Are Noncompete Agreements Enforceable In Georgia?

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

We're committed to your privacy. For more information, check out our Privacy Policy.

Quick Summary

Georgia noncompete agreements are still enforceable in 2026, but the federal regulatory environment shifted in 2024, and business owners who haven’t revisited their agreements since then may be working with documents that no longer protect them the way they expect. The short version: employment noncompetes face mounting legal uncertainty at the federal level, while business-context noncompetes tied to a sale of a business or a franchise agreement remain on firmer ground under Georgia law.

The Georgia Restrictive Covenant Act, What It Requires

Georgia has had a specialized statute governing noncompete agreements in the employment context since 2011: the Restrictive Covenant Act, O.C.G.A. Section 13-8-50 et seq. It replaced a prior framework that made Georgia noncompetes extremely difficult to enforce, and it gave businesses meaningful tools to protect legitimate interests.

Under the RCA, a Georgia noncompete must meet three requirements to be enforceable: reasonable duration, reasonable geographic scope, and connection to a legitimate business interest. "Legitimate business interests" means things like trade secrets, confidential business information, customer relationships, or specialized training the business provided.

The statute allows courts to modify an overly broad noncompete rather than void it entirely, a reform that made Georgia significantly more business-friendly than before. But "the court can fix it" is not a strategy. Agreements that are clearly overbroad still create litigation, still cost money to defend, and still create uncertainty about whether your protections are actually in place.

What Happened At The Federal Level In 2024

In April 2024, the Federal Trade Commission issued a rule that would have banned most noncompete agreements in employment nationwide. The rule was challenged in federal court, and in August 2024 a Texas federal judge vacated the rule, meaning it never went into effect.

The litigation is ongoing, and the legal status of any future federal noncompete restrictions will depend on court rulings and enforcement priorities. For now, employment noncompetes remain governed by state law in Georgia.

But the FTC rule, even though blocked, shifted the conversation. It put noncompete enforceability on the radar of employees and their attorneys in ways it wasn’t before. Businesses with noncompetes drafted years ago and never reviewed should assume those agreements will face more scrutiny if challenged.

What Still Works, And What Doesn’t

Duration: Georgia courts have in most situations been receptive to noncompete periods of up to two years for employees. Longer periods require stronger justification.

Geographic scope: The scope must match the employee’s actual reach within the business. A statewide noncompete for an employee who only serves the Atlanta metro is overbroad. The geographic limitation should reflect the territory where the employee actually had customer or market contact.

Role specificity: Blanket noncompetes that apply identically to every employee, from a senior executive to a warehouse worker, raise enforceability concerns. The agreement should be built for to the employee’s role and access to protected information.

Consideration: A noncompete signed at the start of employment is in most situations supported by the job offer itself. Mid-employment noncompetes, where an existing employee is suddenly asked to sign one, require additional consideration in Georgia. A promise of continued employment alone may not be enough.

Business Sale Context Versus Employment Context

This is an important distinction many business owners overlook.

Noncompetes tied to the sale of a business, where the seller agrees not to compete with the buyer after the transaction, are treated very differently in Georgia than employment noncompetes. Courts apply a much more favorable standard to sale-of-business covenants because the parties are negotiating at arm’s length and the seller is receiving substantial consideration for the restriction.

If you’ve sold a business and signed a noncompete, or if you’re acquiring a business and want enforceable restrictions on the seller, the rules are different from what governs your employee agreements. An attorney familiar with Georgia business law should review any transaction-related noncompete before it’s signed.

What To Do Now

Review any noncompete agreement that has not been looked at since 2022. The federal developments, even the blocked FTC rule, have shifted how these agreements are challenged. Agreements written to meet the minimum legal standard may not hold up under increased scrutiny.

Make sure your noncompetes are role-specific and proportional. The geographic scope and duration should reflect the actual competitive risk, not just be set at the maximum the statute allows.

If you’re adding noncompetes for new hires, have them reviewed before deployment. Boilerplate agreements from generic online services frequently fail to meet Georgia’s specific statutory requirements.

MacGregor Lyon Business Attorneys advises Atlanta business owners on employment agreements, restrictive covenants, and business contract disputes. If your noncompetes haven’t been reviewed recently, now is the right time.

Schedule a free consultation. Call (404) 688-5964.

glennl-lyon-low-grey-block

On Behalf of MacGregor Lyon

Principal Partner

Glenn M. Lyon is a distinguished business attorney recognized for his exemplary service to small and medium-sized, privately-held businesses, and start-up companies.

Startup founders reviewing SAFE notes and early-stage funding documents

SAFE Notes And Early-Stage Funding: What Atlanta Startups Need To Know

SAFE notes and early-stage equity deals look simple on the surface. For Atlanta startups, the fine print determines who controls the company and how much founders are left with. Here's what to get right before you sign.
Atlanta business owner preparing legal documents before selling a company

How Small Business Owners Should Prepare Legally Before Selling A Company

Most small business owners start talking to buyers before their legal house is in order. The problems discovered in due diligence cost money, time, and deal terms. Here's how to prepare before the process starts.