0

Many companies have so-called "anti-poaching" clauses in job contracts to prevent employees that leave from referring their old colleagues.

I heard some large tech companies have got in trouble with anti-trust agencies for backroom anti-solicitation agreements.

Are these clauses legal and enforceable within the European Union?

1 Answer 1

1

Yes, so long as they do not overreach

Please note this is a common law answer, it may not be applicable in civil law jurisdictions like most of the EU.

Like non-compete clauses and non-disclosure agreements, non-solicitation agreements can be unenforceable restraints of trade if they are not reasonable.

Reasonable in this context means they are narrowly focused to protect legitimate business interests. A business does not have a “legitimate business interest” in preventing their competitors from poaching their employees in general - a business does not have a right to keep their employees. Therefore, analysis of the agreement must focus specifically on how an ex-employee can “unfairly” solicit compared to an unrelated corporate headhunter.

In practice, this makes them hard to enforce but they are not prohibited.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .