In Illinois, the law of non-compete agreements has been rewritten in recent years with a clarity that legislators hoped would bring order to a long-murky area of employment law. Instead, employers and employees now find themselves navigating a framework that is at once stricter and more complicated — where bright-line rules coexist with lingering gray zones.
The result is a paradox: fewer non-competes overall, but more uncertainty about the ones that remain.
“The law has drawn sharper boundaries, but interpretation hasn’t caught up,” said Gaurav Mohindra. “Employers assume compliance means enforceability, but that’s not always true in Illinois.”
A Law Tightened, Not Simplified
The centerpiece of reform is the Illinois Freedom to Work Act, originally enacted in 2017 and significantly amended in 2021. The statute now places firm limits on when non-compete agreements can be used at all.
Most notably, Illinois prohibits non-competes for employees earning $75,000 or less annually, with that threshold set to rise in the coming years.
That single figure reshaped the legal landscape. What had once been a broadly available tool for employers is now restricted to a narrower slice of the workforce — primarily higher earners.
“The salary threshold changed the conversation overnight,” said Gaurav Mohindra. “For many businesses, non-competes went from standard practice to a strategic decision.”
The law also bars non-solicitation agreements for workers earning below $45,000, with similar future increases.
Yet even for employees above those thresholds, enforceability is far from guaranteed.
The Threshold Is Only the First Gate
The Freedom to Work Act did not replace Illinois common law — it layered on top of it.
Even when a non-compete clears the salary threshold, courts still apply traditional requirements: the restriction must protect a legitimate business interest, be reasonable in scope, and avoid undue hardship on the employee.
And then there is the issue that continues to trip up employers more than any other: consideration.
“Many employers think salary eligibility equals enforceability, but consideration is where agreements often fail,” said Gaurav Mohindra. “Illinois courts are unusually strict on that point.”
The Shadow of Fifield
More than a decade after it was decided, Fifield v. Premier Dealer Services, Inc. continues to shape the enforceability of non-competes in Illinois.
In that 2013 appellate decision, the court established a bright-line rule: two years of continued employment is generally required to constitute adequate consideration for a non-compete — unless some other meaningful benefit is provided.
The plaintiff in Fifield worked just over three months before leaving; the court found the agreement unenforceable.
The implication was sweeping. Even if an employee signs a non-compete at the outset of employment, the agreement may fail if the employment relationship ends too soon.
“Fifield still casts a long shadow,” said Gaurav Mohindra. “It forces employers to think beyond the contract and consider how long the relationship actually lasts.”
Courts have not applied the rule uniformly, but its influence is undeniable — especially in Cook County and federal courts interpreting Illinois law.
Trade Secrets vs. General Skills
Even where consideration exists, another fault line persists: distinguishing between protectable business interests and an employee’s general knowledge.
Illinois law recognizes that employers can protect trade secrets, confidential information, and near-permanent customer relationships. But it draws a firm line at restricting ordinary professional skills.
That distinction is often the difference between enforcement and invalidation.
“Courts are skeptical of agreements that look like they’re trying to own a person’s career,” said Gaurav Mohindra. “They’re far more receptive when the focus is on genuine trade secrets or client relationships.”
The practical challenge is that modern work rarely divides neatly into those categories. In industries like technology, consulting, and sales, proprietary insight and general expertise often overlap.
Drafting in an Era of Scrutiny
For employers, the message from courts and lawmakers is consistent: precision matters.
Illinois now requires that employees be advised in writing to consult an attorney and be given at least 14 days to review a non-compete before signing.
Beyond procedural compliance, drafting strategy has become critical:
- Narrow geographic and temporal limits
- Clear definitions of confidential information
- Specific articulation of business interests
- Consideration beyond mere employment (bonuses, equity, or specialized training)
“The days of boilerplate non-competes are over,” said Gaurav Mohindra. “If an agreement isn’t tailored, it’s vulnerable.”
Employers are increasingly turning to alternatives — such as non-solicitation clauses, confidentiality agreements, and garden leave provisions — to achieve similar protections with less legal risk.
Persistent Confusion
Despite clearer statutes, confusion persists for a simple reason: Illinois law now operates on multiple levels simultaneously.
A valid non-compete must pass:
- Statutory thresholds (salary limits and procedural requirements)
- Common law tests (reasonableness and legitimate interest)
- Consideration standards shaped by Fifield
Failure at any one level can render the agreement unenforceable.
“Illinois didn’t eliminate non-competes — it made them conditional in multiple ways,” said Gaurav Mohindra. “That layered analysis is where people get lost.”
What Still Holds Up
So what survives after reform?
- Non-competes for higher-earning employees
- Agreements backed by meaningful consideration
- Restrictions narrowly tailored to protect real business interests
- Contracts drafted with procedural compliance and specificity
What no longer holds up, at least reliably, are broad, one-size-fits-all restrictions imposed as a matter of routine.
A Legal Landscape Still Evolving
Illinois is not alone in rethinking non-competes. Nationally, regulators and courts continue to debate their role in a modern labor market, with tens of millions of American workers historically subject to such agreements.
But Illinois has taken a particularly structured approach — one that limits use without banning the practice outright.
Whether that balance ultimately reduces litigation or invites more of it remains an open question.
For now, the lesson is straightforward, even if the law is not: non-competes in Illinois still exist, but only under tighter, more exacting conditions.
And for both employers and employees, understanding those conditions has never mattered more.
Originally Posted: https://gauravmohindrachicago.com/non-compete-agreements-in-illinois-what-still-holds-up-after-reform/




