Employers seeking to enforce non‑compete Singapore 2026 obligations face a materially altered landscape now that the statutory retirement age has risen to 64 and the re‑employment age to 69, both effective 1 July 2026. These changes, layered on top of the Workplace Fairness Act 2025, reshape the practical calculus for every General Counsel and HR Director who needs to protect trade secrets, client relationships and goodwill when senior employees transition out of, or back into, the workforce. This article provides the litigation‑tested, step‑by‑step guidance that in‑house counsel and SME employers need to preserve and enforce restrictive covenants against retirees and re‑employed older workers, covering the legal tests, common pitfalls, clause redrafts, and an actionable compliance checklist.
The combined effect of higher retirement and re‑employment ages and stronger worker protections under the Workplace Fairness Act 2025 is that more employees will remain on payroll longer, re‑employment offers will be issued more frequently, and the contractual chain underpinning restrictive covenants will be tested at multiple transition points. Employers who fail to address these transitions proactively risk finding that their non‑compete and non‑solicit clauses are unenforceable, either because the original consideration has lapsed, because re‑employment created a new contractual relationship that did not incorporate the restraint, or because a court deems the clause unreasonable in light of the employee’s age and diminished competitive threat.
Five immediate actions for HR and counsel:
Singapore’s retirement and re‑employment framework is governed by the Retirement and Re‑employment Act (RRA). Effective 1 July 2026, the minimum retirement age rises from 63 to 64 and the re‑employment age from 68 to 69. These incremental increases, announced as part of a planned trajectory toward 65 and 70, have a direct bearing on the duration and enforceability of post‑employment restraints. The Workplace Fairness Act 2025, enacted with staggered commencement provisions, strengthens protections against age‑based discrimination and imposes additional procedural obligations when employers make re‑employment decisions.
Under the RRA, an employer must offer re‑employment to an employee who (a) is a Singapore citizen or permanent resident, (b) has served the employer for at least three years, and (c) has satisfactory work performance, as assessed by the employer. The re‑employment obligation now extends to age 69, meaning employers may need to re‑employ individuals for up to five years beyond the retirement age of 64. For employees who turned 63 before 1 July 2026 but have not yet been re‑employed, the MOM re‑employment obligations apply based on the age thresholds prevailing on the date the re‑employment offer falls due.
| Change / Rule | Effective date | Employer effect & immediate action |
|---|---|---|
| Retirement age raised to 64 | 1 July 2026 | More employees remain on payroll longer, review covenants and re‑employment offers for older workers; ensure valid consideration if offering new covenants. |
| Re‑employment age raised to 69 | 1 July 2026 | Broader scope of re‑employment obligations; HR must follow MOM guidance when offering re‑employment; consider effect on post‑employment restraints. |
| Workplace Fairness Act 2025 reforms | 2025 (in force with staggered provisions) | Strengthened worker protections and procedural obligations for employers, document processes and compliance steps when offering re‑employment. |
Singapore follows the common law doctrine of restraint of trade. Post‑employment restrictive covenants, whether styled as non‑compete, non‑solicit or non‑dealing clauses, are prima facie void and unenforceable unless the employer can demonstrate that the restraint is reasonable in all circumstances. The burden of proof lies with the employer, and the court will not rewrite an unreasonable clause to save it.
Key authorities and guidance:
A court will first ask whether the employer has a legitimate protectable interest. Three categories are well established:
For retiring employees, the practical relevance of these interests may be more nuanced. A senior executive with 30 years of client relationships presents a stronger enforcement case than a mid‑level operational manager whose contacts are institutionalised within the company’s CRM. Courts are likely to scrutinise whether the retiree’s connections remain commercially valuable given the individual’s planned exit from the workforce.
The second stage is the most litigated. A clause must be no wider than reasonably necessary to protect the identified interest. Singapore courts assess the following dimensions:
The third stage involves a public‑interest assessment, though this is rarely the decisive factor in employment cases. The court balances the employer’s commercial interests against the employee’s right to earn a livelihood and the public interest in free competition.
Where a non‑compete or non‑solicit clause is found enforceable, the employer may seek:
The intersection of re‑employment age 2026 changes and restrictive covenants creates three distinct fact patterns, each with different enforcement consequences. Understanding these scenarios is essential for any employer seeking to enforce non‑compete Singapore 2026 obligations against transitioning workers.
Scenario A, Employee retires and is not re‑employed. The original employment contract terminates. Any post‑employment restrictive covenant contained in that contract becomes operative immediately upon the effective date of retirement. Provided the clause meets the reasonableness test, it is enforceable against the retiree in the normal way. The practical risk here is that a court may view the retiree’s reduced competitive threat, particularly if the individual is genuinely withdrawing from the industry, as a factor weighing against enforcement.
Scenario B, Employee retires and is re‑employed on a new contract. This is the most legally complex scenario. When the original employment contract ends upon retirement and a new re‑employment contract is executed, the restrictive covenant in the original contract is triggered at the point of retirement. If the re‑employment contract does not contain its own restrictive covenant, the employer will have no protection when the re‑employment period eventually ends. Furthermore, there is a risk that the original covenant’s restraint period runs concurrently with the re‑employment period, rendering it spent by the time the employee finally leaves.
Scenario C, Employee is re‑employed on the same or substantially similar terms. Where the employer offers re‑employment that amounts to a continuation of the existing relationship under MOM re‑employment obligations, a court may treat the restrictive covenant as surviving into the re‑employment period. However, this argument is untested in the specific context of the 2026 age changes, and employers should not rely on it without express contractual provision.
As a matter of contractual principle, a restrictive covenant tied to the termination of an employment contract is triggered when that contract terminates, not when the overall employment relationship eventually ends. If the original contract terminates at retirement and a new contract commences for re‑employment, the restraint period from the original contract begins running from the retirement date, regardless of the new contract. Early indications suggest that courts will not imply a “rolling” covenant absent clear contractual language.
To preserve protection, employers should include a standalone restrictive covenant in the re‑employment contract, supported by fresh consideration. Recommended approaches include:
Preserving and enforcing post‑employment restraints requires coordinated action between HR, legal and IT teams. The following checklist, organised by timeline, provides a practical operational framework.
Sample clause language (re‑employment scenario):
“In consideration of the Re‑employment Payment of S$[amount] and the Company’s offer of re‑employment under this Agreement, the Employee covenants that for a period of [6/12] months following the termination of this Re‑employment Agreement (howsoever arising), the Employee shall not, directly or indirectly, [solicit/deal with/compete] within [Singapore / the ASEAN region] in respect of [defined business activities].”
Do / Don’t summary for HR:
| Do | Don’t |
|---|---|
| Issue a covenant reminder letter before the last day | Rely solely on the original contract without reviewing it |
| Include a standalone covenant in every re‑employment contract | Assume re‑employment automatically extends the old restraint |
| Provide identifiable fresh consideration for new covenants | Offer re‑employment and add a covenant without new consideration |
| Preserve digital evidence proactively through IT | Wait until after the breach to investigate evidence |
| Tailor the restraint to the re‑employment role’s actual scope | Copy and paste a senior role’s restraint into a reduced role |
Not every suspected breach warrants litigation. The decision to seek an injunction, pursue damages, or attempt mediated settlement depends on the commercial value at stake, the strength of the evidence, and the employer’s risk tolerance for public proceedings.
An interlocutory injunction is the primary enforcement tool. To obtain one, the employer must move quickly, typically within days of discovering the breach. The application is made to the High Court and requires a supporting affidavit detailing the covenant, the breach, and the irreparable harm that will result absent an injunction. Courts will assess whether there is a serious question to be tried, whether damages are an adequate remedy, and where the balance of convenience lies. In practice, an employer with a well‑drafted covenant, documented evidence of client solicitation, and prompt action stands a reasonable prospect of obtaining interim relief. Delay of even a few weeks can be fatal to the application.
Where injunctive relief is not available or appropriate, the employer may pursue damages. Quantification typically centres on provable lost revenue, clients diverted, contracts lost, or deals disrupted. Expert evidence from a forensic accountant is generally required. The practical challenge is causation: the employer must demonstrate that the loss was caused by the covenant breach rather than by market forces, competitor activity, or client preference. Courts may also award nominal damages where a breach is established but financial loss is not proven, preserving the employer’s ability to enforce the covenant as a matter of precedent.
Mediation under the Singapore Mediation Centre framework offers confidentiality, speed and cost advantages. Industry observers expect that the increased volume of re‑employment disputes flowing from the 2026 changes will make mediation an increasingly attractive first step. In settlement negotiations, employers should seek undertakings that mirror injunctive relief, a binding commitment from the former employee not to solicit named clients or work for named competitors for the remaining restraint period, combined with a mechanism for damages if the undertaking is breached.
Sample enforcement chronology (anonymised):
The following table consolidates the key legal changes affecting the ability to enforce non‑compete Singapore 2026 obligations, with practical actions for each.
| Change / Rule | Effective date | Employer effect & immediate action |
|---|---|---|
| Retirement age raised to 64 | 1 July 2026 | More employees remain on payroll longer, review covenants and re‑employment offers for older workers; ensure valid consideration if offering new covenants. |
| Re‑employment age raised to 69 | 1 July 2026 | Broader scope of re‑employment obligations; HR must follow MOM guidance when offering re‑employment; consider effect on post‑employment restraints. |
| Workplace Fairness Act 2025 reforms | 2025 (in force with staggered provisions) | Strengthened worker protections and procedural obligations for employers, document processes and compliance steps when offering re‑employment. |
| MOM Tripartite Guidelines on re‑employment | Ongoing (updated periodically) | Follow prescribed process for making re‑employment offers and EAP payments; non‑compliance weakens enforcement position and invites regulatory scrutiny. |
The 1 July 2026 changes to Singapore’s retirement and re‑employment ages significantly increase the number of transitional employment events at which restrictive covenants are tested. Employers who wish to enforce non‑compete Singapore 2026 obligations must act proactively: audit contracts, redraft covenants for re‑employment scenarios, provide fresh consideration, and preserve evidence well before the employee’s retirement date. Early engagement with specialist employment counsel is the single most effective step to protect the business. For access to experienced Singapore employment law specialists, consult the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ang Ann Liang at CHP Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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