We guide founder-led owners through the deal and the key protections that matter. Our focus is practical. We cut to the terms that preserve value and limit risk.

When preparing to sell, a clear non-compete agreement often anchors the transaction. It protects goodwill and makes the sale more attractive to buyers.

We explain how package costs scale with deal size — from about $80,000 on a $1,000,000 purchase to roughly $1,130,000 at the $100,000,000 level. That framing helps you weigh protection against price.

Pragmatic counsel. Real numbers. Faster clarity. We help you document obligations so both seller and buyer know what to expect. That reduces surprises and keeps the sale on track.

Key Takeaways

Understanding the Role of a Non-Compete Agreement

A clear post-sale restraint protects value and eases transition. We view these terms as a shield that preserves goodwill and the buyer’s customer base. Careful drafting makes the sale more predictable for both parties.

non-compete

Definition and Purpose

A non-compete defines where and for how long the former owner must refrain from competing. It stops an immediate scramble for clients and safeguards the information and relationships the buyer acquired.

Types of Restrictions

Restrictions vary by scope. They can limit activity by industry, set a geographic area, or define a strict time frame in years.

Practical note: Courts in several states balance reasonableness. They allow restraints that protect legitimate goodwill but strike down overly broad terms. That judicial lens matters when you set terms that preserve long-term value.

Protecting Business Goodwill During a Sale

Buyers pay for continuity; restraints preserve the value they expect to receive. Protecting goodwill is the primary reason to include a non-compete clause when selling business assets.

When you transfer assets, expressly listing goodwill in the contract keeps the buyer business safe from immediate competitive threats. That clarity encourages higher offers.

protect business goodwill

In local markets, relationships often represent the largest asset. A short, focused restraint keeps customers and staff connected through transition.

Without these protections, competition can quickly erode value. Buyers may be left owning little more than equipment and leasehold improvements.

For practical enforcement tips, see our guide on non-compete enforceable.

Legal Enforceability of a Sell Business Non Compete Agreement

State law controls whether a post-sale restraint is enforceable. Courts read statutes and cases to decide if terms protect goodwill or overreach. We focus on practical points that matter at closing.

legal enforceability non-compete

The Role of State Statutes

In Texas, the Texas Covenants Not to Compete Act requires that any restraint be ancillary to an otherwise enforceable contract. Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 15.50(a) also asks for limits on time, geographic area, and scope of activity.

Court decisions matter. Chandler v. Mastercraft recognized goodwill protection as a valid purpose. Bandera Drilling warns that failing to list goodwill explicitly risks invalidation. Oliver shows a missing time limit is not always fatal.

California generally bars post-employment restrictions but carves out a sale exception under Cal. Bus. & Profs. Code § 16600–16602.5. That difference underscores why parties must tailor terms to the state that governs the sale.

For drafting checks and buyer-side tactics, see our guide buy-side M&A strategies.

Drafting Reasonable Terms for Your Sale

Clear, narrow restraints protect the value a buyer pays for and keep transitions smooth. We focus on practical limits that survive judicial review and preserve goodwill. Drafting is an exercise in balance.

drafting reasonable terms non-compete

Defining Time Frames

We recommend one to three years in most cases. That range matches common judicial expectations and protects customer relationships without unduly limiting the owner.

Establishing Geographic Scope

Keep the area to where current customers live or where services are offered. Broad, state‑wide bans often trigger scrutiny. Match scope to real market reach.

Limiting Scope of Activity

Avoid industry-wide prohibitions in the employer-employee context. Target activity that would harm the buyer’s purchased goodwill or use of confidential information.

Practical checklist:

TermTypical RangeWhy it matters
Time1–3 yearsProtects goodwill while staying reasonable
AreaLocal/RadiusAligns with customer footprint
ScopeServices soldPrevents overbroad restrictions

Tip: Both buyer and seller should collaborate early. For practice-level framing, see our guide on the non-compete practice sale.

Balancing Buyer and Seller Interests

A fair restraint must balance the buyer’s need for continuity with the seller’s right to move on. That balance keeps negotiations focused on value rather than leverage. We frame terms so both parties see the restraint as protection, not punishment.

When a buyer would face immediate competition, a clear, narrow contract provides security. It protects customers and preserves goodwill while allowing the seller to retain professional freedom after the sale.

balancing buyer and seller interests

“Reasonable terms speed closings and reduce post-closing disputes.”

PriorityTypical ApproachBenefit
Buyer protectionShort, defined area and activity limitsStabilizes revenue after closing
Seller rightsLimited duration and carve-outs for unrelated workPreserves professional options
Mutual clarityExplicit definitions of customers and goodwillFewer disputes post-sale

We help parties draft terms that reflect those trade-offs. For practical drafting guidance, see our note on how to structure a non-compete in a. The right framing keeps deals clean and preserves value for both buyer and seller.

Conclusion

Practical, narrow restraints shorten disputes and keep buyers confident at closing.

When you plan an exit, protect goodwill with clear, reasonable terms tied to price and time. We advise limits that reflect customer reach, lender needs, and likely court views.

Keep terms defensible: a two- to five-year frame should match the deal size and area of operations. Consult counsel and tax advisors so allocation and duration align with state law and tax consequences.

For a concise primer on common structures and ranges, see our guide on non-compete agreements. We help founders and buyers close with confidence and preserve value.

FAQ

What is a non-compete and why include one when you sell a company?

A non-compete is a contract clause that limits an owner’s ability to start or join a rival after a transaction. Buyers use it to protect customers, confidential information, and goodwill that travel with the transfer. Sellers accept reasonable restraints to preserve value and smooth closing conditions.

What types of restrictions are common in these clauses?

Typical limits cover time, geography, and activity. Time frames commonly range from one to five years. Geographic limits focus on the buyer’s market footprint. Activity limits define what work the former owner may not perform or what services they may not offer.

How do we define an enforceable time frame?

Courts expect reasonableness. Shorter terms are easier to uphold and often sufficient to protect customer relationships while allowing the seller to resume work later. We recommend aligning duration with industry norms and the transaction’s value.

What geographic scope will courts accept?

Reasonableness matters. Courts look at the buyer’s market, customer locations, and where the seller actually operated. Narrow, market-aligned territories are more defensible than sweeping, nationwide bans.

How should the activity scope be limited?

Tie prohibitions to specific services, products, or client types that replicate the transferred operations. Broad, catch-all bans invite challenge. Precision protects the buyer while preserving the seller’s right to work in unrelated areas.

How do state laws affect enforceability?

States vary widely. Some enforce restraints with judicial scrutiny; others, like California, largely void them in employment contexts. We always review applicable statutes and precedent before recommending terms.

How can sellers balance protecting future income with buyer protections?

Negotiate shorter terms, carve-outs for passive investments, and geographic or client-based exclusions. Consider tiered restrictions tied to escrow payments or earn-outs so protection declines as the buyer’s risk drops.

What alternatives exist if a court might strike down a restraint?

Use confidentiality clauses, customer non-solicitation terms, and tailored assignment of intellectual property. Often these measures deliver practical protection without the legal risk of a broad restraint.

How does a non-solicit differ from a restraint on competition?

A non-solicit bars approaching or doing business with specific customers or employees. It’s narrower than a general restraint and usually more likely to survive judicial review when carefully drafted.

Can an overly broad clause reduce transaction value?

Yes. Buyers asking for sweeping limits can stall deals or depress bids. Reasonable, market-focused terms preserve value and close deals faster. We counsel calibrated protections that buyers accept and courts respect.

Should the clause cover former employees as well as owners?

Often yes. Key staff movements affect customer retention. But terms for employees must reflect employment-law limits and vary by role and seniority to remain enforceable.

How do we draft a clause that survives judicial scrutiny?

Be specific. Limit duration, territory, and activities to what the buyer legitimately needs to protect. Include consideration details, carve-outs for passive investments, and linkage to confidential information or trade secrets.

What role does consideration play in enforceability?

Consideration—payment or contractual benefits—anchors enforceability. In a sale, purchase proceeds typically suffice. Where restraints are added later, additional consideration may be required under state law.

How can buyers protect customer lists and trade secrets beyond restraints?

Combine enforceable confidentiality clauses, robust IP assignments, and targeted non-solicitation terms. Implement access controls and post-closing transition support from the seller to preserve relationships.

When should we involve counsel during negotiations?

Early. State law nuances, industry norms, and deal structure affect drafting. Early counsel prevents overreach, speeds negotiation, and preserves deal value for both sides.

Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side deal origination firm headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming. CT Acquisitions sources founder-led businesses for 75+ private equity firms, family offices, and search funds across the U.S. lower middle market ($1M–$25M EBITDA). Christoph writes about M&A from the perspective of someone on the phone with both sides of the deal table every week. Connect on LinkedIn · Get in touch

CT Acquisitions is a trade name of CT Strategic Partners LLC, headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming.
30 N Gould St, Ste N, Sheridan, WY 82801, USA · (307) 487-7149 · Contact





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