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Are non‑poaching agreements legal in the United Kingdom? In most cases the answer is no, and the risk of enforcement action has never been higher. On 9 September 2025 the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) published its Competing for Talent guidance, placing no‑poach pacts and wage‑fixing squarely at the top of its enforcement agenda. The guidance confirms that naked agreements between competing employers not to hire or solicit each other’s staff are treated as restrictions of competition “by object” under the Competition Act 1998, carrying the same legal gravity as price‑fixing cartels.
This article provides a definitive 2026 compliance playbook for in‑house counsel, HR leaders and general counsel operating in the UK: the legal framework, practical red flags, safe‑harbour alternatives for information sharing in hiring, penalty thresholds, and step‑by‑step escalation workflows.
The short answer is that standalone, competitor‑to‑competitor no‑poach agreements are almost certainly unlawful under UK competition law. A narrow exception exists where a no‑poaching clause is genuinely ancillary to a wider legitimate transaction, such as a merger, joint venture or outsourcing arrangement, and meets a strict necessity and proportionality test. Outside that exception, such agreements are void and expose the parties to significant fines and damages.
Key takeaway decision tree:
Three immediate actions for HR and compliance teams:
Understanding whether non‑poaching agreements are legal requires familiarity with two overlapping bodies of law, UK domestic competition legislation and the residual influence of EU antitrust principles, together with the enforcement machinery operated by the CMA.
The Competition Act 1998 contains two prohibitions that matter here. The Chapter I prohibition (section 2) outlaws agreements between undertakings that have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the United Kingdom. A no‑poach agreement between rival employers restricts competition in the labour market, suppressing the normal process by which workers receive competing offers and employers bid for talent.
Agreements caught by the Chapter I prohibition are automatically void and unenforceable. There is no need for the CMA to prove that actual competitive harm resulted; an anti‑competitive object is sufficient. Where the CMA classifies conduct as a “by object” infringement, as it does with naked no‑poach antitrust violations, the evidential burden on the authority is considerably lighter.
Section 36 of the Competition Act 1998 further empowers the CMA to impose financial penalties of up to 10 % of an undertaking’s worldwide turnover for the most serious infringements, and the Enterprise Act 2002 adds criminal sanctions for individuals involved in certain cartel conduct.
Although the UK has left the European Union, Article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union remains highly relevant for two reasons. First, many UK employers also operate across EU member states and must comply with both regimes. Second, UK courts and the CMA continue to draw on EU case law and guidance when interpreting the Chapter I prohibition.
A European Commission policy brief on labour‑market agreements has confirmed that no‑poach and wage‑fixing pacts between competitors are capable of restricting competition by object under Article 101. The policy brief explicitly likens such arrangements to market‑allocation cartels, businesses dividing a market for labour rather than for goods.
The CMA is the principal UK enforcer. Its toolkit for no‑poach antitrust cases includes:
The CMA published its Competing for Talent guidance on 9 September 2025, signalling an enforcement step‑change. The guidance makes clear that the CMA treats labour markets with the same seriousness as product markets, and that employers who agree not to poach or hire each other’s workers face the full range of competition‑law sanctions.
Headline points from the competing for talent guidance include:
Since publishing the guidance the CMA has used public communications, including social media posts and industry webinars, to reinforce the message. Industry observers expect the CMA’s 2026–27 enforcement programme to include at least one formal investigation into labour‑market conduct, particularly in sectors where skilled‑worker shortages create the strongest incentive for no‑poach arrangements, such as technology, financial services, healthcare and engineering.
The economic rationale underpinning the CMA no‑poach enforcement stance is well documented. Oxera’s analysis demonstrates that no‑poach agreements suppress wages by reducing the competitive pressure that forces employers to offer attractive packages. Without the threat that a rival will recruit their best people, employers have less incentive to raise pay, improve conditions or invest in retention. The result is a transfer of value from workers to employers, and a less efficient allocation of talent across the economy. Where multiple firms in a sector participate, the cumulative effect on wages can be substantial and lasting, particularly for specialist roles where alternative employment options are already limited.
Identifying whether your organisation is exposed to no‑poach antitrust risk requires a structured review of both formal contracts and informal practices. The following red‑flag table and checklist is designed for HR leaders and general counsel.
| Red Flag | Why It Matters | Immediate HR Action |
|---|---|---|
| Written or oral agreement with a competitor not to solicit or hire each other’s employees | Classic “naked” no‑poach, likely unlawful by object under the Competition Act 1998 | Suspend immediately; escalate to legal counsel |
| Trade association or industry body “code” discouraging cross‑firm recruitment | Collective arrangements widen the scope of harm and increase CMA scrutiny | Withdraw from the code; notify compliance team |
| Recruiter or staffing agency instructed not to approach specified competitors’ staff | Instruction could evidence a concerted practice even without a signed contract | Revise agency briefings; remove competitor‑specific restrictions |
| Direct exchange of salary data, bonus structures or hiring plans with a competitor | Competitively sensitive information sharing in hiring may itself infringe competition law | Stop sharing; switch to anonymised third‑party benchmarking |
| Joint venture or outsourcing contract with a blanket no‑poaching clause that is not time‑limited or role‑specific | Over‑broad clause fails the ancillary‑restraint proportionality test | Review and narrow the clause; take legal advice on scope |
| Informal “gentlemen’s agreement”, verbal understanding at a conference or via email that “we don’t poach from you if you don’t poach from us” | Oral or implied agreements are caught just as firmly as written contracts | Document the approach; refuse and report internally |
Industry observers expect the CMA to pay particular attention to non‑solicitation clauses in staffing‑agency agreements, given that these arrangements are widespread and often escape internal compliance review. In‑house teams should treat agency agreements as a priority audit target.
Not all employer interaction about workforce matters is unlawful. The key distinction is between coordinated conduct that restricts competition and independent, properly anonymised market intelligence.
Salary benchmarking is legitimate, and often essential for competitiveness, provided it is structured safely:
HR professionals frequently attend industry events, conferences and networking forums. The following micro‑workflow applies when approached by a competitor about hiring:
The maximum fine for breaching competition law under the Competition Act 1998 is 10 % of the infringing undertaking’s worldwide group turnover for each year of infringement. For large multinationals the sums involved can be enormous. Beyond financial penalties, the consequences include:
Employees and former employees harmed by anti‑competitive hiring practices can bring follow‑on damages claims in the Competition Appeal Tribunal once the CMA has made an infringement finding. Early indications suggest that the plaintiffs’ bar, particularly specialist competition‑damages firms, is preparing to bring such claims in the UK, following the model of large‑scale no‑poach damages cases that have already been litigated in the United States. The financial exposure from a successful damages action compounds the regulatory fine significantly.
Where a genuine business need exists to protect confidential information, client relationships or a joint‑venture workforce, carefully drafted restrictive clauses can still be lawful, provided they pass the ancillary‑restraint test.
Drawing on ancillary‑restraint analysis, the following conditions must all be met:
| Clause Type | Likely Competition Risk | Appropriate Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| Naked no‑poach (standalone agreement between competitors) | Very high, treated as by‑object restriction; likely unlawful | None, avoid entirely |
| Ancillary non‑solicit (tied to a JV, M&A or outsourcing agreement; time‑limited, role‑specific) | Low–moderate, defensible if proportionality criteria met | JV secondees, post‑merger integration teams, outsourcing transitions |
| Individual non‑compete clause (in an employment contract) | Low, primarily an employment‑law matter; competition risk arises only if clause forms part of a wider coordinated scheme | Senior executives, employees with access to trade secrets |
Confusion between these three types of restrictive covenant is common. The difference between a non‑compete and a no‑poach is fundamental to assessing legal risk, because each engages a different body of law.
| Restrictive Covenant | Main Legal Test | UK Enforcement Risk and Remedy |
|---|---|---|
| Non‑compete clause (in an individual’s employment contract) | Employment‑law reasonableness: must protect a legitimate business interest and be no wider than necessary in scope, duration and geography. | Enforced or struck down by employment tribunals / High Court. Risk: clause voided; employer loses protection. See more on non‑compete enforcement. |
| No‑poach agreement (between two or more employers) | Competition Act 1998, Chapter I prohibition: by‑object restriction of competition in the labour market. | CMA fines up to 10 % of worldwide turnover; agreement void; director disqualification; private damages claims. |
| Non‑solicitation clause (employer‑to‑employer or in a commercial contract) | Depends on context, if ancillary to a legitimate agreement and proportionate, may survive competition‑law scrutiny; if standalone between competitors, treated the same as a no‑poach. | Risk sits on a spectrum: narrowly drafted ancillary clauses are defensible; broad, standalone clauses carry the same penalties as naked no‑poach agreements. |
The following situations should trigger an immediate referral to specialist competition counsel:
Internal escalation form, fields to capture:
For UK employers the position is clear: naked no‑poach agreements between competitors are unlawful, carry severe penalties, and are a stated enforcement priority for the CMA following its Competing for Talent guidance of 9 September 2025. The question of whether non‑poaching agreements are legal can only receive a qualified “yes” in the narrow circumstance where a clause is genuinely ancillary to a wider legitimate transaction and satisfies strict tests of necessity, proportionality and limited duration. In every other case the legal, financial and reputational risk is acute.
HR teams and general counsel should treat the compliance steps outlined in this article as a baseline, and seek specialist competition‑law advice before entering, continuing or renewing any arrangement that touches on cross‑employer hiring restrictions.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Julian Maitland Walker at Maitland Walker LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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