Attorney for Employment Contract Review

Signing an employment contract is one of the most consequential decisions in your professional life. Whether you have just received an offer from a Manhattan investment bank, a Brooklyn tech startup, or a Midtown law firm, the document in front of you will govern your compensation, your career mobility, your intellectual property, and potentially your ability to earn a living after you leave. A thorough review by a qualified New York City employment attorney before you sign can prevent years of costly disputes and protect rights you may not even realize are at stake.

Our employment contract review practice serves executives, professionals, and employees at every level across the five boroughs. We help clients understand exactly what they are agreeing to, identify problematic provisions, and negotiate stronger terms — often securing meaningful improvements to compensation, equity, severance, and post-employment restrictions.

Why Employment Contract Review Matters in New York

New York employment law is uniquely complex. The state and city have layered protections under the New York Labor Law, the New York State Human Rights Law, the New York City Human Rights Law, the Wage Theft Prevention Act, and numerous regulations governing wage payment, equity compensation, and restrictive covenants. At the same time, New York remains an at-will employment state, meaning that without a written contract providing otherwise, your employer can generally terminate you at any time for any lawful reason.

This combination makes the written contract enormously important. The contract is often the only document that limits your employer's discretion, guarantees your compensation, and defines what happens if the relationship ends. Provisions that seem standard or boilerplate can have dramatic consequences. A poorly drafted bonus clause can cost you tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars. An overly broad non-compete can prevent you from working in your industry. A weak severance provision can leave you without income during a job search.

Types of Employment Agreements We Review

Our attorneys regularly review and negotiate a wide range of employment documents for clients throughout New York City:

Executive Employment Agreements

Senior executives — C-suite officers, managing directors, partners, and other leadership — typically receive detailed contracts addressing base salary, annual and long-term incentive compensation, equity grants, change-in-control protections, severance, indemnification, and restrictive covenants. We help executives evaluate these complex agreements and negotiate terms commensurate with their value to the organization.

Offer Letters

Even brief offer letters can contain binding terms regarding at-will status, compensation structure, sign-on bonuses (often subject to clawback), and incorporation of employee handbooks or other policies. A short document does not mean low stakes.

Equity and Compensation Agreements

Stock option agreements, restricted stock unit (RSU) grants, profits interests, and phantom equity plans each have distinct vesting, taxation, and forfeiture implications. We help clients understand acceleration triggers, post-termination exercise windows, and the impact of leaving voluntarily versus being terminated.

Restrictive Covenant Agreements

Non-competition, non-solicitation, non-disclosure, and non-disparagement clauses are heavily scrutinized under New York law. New York courts apply the well-established BDO Seidman test, requiring restrictive covenants to be reasonable in duration and geographic scope, no greater than necessary to protect the employer's legitimate interests, not unduly burdensome on the employee, and not harmful to the public.

Severance and Separation Agreements

When employment ends, employees are often presented with separation agreements offering severance in exchange for releases of claims. These documents almost always favor the employer and frequently can be improved through negotiation.

Independent Contractor and Consulting Agreements

Misclassification is a significant risk in New York. We review contractor agreements to assess proper classification and protect against unanticipated liability.

Critical Provisions We Examine

A comprehensive contract review goes well beyond reading the document. We analyze each provision in context and identify both legal risks and negotiation opportunities. Key areas of focus include:

Compensation Structure

  • Base salary, raise mechanisms, and review cycles
  • Bonus eligibility, calculation methods, and discretion standards
  • Conditions for earning and being paid bonuses (particularly whether bonuses are forfeited if you leave before payout)
  • Commission structures and chargeback provisions
  • Equity vesting schedules, cliffs, and acceleration upon termination or change in control
  • Compliance with New York's Wage Theft Prevention Act notice requirements

Termination and Severance

  • Definitions of "Cause" — these definitions can be drafted broadly enough to deprive you of severance
  • "Good Reason" provisions allowing the employee to resign with severance benefits
  • Notice periods and garden leave
  • Severance amounts, continuation of health benefits, and treatment of unvested equity
  • Conditions to receiving severance, including release requirements

Restrictive Covenants

  • Geographic scope — overly broad geographic restrictions are frequently unenforceable
  • Duration — courts generally view restrictions beyond one year skeptically
  • Scope of restricted activities and definition of "competitive" businesses
  • Customer non-solicitation versus employee non-solicitation
  • Carve-outs for general advertising, passive investments, or pre-existing relationships
  • Consideration supporting the restriction

Intellectual Property and Confidentiality

  • Assignment of inventions and works created during employment
  • Carve-outs for inventions developed on personal time without company resources
  • Scope and duration of confidentiality obligations
  • Required disclosures under the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act

Dispute Resolution

  • Mandatory arbitration clauses and class action waivers
  • Choice of law and venue provisions
  • Attorneys' fees provisions
  • Carve-outs for injunctive relief

New York-Specific Considerations

Several features of New York law shape how we approach contract review:

Restrictive covenant scrutiny. New York courts will refuse to enforce restrictive covenants that are unreasonable, and they may apply a "blue pencil" approach to narrow overbroad provisions — though employees should never rely on judicial rewriting as a defense strategy. Recent legislative attention has further increased focus on the reasonableness and necessity of non-compete agreements.

Pay transparency. Under New York City and New York State pay transparency laws, employers must disclose salary ranges in job postings. This information can be valuable leverage during negotiation.

Wage payment frequency and form. The New York Labor Law imposes specific requirements on how and when employees must be paid, including timing for commissions and earned bonuses. Contract provisions inconsistent with these requirements may be unenforceable.

Discrimination and retaliation protections. The New York State and New York City Human Rights Laws provide some of the broadest employee protections in the country. Releases and waivers in employment contracts cannot waive certain prospective rights, and confidentiality provisions covering harassment or discrimination claims are subject to specific statutory limitations.

Choice of law clauses. Contracts sometimes attempt to apply another state's law to a New York employee. Whether such provisions will be honored depends on a careful analysis of the relevant facts and competing public policies.

Our Contract Review Process

When you engage our firm to review an employment contract, we follow a structured process designed to deliver clear, actionable advice:

  1. Initial consultation. We discuss your role, the opportunity, your priorities, and any leverage points such as competing offers or unvested equity at your current employer.
  2. Document analysis. We perform a detailed legal review of the contract and any incorporated documents, including equity plans, bonus plans, and employee handbooks.
  3. Written summary and recommendations. You receive a clear written analysis identifying problematic provisions, explaining their practical impact, and prioritizing negotiation targets.
  4. Negotiation strategy. We work with you to develop a negotiation approach — whether you wish to negotiate directly with the employer using our advice behind the scenes, or have us communicate with the employer's counsel.
  5. Markup and counterproposals. Where appropriate, we prepare a marked-up version of the contract with proposed revisions and supporting rationale.
  6. Final review. Before you sign, we confirm that the final document accurately reflects what was negotiated.

When You Should Engage an Attorney

The ideal time to engage an attorney is as soon as you receive a written offer or proposed agreement — and before you sign anything. Common situations where representation is particularly valuable include:

  • Accepting a senior or executive position
  • Receiving a contract containing restrictive covenants
  • Negotiating an offer that includes equity, deferred compensation, or complex bonus arrangements
  • Joining a company while subject to a non-compete or non-solicit from a prior employer
  • Reviewing a separation or severance agreement
  • Considering whether to accept a promotion that comes with new contract terms
  • Transitioning between employee and independent contractor status

Many employees believe that contracts are non-negotiable. In our experience, this is rarely true — particularly for experienced professionals, executives, and employees with specialized skills. Even when base salary is fixed, meaningful improvements can often be achieved in severance, equity acceleration, the definition of Cause, the scope of restrictive covenants, and other terms.

Contact Our New York City Employment Contract Attorneys

Your employment contract will shape your career and your finances for years to come. Before you sign, take the time to understand what you are agreeing to and what improvements may be available. Our attorneys offer prompt, confidential contract review for clients throughout New York City and the surrounding region.

Contact our office to schedule a consultation. We will discuss your situation, explain how we can help, and provide a clear understanding of our fees so you can make an informed decision about representation. The investment in a careful contract review is almost always far smaller than the financial and professional consequences of signing an unfavorable agreement.

You can contact us by phone at 212-233-1233 or by email at [email protected].

Attorney Albert Goodwin

About the Author

Albert Goodwin Esq. is a licensed New York attorney with over 18 years of courtroom experience. His extensive knowledge and expertise make him well-qualified to write authoritative articles on a wide range of legal topics. He can be reached at 212-233-1233 or [email protected].

Albert Goodwin gave interviews to and appeared on the following media outlets:

ProPublica Forbes ABC CNBC CBS NBC News Discovery Wall Street Journal NPR

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