As we reported last month, Virginia lawmakers passed Senate Bill 170 imposing additional restrictions on employee noncompetes in the Commonwealth. On April 13, 2026, Governor Abigail D. Spanberger signed Senate Bill 170 (“the Act”) into law. The Act will take effect July 1, 2026 and will prohibit enforcement of a noncompete if the employer discharges the employee without cause and does not provide the employee with severance benefits or other monetary payment. The Act applies to agreements entered into, amended, or renewed on or after July 1, 2026.
On July 17, 2024, Governor Josh Shapiro approved Pennsylvania’s first statute imposing limitations on the use of noncompetes in the state. The Fair Contracting for Health Care Practitioners Act (the “Act”) prohibits the enforcement of certain noncompete covenants entered into by health care practitioners and employers. Here are the key points of the Act:
- The Act’s effective date is January 1, 2025.
- Subject to certain exceptions, a “noncompete covenant” entered into after January 1, 2025 is “deemed contrary to the public policy and is void and unenforceable by an employer.”
- A “noncompete covenant” is defined as an “agreement that is entered into between an employer and a health care practitioner in this Commonwealth which has the effect of impeding the ability of the health care practitioner to continue treating patients or accepting new patients, either practicing independently or in the employment of a competing employer after the term of employment.”
This year, California was one of many states to enact legislation restricting noncompetes. California has long had the strictest noncompete law, and employee noncompetes are already void under California Business and Professions Code § 16600 (“Section 16600”). On September 1, 2023, California passed new legislation (“SB 699”) that further broadens Section 16600 and provides employees with new legal remedies.
The Current Law
Unless one of the narrow statutory exceptions applies, Section 16600 provides that any contract restraining a person from ...
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Recent Updates
- Tennessee Enacts New Restrictions on Noncompete Agreements
- Maine Restricts Noncompetes for Health Care Practitioners
- Utah Bans Post-Employment Noncompetes for Healthcare Workers Effective May 6, 2026
- Garden Leave Provisions in Employment Agreements: 2026 Update
- 50-State Noncompete Survey Updated Amid Growing State Restrictions