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Employee Retention Agreement

Drafts enforceable U.S. Employee Retention Agreements (ERAs) for M&A, restructurings, and leadership transitions. Covers cash/equity/hybrid incentives, 409A compliance, termination scenarios, change-in-control triggers, restrictive covenants, and 280G golden parachute analysis. Trigger when drafting retention bonus agreements, executive compensation packages, or key-employee continuity contracts for business transitions.

ID: us.employment.employee-retention-agreement Version: 0.1.0 License: Apache-2.0 Author: CaseMark Language: en Added: 2026-05-27
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Employee Retention Agreement

Drafts a binding ERA balancing employer talent-continuity needs with enforceable, fair terms for key employees during critical business transitions.

Prerequisites

Collect before drafting:

  1. Employee data — legal name, title, hire date, base salary, bonus structure, equity holdings
  2. Employer data — legal entity name, state of incorporation, principal place of business, parent/subsidiary relationships
  3. Existing agreements — employment agreement, offer letter, equity plan docs, prior severance/retention/restrictive covenant agreements
  4. Transaction context — term sheet, board resolutions, retention budget, anticipated closing date (if M&A)
  5. Jurisdiction — employee's primary work state (drives covenant enforceability)
  6. Incentive parameters — cash amount/formula, equity type/amount, vesting schedule, retention period dates

Drafting Workflow

1. Recitals

  • State business rationale (M&A integration, leadership transition, competitive threat)
  • Frame retention payment as new consideration beyond existing duties (enforceability requirement)
  • Acknowledge employee's unique skills and replacement cost

2. Retention Incentive Structure

Element Requirements
Cash (fixed) Gross amount; withholding acknowledgment; installment dates
Cash (formula) Salary multiple or metric with calculation methodology
Equity Reference governing plan; award type; attach grant agreement as exhibit
Hybrid Define components separately; address vesting timeline interaction

409A compliance:

  • Employer withholds federal, state/local, FICA; employee bears ultimate tax liability
  • Classify as: (a) short-term deferral (paid within 2½ months of vesting year-end), or (b) compliant 409A deferred compensation with fixed schedule
  • Define "separation from service" per 409A (reduction to <50% of prior 36-month average)
  • Specified employees (public company key executives): include 6-month payment delay on separation-triggered payments

3. Retention Period

  • Set exact start and end dates (not ranges)
  • Define "continuous employment" — address FMLA, paid leave, STD (counted vs. tolled)
  • Specify: employed through final day vs. on a date certain
  • If performance conditions apply: state objective criteria, evaluator, evaluation timing, dispute process

4. Termination Scenarios

Scenario Default Treatment
Voluntary resignation Full forfeiture; specify notice period
For Cause Forfeit all unvested (optionally vested-but-unpaid)
Without Cause Pro-rata or accelerated vesting (specify formula)
Constructive Discharge Treat as without Cause; define triggers (duty reduction, >X% comp cut, relocation >Y miles)
Death/Disability Pay vested to estate; consider accelerating unvested
Change in Control Single-trigger (transaction accelerates) vs. double-trigger (transaction + qualifying termination)

Cause definition (non-exhaustive): felony conviction, willful misconduct/gross negligence, fiduciary breach, unauthorized confidential disclosure, material policy violations.

5. Restrictive Covenants

Covenant Scope Jurisdiction Notes
Confidentiality Trade secrets: indefinite; other: specified term Uniform across states
Non-compete Geographic area + 6–24 months by seniority CA, ND, OK: prohibited; FL, TX: enforceable if reasonable
Non-solicit (employees) 12–24 months Broadly enforceable; tailor to seniority
Non-solicit (clients) Material-contact clients; 12–24 months Tailor to actual exposure
Non-disparagement Mutual; carve out legally required truthful statements
  • Include severability/reformation clause for court narrowing of overbroad terms
  • Some jurisdictions void (rather than reform) unreasonable covenants — flag for state-specific review

6. 280G Golden Parachute Analysis

When ERA + other change-in-control payments may exceed 3× base amount:

  • Gross-up: employer covers 20% excise tax (senior executives with leverage)
  • Cutback: reduce to 2.99× base amount to avoid excise (typical default)
  • Specify calculator (independent accountants), binding effect, and timing

7. Standard Provisions

  • Integration: supersedes prior retention arrangements; supplements (not replaces) employment agreement
  • Amendment: written, signed by both parties
  • Assignment: employee non-assignable; employer may assign to M&A successor assuming obligations
  • Notice: certified mail, overnight courier, or confirmed email; specify addresses and deemed-receipt
  • Dispute resolution: litigation or arbitration (JAMS/AAA); carve out injunctive relief for covenant breaches
  • Governing law: employer or employee state; note mandatory employment protections may override
  • Counterparts/e-signatures: ESIGN Act compliant

8. Representations & Signature

Employee represents: no conflicting prior-employer covenants; voluntary execution with counsel opportunity; awareness of restrictive covenant scope; disclosure of existing restrictions.

Signatures: employer authorized officer (per bylaws/board resolution) with title and date; employee with printed name, title, date. Attach all exhibits (grant agreements, vesting schedules, milestones).

Pitfalls & Checks

  • Verify signing authority — unauthorized signatures may render agreement voidable
  • 409A safe harbor — default to short-term deferral when classification is uncertain
  • Non-compete state check — always confirm work state; flag CA non-competes as unenforceable [VERIFY current state law]
  • 280G — flag for tax counsel review on any M&A-related ERA with senior executives
  • New consideration — frame retention payment as consideration beyond existing duties; critical for enforceability
  • Drafting style — defined terms (capitalized at first use), numbered sections, active voice; no archaisms

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