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Wyoming bans noncompete agreements

Effective July 1, 2025, Wyoming will become the fifth state to ban the use of noncompete agreements.

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by Robert S. Teachout, SHRM-SCP, Legal Editor at Brightmine

Effective July 1, 2025, Wyoming will become the fifth state to ban the use of noncompete agreements.

The new law provides that any noncompete agreement that restricts a person’s right to receive compensation for performing skilled or unskilled labor is void. Exceptions are allowed for:

  • Noncompete clauses contained in a contract for purchasing or selling a business;
  • Noncompete agreements that provide for the protection of trade secrets;
  • Contractual provisions that allow for the recovery from an employee of relocation, education and training expenses; and
  • Noncompete clauses that apply to executive and management personnel and the officers and employees who make up the professional staff of executive and management personnel.

The law also specifically provides that noncompete clauses that restrict the right of a physician to practice medicine upon the termination of the physician’s employment, partnership or corporate affiliation are void. It further clarifies that physicians may disclose their continuing practice of medicine and new professional contact information to any patient with a rare disorder who the physician had been treating.

The provisions apply to contracts entered into on and after July 1, 2025.

Wyoming joins California, Minnesota, North Dakota and Oklahoma in generally barring noncompete agreements with employees. Other states impose an array of laws restricting the use of noncompete agreements.

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About the author

Robert Teachout, SHRM-SCP - Legal Editor at Brightmine

Robert S. Teachout, SHRM – SCP
Legal Editor, Brightmine

Robert Teachout has more than 30 years’ experience in legal publishing covering employment laws on the state and federal level. At Brightmine, he covers labor relations, performance appraisals and promotions, succession and workforce planning, HR professional development and employment contracts. He often writes on the intersection of compliance with HR strategy and practice.

Before joining Brightmine, Robert was a senior HR editor at Thompson Information Services, covering FMLA, ADA, EEO issues and federal and state leave laws. Prior to that he was the primary editor of Bloomberg BNA’s State Labor Laws binders and was the principal writer and editor of the State Wage Assignment and Garnishment Handbook. Robert also served as a union unit leader and shop steward in the Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild of the Communications Workers of America. Actively involved in the HR profession, Robert is a member of SHRM at both the national and local levels, and gives back to the profession by serving as the communications vice president on the board of his local chapter.

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