Free Employment Agreement Review Tool — AI-Powered Risk Detection for Employment Contracts

Free Employment Agreement Review Tool — AI-Powered Risk Detection for Employment Contracts
Employment agreements contain more hidden traps than any other routine contract type. A misclassified at-will provision, an unenforceable non-compete, or a vague termination-for-cause definition can expose your client to six-figure wrongful termination claims — or leave a departing employee bound by restrictions that no court would uphold.
According to the ABA’s analysis of restrictive covenants in employment contracts, the starting point for enforceability is that restrictive covenants are presumed void as restraints of trade, enforceable only if the employer demonstrates they protect legitimate business interests and extend no further than reasonably necessary. That’s a high bar — and one that poorly drafted employment agreements fail to clear routinely.
Meanwhile, the legal landscape is shifting under these agreements. The FTC’s federal non-compete ban collapsed in 2025, but state-level restrictions have only accelerated. Four states now ban non-competes entirely. At least seven impose income thresholds. And remote work has created jurisdiction conflicts that didn’t exist five years ago: which state’s law governs when the employer is in Texas and the employee works from California?
Upload any employment agreement to Clause Labs and get a clause-by-clause risk analysis in under 60 seconds. The employment playbook flags restrictive covenants, termination traps, compensation gaps, and IP assignment issues — with plain-English explanations of why each finding matters. Free for up to 3 reviews per month. No credit card required.
Why Employment Agreements Need Specialized Review
Employment agreements sit at the intersection of contract law, employment law, and state-specific regulatory requirements. A standard contract review framework catches general red flags, but employment agreements require additional analysis layers that generic approaches miss.
Regulatory complexity: Employment agreements must comply with federal law (FLSA, ERISA, Title VII), state employment statutes, and often local ordinances. A compensation provision that’s perfectly legal in Georgia may violate wage theft protections in California or New York.
Asymmetric risk: Employment agreements are inherently one-sided in drafting — the employer writes them. The employee (or their lawyer) must identify provisions that shift risk unfairly, restrict future employment unreasonably, or waive statutory rights improperly.
State-by-state variation: Non-compete enforceability alone varies from complete bans (California, Minnesota) to income thresholds (Colorado, Illinois, Washington) to general reasonableness standards (Texas, Florida). One agreement used nationwide can be enforceable in half the states and void in the other half.
Evolving law: Multiple states passed new employment regulations effective in 2025 and 2026, including AI-in-hiring transparency requirements (Illinois, Colorado), non-compete restriction updates, and independent contractor classification rules. Employment agreements drafted two years ago may already be non-compliant.
For a broader view of contract red flags beyond employment agreements, see our complete contract red flags checklist.
What Clause Labs Flags in Employment Agreements
When you upload an employment agreement to Clause Labs, the AI identifies and risk-scores every clause across six categories. Here’s what the employment agreement playbook covers — and what each finding means for your client.
Restrictive Covenant Risks
Restrictive covenants are the highest-risk provisions in most employment agreements. Clause Labs evaluates each type separately:
Non-compete provisions: The AI flags the non-compete and evaluates it against the governing jurisdiction’s requirements. Is the duration reasonable (most courts require 6-24 months)? Is the geographic scope proportional to the employee’s actual territory? Is there an income threshold that applies? If the governing law is California, Minnesota, Oklahoma, or North Dakota, the non-compete is flagged as likely unenforceable regardless of its terms.
For a detailed state-by-state analysis of what’s enforceable, see our guide to non-compete clauses in 2026.
Non-solicitation provisions: Flagged if the restricted activity is so broad it functions as a de facto non-compete. A non-solicitation covering “all current, former, and prospective customers” of a company with thousands of customers effectively prevents the employee from working in their industry. Clause Labs identifies overbroad non-solicitation language and suggests narrower formulations.
Non-disclosure/Confidentiality provisions: Evaluated for overbroad definitions of confidential information, missing standard exclusions, and unreasonable duration. Employment NDAs that attempt to restrict publicly available information or independently developed knowledge are flagged. For NDA-specific review guidance, see our NDA review framework.
Garden leave provisions: Identified and evaluated for adequacy. Massachusetts requires garden leave pay (at least 50% of base salary) as consideration for non-competes. Other states are trending in this direction.
Compensation and Benefits Risks
Compensation provisions create liability in ways that aren’t always obvious.
Ambiguous bonus structures: Clause Labs flags bonus provisions that use terms like “discretionary” without defining what that means, or that condition bonuses on continued employment without specifying the exact date. An employee terminated the day before a bonus vests has a strong argument for payment — unless the agreement is drafted precisely.
Commission clawback provisions: Flagged when the agreement allows the employer to recoup commissions already paid. Clawback provisions face enforceability challenges in several states, and aggressive clawbacks may violate state wage and hour laws.
Equity and option provisions: The AI identifies vesting schedules, acceleration triggers (change of control, termination without cause), and cliffs. A four-year vesting schedule with a one-year cliff means the employee gets nothing if terminated in month eleven — a fact many employees don’t understand when signing.
Benefits continuation gaps: Flagged when the agreement doesn’t address what happens to health insurance, life insurance, and other benefits upon termination. COBRA obligations exist by statute, but the agreement should clarify the employer’s obligations during any notice or garden leave period.
Termination Risks
Termination provisions determine how the employment relationship ends — and what it costs.
At-will vs. for-cause confusion: The most common employment agreement drafting error. An agreement that states the employee is “at-will” but then lists specific grounds for termination creates ambiguity: is the list exhaustive (implying the employee can only be fired for those reasons) or illustrative (maintaining at-will flexibility)? Courts in multiple jurisdictions have held that a detailed cause definition can override an at-will disclaimer. Clause Labs flags this conflict every time it appears.
Termination for cause — overbroad or too narrow: A cause definition that includes “any act that the Company determines, in its sole discretion, is detrimental to its interests” gives the employer unlimited discretion and may not qualify as a bona fide cause termination for severance or benefits purposes. Conversely, a definition limited to “conviction of a felony” may be too narrow to cover fraud, embezzlement, or other conduct the employer clearly intended to include.
Severance conditions and triggers: Flagged when severance is conditioned on signing a release agreement but the release terms aren’t specified in the employment agreement itself. Also flagged: severance that disappears if the employee is terminated for cause, without adequate protection against pretextual cause findings.
Notice period requirements: Evaluated for reasonableness and mutuality. An agreement requiring the employee to give 90 days’ notice but allowing the employer to terminate immediately creates an unfair asymmetry.
IP and Ownership Risks
Intellectual property provisions matter most for employees in technology, creative, and research roles.
Invention assignment scope: Clause Labs flags assignment clauses that capture inventions created outside of work hours, using the employee’s own equipment, and unrelated to the employer’s business. Several states — including California (Lab. Code § 2870), Delaware, Illinois, Minnesota, and Washington — have statutes limiting the scope of invention assignment to work-related inventions.
Prior inventions exclusion: Flagged if the agreement doesn’t include a schedule or opportunity for the employee to list pre-existing inventions. Without this exclusion, the employer could claim ownership of intellectual property the employee created before the employment relationship began.
Work-for-hire classification: Identified and evaluated. True work-for-hire requires that the work falls into one of the nine statutory categories under 17 U.S.C. § 101. Agreements that broadly classify all employee output as work-for-hire may overreach — particularly for employees who aren’t creating copyrightable works.
Moral rights waivers: Flagged in creative industry agreements. The U.S. provides limited moral rights protection (primarily for visual art under VARA), but international employees may have broader moral rights that cannot be waived by contract.
Compliance Risks
Employment agreements must comply with a web of federal, state, and local requirements.
Arbitration clauses: Clause Labs evaluates whether the arbitration clause is enforceable given the type of claims covered. Several states restrict mandatory arbitration for employment disputes — particularly sexual harassment claims following the federal Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act of 2021. Class action waivers paired with arbitration provisions face additional scrutiny.
Choice of law provisions: Flagged when the governing law conflicts with the employee’s work location. A remote employee working from California is likely subject to California employment law regardless of what the agreement states. Clause Labs identifies these jurisdiction conflicts.
FLSA exemption classification: While the AI can’t make legal determinations about exemption status, it flags compensation structures that suggest misclassification risk — such as salaried positions without overtime eligibility that may not meet the duties test for executive, administrative, or professional exemptions.
Employment Agreements by Role Type
Different roles create different risk profiles. Here’s what to focus on for each category.
Executive Employment Agreements
Unique risks: Golden parachute provisions, change-of-control triggers, D&O insurance coverage, board observer rights, and equity acceleration upon termination without cause.
What to flag: Ensure change-of-control definitions cover all acquisition scenarios (stock purchase, asset purchase, merger). Verify that equity acceleration is “double trigger” (change of control AND termination) rather than “single trigger” (change of control alone). Confirm D&O tail coverage survives termination.
At-Will Employee Agreements
Unique risks: The at-will/cause definition conflict described above. Restrictive covenants that exceed state limits. Inadequate consideration for mid-employment non-compete additions.
What to flag: Ensure the at-will disclaimer is clear and not contradicted by detailed cause provisions. Verify that restrictive covenants comply with the employee’s state of residence (not just the employer’s home state). Check that existing employees received independent consideration for any new restrictive covenants.
Independent Contractor Agreements
Unique risks: Misclassification — treating a contractor as an employee for work purposes but a contractor for tax and benefits purposes. Non-competes in contractor agreements are almost always unenforceable and signal misclassification.
What to flag: Behavioral control (who sets the schedule, provides tools, directs work), financial control (who bears expenses, provides equipment), and relationship factors (duration, exclusivity, benefits). The more factors that point to employment, the higher the misclassification risk.
Remote and Hybrid Employee Agreements
Unique risks: Multi-state compliance when the employee works from a different state than the employer. Equipment and expense reimbursement requirements (California and Illinois require reimbursement of necessary business expenses). Tax withholding complications.
What to flag: Which state’s law governs? Does the agreement address home office equipment, internet reimbursement, and cybersecurity requirements? Are restrictive covenants enforceable in the employee’s home state?
Sales and Commission Agreements
Unique risks: Commission calculation disputes, territory definitions, post-termination commission rights, and customer ownership upon departure.
What to flag: Are commissions calculated on booking, invoicing, or collection? What happens to pipeline deals after termination? Does the employee retain rights to commissions on deals they initiated but that close after departure? Many states — including California and New York — have statutes protecting earned but unpaid commissions.
Reviewing an employment agreement with restrictive covenants right now? Upload it to Clause Labs free — the employment playbook flags all the issues above in under 60 seconds. Compare the AI’s findings against your own review.
The Employment Agreement Review Checklist
Whether you use AI or review manually, confirm each item:
Identity and Structure
– Correct legal entity for employer and employee
– Position title, duties, and reporting structure clearly defined
– Start date and employment type (at-will, fixed term, probationary)
Compensation
– Base salary amount and payment frequency
– Bonus structure: discretionary vs. guaranteed, timing, conditions
– Commission terms: calculation method, payment schedule, clawback provisions
– Equity: grant amount, vesting schedule, acceleration triggers, exercise window post-termination
– Benefits: health, dental, vision, 401k match, other perquisites
Term and Termination
– At-will disclaimer that isn’t contradicted elsewhere
– Termination for cause: specific, exhaustive definition
– Termination without cause: notice period, severance trigger
– Resignation: notice requirements, cooperation obligations
– Constructive termination: is it addressed?
Restrictive Covenants
– Non-compete: duration, geography, scope, state compliance
– Non-solicitation: customer list, employee list, breadth
– Non-disclosure: definition scope, exclusions, duration
– Garden leave: pay rate, duration, activity restrictions
IP and Ownership
– Invention assignment scope and state-law compliance
– Prior inventions schedule or exclusion
– Work-for-hire classification accuracy
– License-back provisions for assigned IP used in personal projects
Dispute Resolution
– Governing law and jurisdiction
– Arbitration vs. litigation
– Class action waiver (if present)
– Attorney’s fees allocation
Compliance
– FLSA exemption alignment
– State-specific wage and hour requirements
– Benefits continuation obligations
– Release agreement requirements for severance
Free vs. Paid: What Each Tier Provides
Clause Labs’s employment agreement analysis is available at every pricing tier:
| Feature | Free ($0/mo) | Solo ($49/mo) | Professional ($149/mo) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Employment agreements reviewed | 3/month (any contract type) | 25/month | 100/month |
| Clause identification & risk scoring | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Missing clause detection | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| AI-generated redlines | Blurred (upgrade to view) | Full access | Full access |
| DOCX export with tracked changes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Employment playbook | NDA playbook only | All 7 system playbooks including Employment | All + custom playbooks |
| Preference learning | No | Yes (after 10+ decisions) | Yes |
| Clause library | No | No | Yes |
The free tier gives you a risk score, clause-by-clause breakdown, and flagged issues for up to 3 contracts per month. The Solo tier at $49/month unlocks the full employment agreement playbook with 25 reviews per month, DOCX export, and AI-generated redlines. For firms handling employment agreements at volume, the Professional tier at $149/month adds custom playbook building, a shared clause library, and contract comparison.
Start free — upload your first employment agreement and see what the AI catches in 60 seconds. Compare the findings against your own review. Most lawyers who test it find at least one issue they would have flagged differently.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I review offer letters with this tool?
Yes. Offer letters that contain material terms — compensation, position, start date, at-will disclaimer, restrictive covenants — are functionally employment agreements and benefit from the same analysis. Clause Labs identifies the terms present in the offer letter and flags terms that should be present but aren’t. Keep in mind that offer letters sometimes reference a separate employment agreement to follow — flag this for your client so they know the offer letter isn’t the complete picture.
Does it flag state-specific employment law issues?
Clause Labs identifies jurisdiction conflicts and restrictive covenant provisions that may face enforceability challenges based on the governing law specified in the agreement. For example, a non-compete in an agreement governed by California law is immediately flagged as likely unenforceable. Income-threshold-based restrictions in Colorado, Illinois, Washington, and Oregon are identified and noted. However, the AI doesn’t replace a jurisdiction-specific legal analysis — it identifies the issues that warrant deeper review.
Can I use it for independent contractor agreements?
Yes. Clause Labs’s contract review handles independent contractor agreements and flags misclassification risk factors — behavioral control provisions, exclusivity clauses, equipment requirements, and non-compete restrictions that are inconsistent with contractor status. The employment agreement playbook is particularly useful here because it highlights provisions that look like employment terms in what’s supposed to be a contractor relationship.
How does it handle executive-level agreements?
Executive agreements receive the same clause-by-clause analysis with additional attention to equity provisions, change-of-control triggers, golden parachute calculations, D&O insurance coverage, and board-level governance rights. The AI identifies standard market terms for executive agreements and flags deviations — for example, single-trigger acceleration when double-trigger is market standard, or an exercise window that’s shorter than typical post-termination periods.
What about multi-state employer agreements?
Clause Labs identifies the governing law specified in the agreement and flags potential conflicts with the employee’s work location. For employers with employees across multiple states, the tool highlights provisions that may be enforceable in one state but void in another — most commonly, restrictive covenants. The AI can’t resolve multi-state conflicts (that requires attorney judgment), but it identifies where those conflicts exist so you know which provisions need jurisdiction-specific analysis.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Employment law varies significantly by jurisdiction, and the enforceability of specific employment agreement provisions depends on applicable state and federal law. Consult a qualified employment attorney for advice specific to your situation.
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