Non-Compete Clause Enforcement Australia: What MSPs Can and Can't Do
Non-compete clauses — or restraints of trade — are common in MSP employment contracts. But common does not mean enforceable. Australian law takes a nuanced approach to these clauses, and understanding your rights is essential before you sign or leave.
What Is a Non-Compete Clause?
A non-compete clause restricts your ability to work for a competitor, start a competing business, or solicit clients after leaving your employer. In the MSP context, these clauses typically restrict:
- Working for a competing MSP
- Starting a competing MSP
- Soliciting your former employer's clients
- Soliciting your former employer's employees
The Australian Legal Framework
Australia does not have a specific statute governing non-compete clauses. Instead, enforcement is determined by common law through the "restraint of trade" doctrine.
The Restraint of Trade Doctrine
Under Australian common law, a restraint of trade is presumed to be void unless the party seeking to enforce it can prove:
- Legitimate business interest — the restraint protects a genuine interest (trade secrets, client relationships, staff stability)
- Reasonableness — the restraint is no wider than necessary to protect that interest
- Public interest — the restraint does not harm the public interest
The burden of proof is on the employer, not the employee.
The Reasonableness Test
Australian courts assess reasonableness across multiple dimensions:
| Factor | What Courts Consider |
|---|---|
| Duration | How long the restraint lasts |
| Geographic scope | Where the restraint applies |
| Activity scope | What activities are restricted |
| Seniority | Employee's role and access to sensitive information |
| Industry | How niche or broad the industry is |
Enforceability by MSP Role
Senior Leadership (Directors, VPs, C-Suite)
Non-competes are most likely to be enforced for senior leaders who have:
- Access to strategic business plans
- Deep client relationships
- Knowledge of pricing and margins
- Access to trade secrets
Typical enforceable duration: 12-24 months for the most senior roles.
Senior Engineers and Architects
Moderate enforceability. These roles typically have:
- Access to client environments and credentials
- Knowledge of security configurations
- Client relationships
Typical enforceable duration: 6-12 months.
Mid-Level Engineers
Lower enforceability. These roles typically have:
- Limited strategic knowledge
- Some client relationships
- Technical skills that are generally available
Typical enforceable duration: 3-6 months, if any.
Help Desk / Junior Staff
Rarely enforceable. These roles typically have:
- Minimal unique knowledge
- Limited client relationships
- Skills that are widely available
Typical enforceable duration: Courts are reluctant to enforce non-competes for these roles.
The Cascading Restraint
Many MSP contracts use "cascading" restraint clauses — multiple restraint periods of decreasing length:
"If the employee is restrained for 24 months, then 18 months, then 12 months, then 6 months..."
The court can strike down the longest period and enforce the next shorter one. This is a common drafting technique to increase the chance of enforcement.
How to Read Cascading Clauses
Look for the shortest period in the cascade — that is the most likely to be enforced. If the shortest period is still unreasonable, the entire clause may be struck down.
What Makes a Non-Compete Unenforceable?
Too Broad in Scope
A clause that prevents you from working in "any IT-related business" is likely too broad. Courts prefer clauses that are specific to the particular type of MSP work.
Too Long in Duration
A 3-year non-compete for a mid-level engineer is almost certainly unenforceable. Duration must be proportionate to the legitimate interest being protected.
Too Wide Geographically
A clause that prevents you from working anywhere in Australia when the MSP only operates in Sydney is likely unreasonable.
No Legitimate Interest
If the employer cannot demonstrate a genuine business interest being protected (beyond simply preventing competition), the clause is unenforceable.
Against Public Interest
If the restraint would leave the community without essential services (e.g., preventing all cybersecurity engineers from working), it may be unenforceable on public interest grounds.
What Happens If You Breach
If the non-compete is enforceable and you breach it, the employer can:
- Seek an injunction — court order to stop you from working in breach
- Claim damages — financial compensation for loss caused by the breach
- Seek an account of profits — require you to hand over profits earned in breach
The Practical Reality
Most MSPs do not enforce non-compete clauses because:
- Legal action is expensive ($50,000-$200,000+)
- Enforcing the clause requires proving it is reasonable
- The negative publicity can damage the MSP's reputation
- The MSP may prefer you simply leave quietly
However, some MSPs do enforce — particularly when senior employees take clients or trade secrets.
How to Protect Yourself
Before Signing
- Read the clause carefully — understand exactly what you are agreeing to
- Negotiate the terms — ask for shorter duration, narrower scope
- Get legal advice — have an employment lawyer review the clause
- Document the negotiation — if you negotiate changes, ensure they are in writing
Before Leaving
- Review your contract — understand your obligations
- Get legal advice — assess enforceability of your specific clause
- Do not take client data — this transforms a potential non-compete issue into a theft issue
- Do not solicit while employed — wait until you have genuinely left
- Keep records — document what you did and did not take
If You Receive a Letter
If your former employer sends a cease-and-desist letter:
- Do not panic — this is often a scare tactic
- Do not ignore it — respond (through a lawyer)
- Get legal advice immediately — assess the strength of their claim
- Do not destroy evidence — preserve all relevant documents
Contract Grading for Non-Competes
Our Contract Grader evaluates non-compete clauses as part of its overall assessment. Look for:
| Grade | Non-Compete Assessment |
|---|---|
| A | Reasonable duration, narrow scope, proportionate to role |
| B | Mostly reasonable with minor concerns |
| C | Broad or lengthy but within the realm of enforceability |
| D | Likely unenforceable but creates uncertainty |
| F | Overly restrictive, potentially unenforceable |
The Bottom Line
Non-compete clauses in Australian MSP contracts are enforceable only if they are reasonable. The law protects your right to earn a living — it does not protect an employer's desire to prevent competition at all costs.
If you are signing a new MSP employment contract, negotiate the non-compete clause. If you are leaving an MSP, understand your obligations and get legal advice before making career decisions.
The most important thing: do not let a non-compete clause you have never had reviewed prevent you from pursuing your career. Get advice, understand your position, and make informed decisions.
Use our Contract Grader to assess the non-compete clause in your MSP employment contract, or our MSP Contract Checklist for a full review of employment terms.
Was this helpful?