✦ Advanced Generator — State-Specific

Employment Agreement Generator

State-specific employment agreements covering compensation, at-will status, non-competes, IP ownership, and termination procedures.

🗺 State-specific clauses💬 Plain-English explanations⚠️ Attorney review flags📥 PDF + Word export🔄 Version history
⚡ Quick Answer

An employment agreement is a legally binding contract between an employer and employee that defines compensation, job duties, term, confidentiality obligations, and termination conditions. LegalStack generates free, state-specific employment agreements pre-configured for California's non-compete ban (Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code §16600), Colorado's $123,750 salary threshold, and New York's at-will protections. No account required. Unlike Rocket Lawyer ($39.99/mo), LegalStack generates state-specific employment contracts at no cost.

⚠️
New Jan 1, 2026: California AB 692 Requirements
California requires a 5-day cooling-off period, right-to-counsel clause, and no repayment provisions in all contractor agreements. Our generator includes this automatically. Learn about all 2026 California employment law changes →
⚠ Template Only — Not Legal Advice AI-generated for educational use only. NOT legal advice or attorney representation. Learn more
🎬 Tool Demo — How It Works
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📋
Choose document
Select from employment agreements, LLC agreements, contractor agreements, and more.
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🗺
Pick your state
State-specific clauses, governing law, and enforceability requirements auto-load.
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📝
Answer prompts
Step-by-step wizard asks targeted questions to tailor every clause to your situation.
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🤖
AI drafts
AI generates a full document with plain-English clause explanations and attorney-review flags.
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📥
Export
Download as PDF or Word. Version history tracks every iteration.
What you're seeing: Pick your document type and state to load the multi-step wizard. Answer targeted questions about parties, terms, and requirements — each answer shapes the clauses. The AI produces a complete document with plain-English explanations and risk flags highlighting state-specific issues. Export to PDF or Word, review with counsel if needed, and get it signed.
How It Works
1
🗺 Select your state
We tailor the document to your jurisdiction's laws
2
📝 Fill in your details
Step-by-step wizard — takes about 2 minutes
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✨ AI generates your document
State-specific clauses, plain-English explanations
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⚠️ Review the warnings
We flag clauses that need attorney review
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📥 Download PDF or Word
Ready to customize and use

📬 The Legal Stack

Stay up to date on legal changes

Get notified when state laws affecting your documents change.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should an employment agreement include? +

A complete employment agreement must include: (1) job title and duties — specific role and responsibilities; (2) compensation — base salary, bonus structure, equity, and benefits; (3) start date and term — at-will or fixed-term; (4) confidentiality clause — protecting trade secrets and business information; (5) IP assignment — who owns work product created during employment; (6) non-solicitation — restrictions on poaching employees or clients post-termination; (7) governing law — which state's law applies. Non-compete clauses are banned in California (Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code §16600), Minnesota, North Dakota, and Oklahoma. In all other states, non-competes must be reasonable in scope, duration (typically 1–2 years), and geographic area.

Can I include a non-compete in an employment agreement? +

It depends on the state. Non-compete clauses are completely unenforceable in California (Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code §16600 — void for all employees), Minnesota (Minn. Stat. §181.988, effective 2023), North Dakota (NDCC §9-08-06), and Oklahoma (15 Okla. Stat. §219A). They are heavily restricted in Colorado (employees earning >$123,750/year only), Illinois ($75,000+/year), Massachusetts (12-month maximum; garden leave required), Oregon ($113,241+/year), Virginia ($73,320+/year), and Washington ($100,000+/year). In most other states, non-competes are enforceable if they have a reasonable time limit (typically 1–2 years), reasonable geographic scope, and protect a legitimate business interest.

Is an employment agreement required by law? +

No federal law requires a written employment agreement. All 50 states (except Montana) are at-will employment states, meaning employment can be terminated by either party at any time for any legal reason — with or without a written agreement. However, certain elements must be in writing: non-compete and non-solicitation clauses must be written to be enforceable in most states; equity grants (stock options, RSUs) require written agreements; certain state-specific disclosures (e.g., California wage theft prevention notices) must be provided in writing. Written agreements are strongly recommended for all salaried employees to prevent disputes.

What's the difference between an offer letter and an employment agreement? +

An offer letter is a brief document confirming employment terms (salary, title, start date, at-will status) — typically 1–2 pages, not a full contract. An employment agreement is a comprehensive contract (typically 5–15 pages) that includes all terms of the offer letter plus: detailed IP assignment clauses, confidentiality and non-disclosure obligations, non-solicitation restrictions, severance terms, arbitration clauses, and governing law. Startups typically use offer letters for most employees; employment agreements are standard for executives, senior technical employees, or any role with significant access to IP or trade secrets.

Does an employment agreement need to be in writing? +

Verbal employment agreements can be legally binding, but written agreements are strongly recommended. Key reasons: (1) non-compete and non-solicitation clauses must be in writing to be enforceable in virtually all states; (2) equity compensation (stock options, RSUs) requires written grant agreements; (3) IP assignment is much more enforceable with a signed written agreement; (4) written agreements prevent "he said/she said" disputes about agreed terms. California requires employers to provide written disclosure of certain terms (wage notice) under the Wage Theft Prevention Act. New York requires a written notice of pay rate and pay day for all employees.

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State-Specific Versions
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