Employee agreements

Employment agreements, or employment contracts, define the terms and conditions of the employment relationship. While employers are not required to extend written contracts to employees, having a clear, well-structured agreement reduces misunderstandings and protects both the employer and the employee throughout the employment relationship.

Well-drafted agreements can also outline how confidential information is handled, whether intellectual property needs protection and what happens when an employee leaves the company.

Employment agreements are especially important when hiring executives, technical specialists, employees with access to sensitive data or anyone whose role includes stock options, bonuses or other complex compensation elements.

  • Washington State bans all noncompetes, voids existing agreements

    Featured article


    Washington State bans all noncompetes, voids existing agreements

    Washington has enacted a near‑total ban on employee noncompete agreements. Under amendments taking effect June 30, 2027, all existing noncompetes—regardless of when signed—will be void and unenforceable, with limited statutory exceptions.

search icon

Results : 9 of 21


















HR News

Washington State bans all noncompetes, voids existing agreements

Washington has enacted a near‑total ban on employee noncompete agreements. Under amendments taking effect June 30, 2027, all …

HR News

New York amends, delays stay-or-pay law

New York changes course on its stay‑or‑pay law—find out what’s been amended, what’s delayed, and how employers should …

Charts

Noncompete Laws by State

Review comprehensive noncompete regulations across all states to ensure your employment agreements meet current legal requirements.

Blogs

Employment agreement types explained: key terms, risks & compliance tips

Discover the most common employment contract types and the compliance risks HR must manage, including misclassification, confidentiality gaps, …

HR News

Starbucks Agrees to Largest Worker-Protection Settlement in NYC History

Starbucks will pay $39 million to settle charges that it violated New York City's predictive scheduling law.

HR law guides

Illinois hiring laws: Employment offers, conditional offers, and withdrawals

This guide gives HR professionals a concise overview of Illinois laws governing employment offers, including verbal and written …

HR law guides

Illinois independent contractor laws – classification, compliance & Freelance Worker Protection Act

Stay compliant with Illinois independent contractor regulations. This guide covers classification factors, key employment laws, and rules for …

HR News

Federal noncompete rule is dead but FTC continues enforcement

The FTC dropped its appeal of an injunction halting the noncompete ban. But it still will aggressively investigate …

HR law guides

Employment at-will laws in Virginia

Learn about Virginia’s employment-at-will doctrine with our detailed guide. Understand employer rights, exceptions, and compliance requirements under state …

Sign up to receive expert HR insights from Brightmine

Join our community and stay updated with industry trends, expert insights, valuable resources, webinar invites… and much more.

Sign up now and receive regular updates straight to your inbox!

    *Brightmine is a tradename of LexisNexis Risk Solutions. By registering your details, you understand that your personal data will be handled according to our Privacy Policy.