Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

News & Analysis Policies & Forms Your Library
News & Analysis Policies & Forms Your Library

User account menu

Sign in Get Started
x

You're signed out

Sign in to access subscriber actions.

FTC sues employers over noncompete agreements

February 2023 employment law letter
Authors: 
Steve Jones, Jack Nelson Jones

Many employers use noncompete agreements as a standard part of their employment agreements. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has now announced it wants to ban noncompetes and is pursuing litigation over their use.

Lawsuits filed

As one of its first actions of 2023, the FTC has announced its intention to challenge noncompetition agreements as a violation Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act (FCTA), which prohibits unfair methods of competition. On January 4, it filed suit against three companies and two individuals seeking to force them to drop noncompete provisions affecting thousands workers in positions ranging from low-wage security guards to factory employees to engineers.

In a press release, the FTC argued that “these cases highlight how noncompetes can block workers from securing higher wages and prevent businesses from being able to compete.” The press release goes on to say the agency “is committed to ensuring that workers have the freedom to seek higher wages and better working conditions without unfair restrictions by employers” and to assert that it “will continue to investigate, and where appropriate challenge, noncompete restrictions and other restrictive contractual terms that harm workers and competition.”

Continue reading your article with a HRLaws membership
  • Sign in
  • Sign up
Upgrade to a subscription now
to get unlimited access to everything on HR Laws.
Start subscription
Any time

Publications

  • Employment Law Letter
  • Employers State Law Alert
  • Federal Employment Law Insider

Your Library Reading List

Reading list 6
Creating List 7
Testing

Let's manage your states

We'll keep you updated on state changes

Manage States
© 2025
BLR®, A DIVISION OF SIMPLIFY COMPLIANCE LLC | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Footer - Copyright

  • terms
  • legal
  • privacy