of medicine does not include managing or directing medical services in an administrative capacity.
the practice of medicine does not include managing or directing medical services in an administrative capacity for a medical practice or other health care provider.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(b-1).
What does SB 1318 require for dentists, nurses, and physician assistants?
A new statutory cap, effective September 1, 2025. Section 15.501, added by SB 1318, makes a non-compete unenforceable against a dentist, professional or vocational nurse, or physician assistant unless it provides a salary-capped buyout, expires within one year, is limited to a five-mile radius, and is clearly and conspicuously in writing .
Before 2025, the statutory buyout-and-limits regime applied chiefly to physicians. SB 1318 extended a parallel set of limits to a broader group of health-care practitioners by enacting § 15.501, effective September 1, 2025 . The section defines that group precisely as licensed dentists, professional or vocational nurses, and physician assistants .
These four requirements mirror the physician buyout, one-year, and five-mile structure, so an employer that already complies with the physician rules has a template for the broader group. Because § 15.501 is new, added by SB 1318 effective September 1, 2025, there is little appellate gloss yet on terms like primarily practiced, and practitioners and employers should expect open questions until courts interpret it.
Do not apply an unlimited or out-of-state non-compete to a Texas dentist, nurse, or physician assistant on or after September 1, 2025. Section 15.501 makes such a covenant unenforceable unless it includes a salary-capped buyout, a one-year expiry, a five-mile limit, and clear, conspicuous written terms .
Sources for this answer
Primary law
J.2 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.501Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.501(a) supports that the health care practitioners covered by the section are licensed dentists, persons licensed to engage in professional or vocational nursing, and licensed physician assistants.
(1) a person licensed by the State Board of Dental Examiners to practice dentistry in this state; (2) a person licensed under Chapter 301 , Occupations Code, to engage in professional or vocational nursing; or (3) a physician assistant licensed under Chapter 204 , Occupations Code.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.501(a).
Primary law
J.1 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.501Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.501, added by SB 1318 (2025), supports that a non-compete is unenforceable against a dentist, nurse, or physician assistant unless it provides a salary-capped buyout, expires within one year, is limited to a five-mile radius, and is clearly and conspicuously stated in writing.
A covenant not to compete relating to the practice of dentistry or nursing, or practice as a physician assistant, as applicable, is not enforceable against a health care practitioner unless the covenant: (1) provides for a buyout of the covenant by the health care practitioner in an amount that is not greater than the practitioner's total annual salary and wages at the time of termination of the practitioner's contract or employment; (2) expires not later than the one-year anniversary of the date the contract or employment has been terminated; (3) limits the geographical area subject to the covenant to no more than a five-mile radius from the location at which the health care practitioner primarily practiced before the contract or employment terminated; and (4) has terms and conditions that are clearly and conspicuously stated in writing.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.501(b).
Can a choice-of-law or forum-selection clause change the outcome in Texas?
Sometimes for forum, rarely to escape Texas policy. Texas courts will enforce a mandatory forum-selection clause through mandamus . But Texas treats enforcement of non-competes as a matter of fundamental policy, and in DeSantis v. Wackenhut the court applied Texas law, not the contractually chosen law, and found the covenant unenforceable .
Multistate employers often try to select a more favorable state's law or a particular forum. The two devices fare differently in Texas. A forum-selection clause is generally enforceable; in In re AutoNation, Inc., the Texas Supreme Court used mandamus to enforce a mandatory forum-selection clause in a non-compete dispute .
A choice-of-law clause is harder to use as an end-run around Texas policy. In DeSantis v. Wackenhut Corp., the Texas Supreme Court refused to apply the contract's chosen law where doing so would offend Texas's fundamental policy on covenants not to compete .
The federal courts apply the same conflicts analysis. In Cardoni v. Prosperity Bank, the Fifth Circuit walked through the Texas-versus-other-state policy comparison, noting that Texas generally permits covenants that are reasonably limited in time and geography . The combined lesson is that forum clauses tend to hold, while a choice-of-law clause selecting a more employer-friendly state may yield to Texas policy when a Texas worker and Texas interests are involved, and conversely Texas policy may yield where another state's fundamental policy controls.
Sources for this answer
Case law · 2007-06-29
K.1 In re AutoNation, Inc.In re AutoNation supports that Texas courts will enforce a mandatory forum-selection clause in a non-compete dispute through mandamus relief.
AutoNation now seeks mandamus relief to enforce the mandatory forum-selection clause, and we conditionally grant it.
See In re AutoNation, Inc., 228 S.W.3d 663 (Tex. 2007).
Case law · 1990-06-06
K.2 DeSantis v. Wackenhut Corp.DeSantis v. Wackenhut supports that Texas treats non-compete enforcement as fundamental policy and will apply Texas law rather than the contractually chosen law where the chosen law would offend that policy.
We hold that Texas law, not Florida law, applies in this case, and that under Texas law, the noncompetition agreement is unenforceable.
See DeSantis v. Wackenhut Corp., 793 S.W.2d 670 (Tex. 1990).
Case law · 2015-10-29
K.3 Cardoni v. Prosperity BankCardoni v. Prosperity Bank supports that, in a Texas conflicts-law analysis, the Fifth Circuit described Texas as generally allowing geographically and temporally limited non-competes, while ultimately giving effect to Oklahoma's contrary fundamental policy for the covenants at issue.
Texas generally allows them so long as they are limited both geographically and temporally.
See Cardoni v. Prosperity Bank, 805 F.3d 573 (5th Cir. 2015).
Does a tolling clause extend a Texas non-compete during breach or litigation?
Texas law does not clearly bless contractual tolling. No Texas statute or Texas Supreme Court decision squarely authorizes extending a non-compete's clock for the time an employee spent breaching or litigating, and any such extension still has to satisfy the Act's reasonableness limit . The more dependable protection against ongoing violations is injunctive relief, which the Act expressly authorizes .
Many national templates add a tolling clause so the employer gets the full benefit of the restricted period even if the former employee competes during it. Texas has no statute on point, and the question is best treated as unsettled. Whatever a tolling clause says, the resulting restraint must still be reasonable under § 15.50(a); a clause that effectively extends the restriction for an indefinite period of breach or litigation is in tension with the requirement that the limit on time be reasonable and no greater than necessary .
In practice, rather than relying on a contractual tolling provision, a Texas employer can seek injunctive relief, which the Act authorizes for breach of an enforceable covenant ; an injunction running from the date of the order can effectively extend protection past the covenant's nominal end date when violations are ongoing. There is no Texas Supreme Court decision squarely approving or rejecting a contractual tolling clause, so this conclusion rests on the statutory reasonableness requirement and the availability of injunctive relief rather than a case directly on tolling.
Do not assume a Texas court will add back time to a non-compete for a period of breach or litigation based on a tolling clause. Texas law is unsettled on contractual tolling, and any extended restraint still must satisfy § 15.50(a)'s reasonableness limit, so the more reliable path is to seek injunctive relief for ongoing violations .
Sources for this answer
Primary law
L.1 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(a) supports that any non-compete restraint, including one extended by a tolling clause, must be reasonable as to time and no greater than necessary to protect the promisee's business interest.
a covenant not to compete is enforceable if it is ancillary to or part of an otherwise enforceable agreement at the time the agreement is made to the extent that it contains limitations as to time, geographical area, and scope of activity to be restrained that are reasonable and do not impose a greater restraint than is necessary to protect the goodwill or other business interest of the promisee.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(a).
Primary law
L.2 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(a) supports that a court may grant injunctive relief for breach of an enforceable covenant, the more dependable protection against ongoing violations than a contractual tolling clause.
a court may award the promisee under a covenant not to compete damages, injunctive relief, or both damages and injunctive relief for a breach by the promisor of the covenant.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.51(a).
Are trade-secret and confidentiality protections available in Texas?
Yes. The Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act lets a court enjoin actual or threatened misappropriation, independent of any covenant . A confidentiality agreement is also available, but it cannot be drafted so broadly that it functions as a disguised non-compete and triggers the Act's reasonableness test .
Because covenant enforcement carries the reformation and damages limits discussed above, Texas employers frequently lean on trade-secret and confidentiality protections as a complement. The Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act provides injunctive relief that does not depend on any non-compete .
That statutory carve-out for general knowledge, skill, and experience is important: a trade-secret injunction protects genuine secrets, not the ordinary expertise an employee carries to a new job . Beyond an injunction, the Act also lets a claimant recover damages for misappropriation . A non-disclosure agreement complements these protections by contract, and the Act leaves contractual remedies in place whether or not they rest on trade-secret misappropriation . But an NDA is not a way around § 15.50: a confidentiality clause drafted so broadly that it effectively bars the former employee from working in the field invites a court to treat it as a non-compete and apply the Act's reasonableness test .
Do not draft a Texas confidentiality or non-disclosure clause so broadly that it operates as a covert non-compete. The trade-secret statute supports an injunction against misappropriation but excludes general knowledge, skill, and experience, and an NDA that effectively prevents the employee from working can be recharacterized as a non-compete subject to § 15.50.
Sources for this answer
Primary law
M.1 Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.003Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.003 supports that, under the Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act, actual or threatened misappropriation may be enjoined, but the order may not prohibit using general knowledge, skill, and experience acquired during employment.
Actual or threatened misappropriation may be enjoined if the order does not prohibit a person from using general knowledge, skill, and experience that person acquired during employment.
See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.003.
Primary law
M.3 Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.004Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.004 supports that, in addition to or in lieu of injunctive relief, a claimant is entitled to recover damages for trade-secret misappropriation.
In addition to or in lieu of injunctive relief, a claimant is entitled to recover damages for misappropriation.
See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.004(a).
Primary law
M.4 Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.007Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.007(b) supports that the Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act does not displace contractual remedies, whether or not based on trade-secret misappropriation, so confidentiality agreements remain available as contract tools.
This chapter does not affect: (1) contractual remedies, whether or not based upon misappropriation of a trade secret
See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 134A.007(b).
Primary law
M.2 Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(a) supports that a confidentiality clause broad enough to function as a non-compete would be judged under the Act's ancillary-and-reasonableness test rather than escaping it.
a covenant not to compete is enforceable if it is ancillary to or part of an otherwise enforceable agreement at the time the agreement is made to the extent that it contains limitations as to time, geographical area, and scope of activity to be restrained that are reasonable and do not impose a greater restraint than is necessary to protect the goodwill or other business interest of the promisee.
See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(a).