What Is a Employment Agreement?
Legally binding contract between employer and employee establishing terms of work, compensation, and obligations. In Texas, this document must comply with state-specific requirements that differ from federal standards and from other states.
Every new hire, full-time and part-time in Texas faces unique legal requirements. Failing to use the correct Texas-compliant version of this document exposes your business to liability up to $5,000 - $100,000.
Texas-Specific Employment Agreement Requirements
Texas enforces non-competes if reasonable and ancillary to otherwise enforceable agreement. No salary history ban statewide.
Texas Compliance Snapshot
Download the Texas Employment Agreement Checklist
A free checklist of every clause your Texas employment agreement must include to be legally defensible in 2026.
Key Clauses Your Texas Employment Agreement Must Include
A employment agreement that is missing any of these elements may be unenforceable or create liability in Texas.
- Job title and duties
- Compensation and benefits
- Work schedule and location
- Termination conditions
- Confidentiality and NDA
- Non-compete provisions
Common Texas Employment Agreement Mistakes That Lead to Lawsuits
- Using a generic template not customized for Texas - state law overrides federal minimums
- Not updating the document when Texas law changes (required annual or when terms change)
- Failing to have employees sign and date the document before their start date
- Missing Texas-required disclosures or notices that must be included
- Not retaining signed copies for the required retention period
Texas Employment Agreement by Job Title
Different job roles require different clauses. Select your employee's job title to see a version customized for that role in Texas.