Non-disclosure agreements are among the most commonly signed legal documents in the world — and among the least understood. Employees sign them before starting jobs. Freelancers sign them before seeing a client’s project. Business partners sign them before discussing a deal. Most people sign without fully reading them, assuming the company’s lawyer made sure everything is above board.
That assumption is worth examining. NDAs have real legal force, but they also have real limits. Knowing both sides protects you whether you are signing one or enforcing one.
What a Non-Disclosure Agreement Is
A non-disclosure agreement — also called an NDA, confidentiality agreement, or confidentiality clause — is a legally binding contract in which one or more parties agree not to disclose certain information to third parties. The information covered is typically defined as “confidential information” within the agreement itself.
NDAs serve a legitimate purpose: they allow businesses and individuals to share sensitive information — trade secrets, client lists, financial data, product plans — without giving up control over it. Without them, meaningful collaboration would be harder and intellectual property far more exposed. For a grounding in how binding agreements work in general, our guide to legal contract basics explains the core elements every enforceable contract must have.
Types of NDAs
1. Unilateral NDA
Only one party is bound by confidentiality obligations. The most common example is an employee agreeing not to disclose their employer’s information. The employer is free to discuss the same information without restriction.
2. Mutual NDA
Both parties agree to keep each other’s information confidential. Used often used in joint ventures, merger negotiations, or partnerships where both sides share sensitive information.
3. Multilateral NDA
Three or more parties are bound by the same confidentiality obligations, commonly used in complex business transactions involving multiple stakeholders.
What NDAs Can Legally Cover
A properly drafted NDA can legally restrict disclosure of trade secrets and proprietary processes, business strategies and financial information, customer and client lists, software code and technical specifications, and unpublished product or research information.
The agreement must define “confidential information” with reasonable specificity. Courts are skeptical of NDAs that attempt to classify everything as confidential — overly broad definitions can make an NDA harder to enforce, not easier.
What NDAs Cannot Legally Do?
This is where many people — and some companies — misunderstand the limits of these documents.
NDAs cannot prevent you from reporting illegal activity. In most jurisdictions, an NDA cannot be used to stop someone from reporting a crime, fraud, workplace safety violations, or regulatory violations to government authorities. Attempting to silence a potential whistleblower through an NDA may itself be illegal.
NDAs cannot prohibit disclosure to a lawyer. You always have the right to consult an attorney about a legal matter, even if an NDA is involved. Disclosing confidential information to your own lawyer for the purpose of getting legal advice is generally protected.
NDAs cannot cover information that is already public. Once information is genuinely in the public domain — through no fault of the person bound by the NDA — it typically loses its protected status. An NDA cannot prevent someone from discussing what the world already knows.
NDAs related to workplace harassment and discrimination face increasing restrictions. Several jurisdictions, including many U.S. states and the UK, have passed laws limiting the use of NDAs to silence harassment or discrimination against victims. In the U.S., the Speak Out Act limits the enforceability of pre-dispute NDAs covering sexual harassment claims. Check local law for the specific rules in your jurisdiction.
Key Clauses to Read Before Signing
Definition of confidential information
Is it limited to specific categories, or does it attempt to cover everything you encounter in your role? Broader definitions create broader obligations and more legal exposure.
Duration
How long does the obligation last? Some NDAs are time-limited (two to five years is common). Others are indefinite. Indefinite restrictions on general knowledge or skills are less likely to hold up in court than those protecting clearly defined trade secrets.
Exclusions
A properly drafted NDA should include exclusions for information that becomes public through no fault of yours, information you knew before signing, and information you develop independently afterward. If these exclusions are missing, flag them before signing.
Consequences of breach
Does the agreement specify damages, injunctive relief, or both? Some NDAs include liquidated damages clauses specifying a fixed amount owed for any breach. Understanding the consequences before signing is essential.
When You Have a Strong Position Against an NDA
- The information you disclosed relates to illegal conduct — whistleblower protections likely override the NDA
- The NDA was presented as a condition of receiving something you were already legally entitled to (such as earned wages or a statutory settlement)
- The definition of confidential information is so broad and vague that it fails to give you fair notice of what is actually protected
- You disclosed information to your own attorney for the purpose of obtaining legal advice
- The information was already publicly available before you disclosed it
When Breaking an NDA May Be Protected
Despite being legally binding, NDAs can be challenged or broken in specific circumstances without full legal consequences.
Whistleblowing
If confidential information relates to illegal activity — fraud, safety violations, financial crimes, regulatory breaches — disclosing it to appropriate authorities is protected under whistleblower laws in many jurisdictions. The NDA does not override those protections.
Public interest
Courts have, in some cases, recognized that the public interest in disclosure outweighs a private confidentiality obligation. This is a narrow, fact-specific exception.
The NDA was obtained through improper means
If you were coerced into signing, misled about what you were signing, or the agreement was presented as a condition of receiving something you were already legally entitled to, these circumstances may affect enforceability.
The NDA is overly broad or unconscionable
Courts will not enforce NDAs they find unreasonably broad, vague, or oppressively one-sided. An agreement that attempts to bind someone indefinitely from discussing general industry knowledge is unlikely to be upheld as written.
What to Do If You Are Asked to Sign an NDA
Read it fully before signing, regardless of how routine the situation feels. Identify what information is covered, for how long, and what the consequences of breach are. If the definition of confidential information is so broad that it would restrict your ability to work in your field after leaving, that is worth negotiating or at a minimum, flagging.
If the stakes are significant — such as an NDA tied to a settlement, a senior employment role, or a substantial business transaction — have a lawyer review it before you sign. The cost of a brief legal review is minimal compared to the cost of a breach dispute later. This also applies to employment agreements more broadly, as outlined in our guide to wrongful termination and employment rights.
FAQs
Can an NDA stop me from telling a friend what I do at work?
It depends on the NDA’s scope. Many workplace NDAs cover specific confidential business information, not general descriptions of your role. However, some are drafted broadly enough to cover detailed operational information. Read the definition of confidential information in your specific agreement to understand what it actually covers.
What happens if I accidentally break an NDA?
Accidental disclosure is relevant to the question of damages, not necessarily to whether a breach occurred. If you disclose confidential information without intent, the other party may still have a legal claim, but courts and arbitrators typically consider intent when determining the appropriate remedy. Notifying the other party promptly after an accidental disclosure is generally advisable.
Can a company sue me for breaking an NDA after I’ve left the job?
Yes, if the NDA remains in effect after your employment ends — which most do — its obligations survive the employment relationship. Post-employment NDA obligations are enforceable as long as they are reasonable in scope and duration. Courts are more willing to enforce narrow, time-limited post-employment NDAs than indefinite, sweeping ones.
Can an NDA prevent me from reporting workplace harassment?
In an increasing number of jurisdictions, no. Laws like the U.S. Speak Out Act, and various UK legislative reforms specifically limit the use of pre-dispute NDAs to silence harassment or discrimination victims. If an NDA was used to cover up workplace misconduct rather than protect legitimate business information, its enforceability is increasingly questionable in many legal systems.
This article is for general educational purposes only. NDA enforceability varies significantly by jurisdiction, industry, and the specific terms of each agreement. If you have concerns about an NDA you have signed or been asked to sign, consult a qualified employment or commercial attorney.
