Change in Control Agreement
Drafts U.S. executive Change in Control Agreements with double-trigger severance, equity acceleration, and 280G/409A compliance. Use when drafting or negotiating CIC agreements, change in control protections, executive severance in M&A, or golden parachute provisions.
Change in Control Agreement
Drafts a tax-compliant U.S. executive CIC agreement with double-trigger structure, precise statutory definitions, severance benefits, and parachute payment protections.
Quick Start
Gather before drafting:
- Executive — name, title, base salary, target bonus, outstanding equity (type, vesting, performance metrics)
- Company — legal name, state of incorporation, entity type, public/private status
- Existing agreements — employment agreement, equity plan docs, prior CIC/severance agreements
- Deal terms — severance multiple, protection period, 280G treatment, benefits continuation period
- Benchmarking (if available) — peer agreements, proxy disclosures, comp committee guidelines
Core Workflow
- [ ] Collect executive profile, company info, and existing agreements
- [ ] Define key terms (Change in Control, Cause, Good Reason, Qualifying Termination)
- [ ] Set severance benefits (cash, equity acceleration, COBRA, pro-rated bonus)
- [ ] Configure 280G approach (No Gross-Up / Best Net / Full Gross-Up)
- [ ] Add 409A compliance provisions (separation from service, specified employee delay)
- [ ] Draft release conditions (OWBPA-compliant consideration + revocation periods)
- [ ] Include general provisions (governing law, dispute resolution, successor assignment)
- [ ] Verify all placeholders resolved and cross-references consistent
Article Specifications
Article I — Definitions
- Change in Control: define ownership threshold, merger/consolidation test, and all-or-substantially-all-assets sale test. Include board-turnover test only if needed by the deal context.
- Cause: include felony/plea trigger, willful failure after written notice plus cure period, materially injurious conduct, fiduciary-duty breach, and material policy violation with cure where applicable.
- Good Reason: include material duty diminution, compensation reduction not broadly applied, and relocation threshold. Include notice/cure/election windows.
- Qualifying Termination: without Cause or for Good Reason during the protection period.
- Protection Period: usually 12-24 months post-CIC; include pre-CIC tail only if requested.
Article II — Severance Benefits
- Cash severance: set multiple against base salary plus target annual bonus.
- Pro-rated bonus: specify target vs actual metric and payment timing.
- Equity acceleration: define covered award types and performance-award vesting level.
- Exercise window: specify post-termination option/SAR exercise period.
- Benefits continuation: define COBRA or equivalent duration and end conditions.
- Mitigation/offset: state whether mitigation is required and whether outside earnings offset benefits.
Article III — Conditions to Benefits
- Release requirement: include execution and non-revocation condition with OWBPA-compliant timelines.
- Release scope and carve-outs: list included claims and preserved rights.
- Property return and transition cooperation: include practical handoff obligations and expense reimbursement terms.
Article IV — Section 280G/4999
- Select one approach: No Gross-Up, Best Net (cutback), or Full Gross-Up.
- If cutback applies, define reduction order (for example, cash first, then equity; 409A-covered amounts first).
- Specify independent calculator (accounting firm or tax counsel), allocation process, and finality standard.
Article V — Section 409A
- Treat each installment/payment as a separate payment for 409A purposes.
- Tie payment triggers to 409A separation-from-service definitions.
- Include specified-employee delay mechanics for applicable public-company executives.
- Include reimbursement timing/non-liquidation guardrails and a compliant savings clause.
Article VI — General Provisions
- Governing law and venue/dispute-resolution path.
- Successor assumption requirements and assignment limits.
- Supersession hierarchy against prior CIC/severance arrangements.
- Amendment/waiver formalities, severability, notice mechanics, and permitted offset language.
Key Placeholders
| Placeholder | Market Range |
|---|---|
[SEVERANCE MULTIPLE] |
CEO: 2x–3x; C-suite/SVP: 1.5x–2x; other senior: 1x–1.5x |
[PROTECTION PERIOD] |
12–24 months post-CIC |
[PRE-CIC TAIL] |
3–6 months (if included) |
[BENEFITS CONTINUATION] |
12–24 months |
[280G APPROACH] |
No Gross-Up / Best Net / Full Gross-Up |
[PERFORMANCE VEST LEVEL] |
Target / Maximum / Actual through CIC date |
[EXERCISE EXTENSION] |
12–24 months post-termination |
[RELOCATION THRESHOLD] |
35–50 miles |
[GOOD REASON NOTICE] |
60–90 days; cure 30 days; election 30–60 days |
Pitfalls
- Single trigger — avoid for public companies; ISS/Glass Lewis routinely vote against single-trigger equity acceleration
- 280G modeling — run parachute calculations before selecting approach; full gross-up is rarely defensible in new agreements
- 409A — treat each payment as separate; do not rely on short-term deferral exemption for CIC-contingent amounts; use Day-60 payment with two-tax-year rule; apply specified-employee 6-month delay for public company executives
- OWBPA — strictly observe 21-day (under 40) or 45/60-day (40+) consideration periods plus 7-day revocation; non-compliance invalidates ADEA release
- Equity plan override — confirm acceleration and extended exercise provisions expressly supersede conflicting plan/award terms; some plans require separate committee action
- Pre-CIC tail — limit to terminations "at the request of" or "in connection with" the contemplated transaction; avoid overbroad language
- State law — CA, NY, and others restrict non-competes; review local WARN, mini-COBRA, and wage payment requirements separately
No additional documents ship with this skill.
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