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At-Will Employment Offer Letter

Drafts a U.S. at-will employment offer letter with unambiguous at-will language, FLSA-compliant compensation terms, benefits disclaimers, and conditions precedent. Use when extending formal job offers, issuing written employment offers, or drafting offer letters for new hires in U.S. jurisdictions.

ID: us.employment.at-will-employment-offer-letter Version: 0.1.0 License: Apache-2.0 Author: CaseMark Language: en Added: 2026-05-27
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At-Will Employment Offer Letter

Drafts a formal U.S. offer letter communicating all material employment terms while preserving at-will status and preventing implied-contract liability.

Required Inputs

  1. Employer — legal entity name, address, authorized signatory name and title
  2. Candidate — full legal name, mailing address
  3. Position — title, department, supervisor, start date, work location, remote/travel requirements
  4. Compensation — base salary or hourly rate, pay frequency, FLSA classification (exempt/non-exempt)
  5. Variable pay — bonus, commission, or incentive details (if any)
  6. Benefits — health, dental, vision, 401(k), PTO, sick leave, eligibility waiting period
  7. Conditions precedent — background check, drug screen, reference check, I-9, required agreements (NDA, arbitration, non-compete)
  8. Acceptance deadline — typically 5–10 business days from letter date

Letter Structure

1. Header

Company letterhead, date, candidate name and address in formal business letter format.

2. Opening

State at-will status immediately in the opening sentence:

"We are pleased to offer you at-will employment as [Job Title]..."

No language suggesting guaranteed duration, job security, or continued employment.

3. Position Details

Include: job title, department, reports-to, start date, work location, travel/relocation requirements. Add duties reservation clause:

"Duties may be modified at the Company's discretion as business needs evolve."

4. Compensation

  • Base salary: annual figure + per-period breakdown (e.g., "$85,000/yr, paid bi-weekly at $3,269.23")
  • Hourly rate (non-exempt): state rate and standard schedule
  • Bonus/commission: label as discretionary, subject to company policy, contingent on continued employment and performance
  • Benefits: list coverages with eligibility date; include: "Benefits are governed by official plan documents, which control in case of any discrepancy and are subject to modification."

5. At-Will Clause

This clause is legally critical — do not soften or omit:

"Your employment with [Company Name] is at-will, meaning that either you or the Company may terminate the employment relationship at any time, for any reason or no reason, with or without cause, and with or without notice. No one other than the [CEO/President] has authority to alter this at-will relationship or enter into any agreement for employment for a specified period, and any such modification must be in writing and signed by the [CEO/President]."

If a probationary/introductory period applies, never imply employment becomes "permanent" after it ends.

6. Conditions Precedent

List all applicable conditions (background check, drug screening, reference verification, Form I-9, execution of named agreements). Reference separate agreements by name but do not incorporate their terms into the letter.

Include integration clause:

"This letter, together with any agreements referenced herein, constitutes the entire agreement regarding employment terms and supersedes all prior discussions or representations."

7. Acceptance and Signature

  • State deadline: "This offer expires at [time] on [date] if not accepted."
  • Instruct candidate to sign, date, and return via specified method
  • Note offer may be withdrawn if conditions precedent are not met
  • Include company signatory block (name, title, company) and candidate acceptance block with signature, date, and printed name lines

Pitfalls and Checks

  • Never use language implying job security, guaranteed tenure, or "permanent" status
  • Never name anyone other than the designated officer as having authority to modify at-will status
  • Non-exempt employees: confirm hourly rate and overtime eligibility comply with FLSA and applicable state wage laws
  • State-specific: verify wage disclosure, at-will disclaimer, and non-compete enforceability rules — California, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Oklahoma have significant restrictions
  • Keep benefits high-level; defer detail to plan documents
  • Do not incorporate terms of separate agreements (NDA, arbitration) into the letter body
  • Target 2–3 pages; professional tone, plain language

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