Home Legal Projects Arizona Review a Non-Competition Agreement in Arizona | 1 Proposal

How a Consumer Hired a Lawyer to Review a Non-Competition Agreement in Arizona

See real project results from ContractsCounsel's legal marketplace — this project was posted by a consumer in Arizona seeking help to review a Non-Competition Agreement. The client received 1 lawyer proposal with a price of $300 flat fee.

Service type
Review
Location
Arizona
Client type
Personal
Client industry
-
Deadline
Less than a week
Pricing Range
$300 (Flat fee)
Number of Bids
1 bid
Pages
3 pages

How much does it cost to Review a Non-Competition Agreement in Arizona?

For this project, the client received 1 proposal from lawyers to review a Non-Competition Agreement in Arizona, with flat fee bids ranging from price of $300 on a flat fee. Pricing may vary based on the complexity of the legal terms, the type of service requested, and the required turnaround time.

I need a lawyer to review a non-competition clause in a small business contract that I am currently under

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"Ryenne was great. I'm satisfied. Thanks."

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Non-Competition Agreement
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Project Description

In 2023, an individual in Arizona sought assistance with reviewing a non-competition agreement related to their contract with a martial arts academy. The client aimed to end their contractual obligations to the academy, which included a clause prohibiting them from teaching martial arts within a specified radius for three years after leaving. They felt the restrictions were unreasonable and anticipated difficulties obtaining written consent from the academy's owners. As a result, the client received one proposal from a licensed lawyer, with a flat fee bid of $300, submitted promptly to meet the requested deadline of less than a week.

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Forum Questions About Non-Competition Agreement

Non-Competition Agreement

Massachusetts

Asked on Aug 3, 2025

Is my non-competition agreement enforceable if I am terminated without cause?

I recently signed a non-competition agreement with my current employer, which restricts me from working for a competitor for a certain period of time after leaving the company. However, I am concerned about the enforceability of this agreement if I am terminated without cause. I want to understand if being terminated without cause would render the non-competition agreement null and void, or if I would still be bound by its terms.

Randy M.

Answered Sep 14, 2025

Whether a non-competition agreement remains enforceable if you’re terminated without cause depends on both the language of your contract and the law of the state that governs it. Termination without cause doesn’t automatically make a non-compete void, but courts often treat it as a factor in deciding whether enforcement is fair. Courts generally apply a “reasonableness” test to non-competes. To be enforceable, the restrictions must be narrowly tailored in duration, geographic scope, and the type of work restricted, and they must protect a legitimate business interest like trade secrets, confidential information, or customer goodwill. If you’re let go through no fault of your own, many courts are skeptical of an employer’s claim that preventing you from working elsewhere is necessary. For example, judges may ask why an employer who voluntarily ended the employment relationship should still be able to limit your ability to earn a living in your field. The outcome varies widely by state. California, Oklahoma, North Dakota, Minnesota, and Washington, D.C. prohibit most non-competes outright. Massachusetts allows them but requires employers to pay “garden leave” or other compensation during the restricted period, and generally doesn’t allow enforcement against employees who were laid off or terminated without cause. Illinois and Colorado enforce non-competes only if income thresholds and notice requirements are met. In New York, the law isn’t settled: some courts uphold non-competes even after termination without cause if they’re otherwise reasonable, while others strike them down as unfair. Texas courts often enforce non-competes if they meet statutory requirements, regardless of whether the employee resigned or was terminated without cause. The Federal Trade Commission tried to ban most non-compete agreements in 2024, but a federal court struck down the rule before it took effect, and the FTC has since abandoned its appeal. There’s no federal ban in place today, although the FTC is still targeting abusive non-compete practices on a case-by-case basis. The exact wording of your contract also matters. Some non-competes say they apply only if you resign or are terminated for cause. Others apply regardless of how the employment ends. If your agreement doesn’t address termination scenarios, a court will fall back on state law and the reasonableness test. If there’s no compensation provided during the restricted period or if the restrictions are overly broad, you’ll have a stronger argument that enforcement is unreasonable. Non-compete agreements turn on the details of both the contract and the law in your state. The emplyment law attorneys on Contracts Counsel can review your agreement and advise you on whether its terms are enforceable given your specific circumstances.

Read 2 attorney answers>

Non-Competition Agreement

Massachusetts

Asked on Aug 3, 2025

Is my non-competition agreement enforceable if I am terminated without cause?

I recently signed a non-competition agreement with my current employer, which restricts me from working for a competitor for a certain period of time after leaving the company. However, I am concerned about the enforceability of this agreement if I am terminated without cause. I want to understand if being terminated without cause would render the non-competition agreement null and void, or if I would still be bound by its terms.

Charles D.

Answered Sep 12, 2025

Without seeing the contract, the short answer would be, yes, you are obligated regardless of how you are terminated. The first question your attorney would look to answer is if the non-compete is valid to begin with. IN some situations, a non-compete without any geographical limitation might be over broad and therefore non-enforceable.

Read 2 attorney answers>

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