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New Non-Compete Law for Healthcare Professionals in Texas in Effect in 2025

Texas NonCompete Law For Healthcare

Healthcare NonCompete Texas Law

On June 20, 2025, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed Senate Bill 1318 (SB 1318), which tightens the rules for noncompete agreements in the healthcare sector. The law becomes effective September 1, 2025.

SB 1318 brings major changes to noncompete restrictions in Texas. It expands the application of stricter noncompete restrictions (once largely reserved for physicians) to a broader group of health care practitioners, imposes hard caps on duration and geography, and changes how buyouts, terminations, and clarity requirements must be handled.

If you are in Texas and dealing with a noncompete in health care—whether as a physician, nurse, dentist, physician assistant, or an employer—you need to understand the new landscape. Hiring a Texas noncompete attorney who specializes in health care or employment law will be crucial. Below is a detailed breakdown.

Key Changes under SB 1318

ChangeWhat SB 1318 RequiresImportance / Impact
Applies to More Healthcare ProfessionsThe stricter rules, once limited to physicians only, now also cover nurses, dentists, and physician assistants when it comes to their professional practice.Roles that previously fell outside the “physician-only” regime may now face more constraint. Employers and practitioners must review whether their noncompetes now fall under the new rules.
One-year maximum termThe noncompete restriction cannot extend beyond one year after termination or contract end.Previously, duration was judged by a “reasonable under the circumstances” standard, which could allow for longer periods in some cases. This caps that flexibility.
Five-mile geographic limitThe restricted area must be within a 5-mile radius of the practitioner’s “primary practice” location prior to termination.Texas courts historically allowed much more flexible geographic analysis (e.g. considering rural vs. urban, patient travel areas). This change significantly narrows what is presumptively acceptable for HCP noncompetes.
Mandatory buyout option with limitThe noncompete must include a buyout option, and that buyout cannot exceed the HCP’s annual salary and wages at the time of termination.Before, the statute allowed a “reasonable price” standard and arbitrator resolution for disputes. Now, the cap and the removal of arbitration for buyout disputes (unless a general arbitration clause already exists) makes buyout terms more uniform and constricted.
Clear & conspicuous writingThe covenant must state its terms clearly and conspicuously in writing so the HCP can understand the post-termination obligations.Increases transparency and can serve as a basis for challenges if an agreement is ambiguous or hidden.
Void if involuntarily terminated without “good cause” (for physicians)For physician noncompetes, if the employer terminates involuntarily without good cause, the noncompete becomes void. The statute provides a definition for “good cause” (e.g. conduct, job performance, contract record) tied to reasonableness.This is a major protection for physicians: it means even a well-drafted covenant may fail if the termination lacks a lawful basis under the statute.
Administrative roles excludedThe stricter provisions do not apply to noncompetes around administrative or managerial medical services (e.g. medical director roles). Those remain under the traditional reasonableness standard.  This helps carve out a path for practices to continue enforcing noncompetes on administrative or nonclinical roles under more flexible standards.
Patient-access provisions remainSB 1318 keeps existing rules requiring physicians, upon termination, to be able to receive certain patient lists, access to medical records, patient continuity care during acute illness, etc. These protections for patients are preserved, meaning noncompetes cannot block necessary patient care functions.

What Doesn’t Change or Is Ambiguous

Practical Implications: Why This Matters for Texas Health Care Noncompete Disputes

For Health Care Practitioners (Physicians, Nurses, Dentists, PAs)

For Health Care Employers / Medical Practices

Why Hire a Texas Noncompete Attorney (Especially in Health Care)

Facing a Non-Compete as a Physician in Texas?

Our firm represents physicians across Texas in challenging unfair and overly restrictive non-compete agreements. If your ability to serve patients and maintain your career is being limited, you may have legal defenses under Texas contract law, Texas Business & Commerce Code, and federal antitrust statutesCall us today for a confidential consultation to discuss your options and protect both your practice and your patients.

Leiza Dolghih is the founder of Dolghih Law Group PLLC.  She is board certified in labor and employment law and has 16+ years of experience in commercial and employment litigation, including trade secrets and non-compete disputes. You can contact her directly at leiza@dlg-legal.com or (214) 531-2403.

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