You’re about to hire a remote worker from Latin America.
The contract template your lawyer sent over has a non-compete clause buried in section 12.
Should you use it?
Here’s the short answer: probably not. And in most Latin American countries, it won’t hold up anyway.
Let me explain why.
The Reality of Non-Competes South of the Border
Non-compete agreements don’t work the same way in Latin America as they do in the US or UK.
Actually, they barely work at all for independent contractors.
The reason is simple. Latin American labor laws draw a hard line between employees and contractors. Employees get benefits, job protections, and severance. Contractors get freedom.
That freedom includes the right to work for whoever they want, whenever they want.
When you hire someone as an independent contractor in Brazil, Mexico, or Colombia, you’re explicitly saying they’re not an employee.
You’re not giving them health insurance or paying into their pension. You’re treating them as an autonomous business.
So when you turn around and try to restrict who they can work for after your contract ends? Courts look at that and say: pick one. Either they’re an employee with restrictions, or they’re a contractor with freedom.
You can’t have it both ways.
What Actually Happens in Each Country
Let’s get specific, because the rules vary.
Brazil is the biggest talent market in Latin America. About 35-40% of the region’s remote workers are Brazilian. Their labor code (the CLT) technically allows non-competes, but only under strict conditions.
You need “just cause”—meaning the contractor had access to legitimate trade secrets. You need to pay them during the restriction period (usually 20-30% of what they were making). And you need to prove they were economically dependent on you.
Most US or European companies hiring a contractor for $3,000/month aren’t going to meet that bar. Brazilian courts side with the worker almost every time.
Mexico is even clearer. The Federal Civil Code basically says non-competes for contractors are anti-competitive and void. You can try to include one, but it won’t be enforceable. The only thing that holds up is a non-disclosure agreement protecting specific confidential information.
Colombia and Argentina follow similar logic. Their civil codes emphasize contractor autonomy. If you want any kind of restriction, it needs to be narrow (6-12 months max), limited geographically, and you need to compensate them for it.
Even then, enforcement is spotty.
Chile and Peru won’t enforce broad non-competes either. The legal systems there prioritize free competition. Again, focus on NDAs instead.
Why This Matters for Your Hiring Strategy
Here’s what this means practically.
If you’re a company in the US, UK, or Australia hiring remote contractors in Latin America, don’t waste time on non-compete clauses. They’ll either be ignored or challenged successfully in local courts.
Instead, focus on what actually works:
Non-disclosure agreements. These are enforceable across Latin America. Protect your trade secrets, customer lists, and proprietary processes with a solid NDA.
Non-solicitation clauses. You can restrict a contractor from poaching your clients or employees. These hold up much better than broad non-competes.
IP assignment clauses. Make sure any work they create belongs to your company. This is standard and enforceable.
Trial periods. Start with a 1-3 month trial. Test the relationship before committing long-term. This is common practice and gives both sides an out.
If you really need employee-level restrictions, hire them as actual employees. That way you get the protections you want legally.
But if you’re hiring contractors to save on costs and complexity, accept the tradeoff. You get flexibility and lower costs. They get the freedom to work with other clients.
The Cultural Side Nobody Talks About
There’s another reason non-competes backfire in Latin America.
They feel disrespectful.
Latin American work culture is deeply relational. People value trust, long-term relationships, and being treated like humans rather than resources.
When you hand someone a contract loaded with restrictions, it sends a message: “I don’t trust you.”
That’s not how you build loyalty in Brazil, Colombia, or Mexico.
I’ve seen companies try to enforce strict non-competes, only to have contractors ghost them or badmouth them on LinkedIn. Word travels fast in tight-knit tech communities in Bogotá, Buenos Aires, or São Paulo.
The better approach? Build actual loyalty.
Pay competitively. Offer growth opportunities like conference tickets or training budgets. Treat contractors like valued partners, not vendors you’re trying to lock down.
Latin American remote workers report higher team cohesion than US workers (72% vs 64% satisfaction with communication, according to recent surveys). They build “familia-like” bonds with teams they trust.
But that trust goes both ways.
What Contractors Should Know
If you’re a freelancer or contractor in Latin America reading this, here’s what to watch for:
Review any contract for “exclusivity” clauses. These are non-competes in disguise. A US or European company might slip in language saying you can’t work for competitors or take on other clients.
In most Latin American countries, those clauses are unenforceable for true contractors. But they can still cause headaches.
If a company insists on a non-compete, demand compensation. In Brazil, that’s typically 20-30% of your monthly rate for the duration of the restriction. If they won’t pay, don’t sign.
Better yet, negotiate it out entirely. Use a lawyer if needed.
And diversify your clients. If you work with 3-4 companies instead of depending on one, non-competes become irrelevant anyway.
The Bottom Line
Non-compete agreements don’t make sense for independent contractors in Latin America.
They’re legally shaky, culturally tone-deaf, and practically unenforceable in most countries.
If you’re hiring remote workers in Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, or Chile, focus on what actually protects your business: strong NDAs, clear IP agreements, and building relationships that make people want to stay.
If you need the control that comes with employment, hire them as employees through an EOR. Don’t try to have it both ways with a contractor agreement loaded with restrictions.
And if you’re a contractor, know your rights. Most non-compete clauses in contracts from US or European companies won’t hold up in your local courts.
The best protection for both sides isn’t legal clauses. It’s mutual respect and clear expectations from the start.
That’s how you build something that actually works.
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