Employment Forms
Employment templates including offer letters, employment agreements, termination notices, and non-compete agreements.
12 forms in this category
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Employment Offer Letter
A letter extending an offer of employment with key terms.
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Employment Agreement
A formal contract between an employer and an employee.
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At-Will Employment Agreement
An employment agreement confirming the at-will nature of the relationship.
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Termination Letter
A formal notice ending an employee's employment.
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Resignation Letter
A formal letter from an employee resigning their position.
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Employee Handbook Acknowledgment
A signed acknowledgment that an employee has received and read the employee handbook.
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Employee Non-Compete Agreement
A non-compete agreement signed at the start of employment.
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Employee Confidentiality Agreement
An NDA signed by an employee covering company information.
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Severance Agreement
An agreement providing severance pay in exchange for a release of claims.
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Direct Deposit Authorization
A form authorizing payroll direct deposit to an employee's bank account.
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Time-Off Request Form
A standard form for employees to request paid or unpaid leave.
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Employee Disciplinary Action Form
A form documenting an employee disciplinary incident and action taken.
About Employment Forms
This section of FormVault collects every template in our library that falls under the heading of Employment Forms. The forms grouped here share a common subject matter and a common audience: people preparing routine paperwork on their own behalf or on behalf of a small business, who want a reliable starting point without paying for an expensive subscription service. Each individual form page contains a plain-language overview of the document, instructions for filling it out, a discussion of any witness or notarization requirements that may apply in your state, and a frequently asked questions section addressing the most common reader concerns.
Before you download or print any form in this section, take a moment to confirm that the template matches the situation you are dealing with. The U.S. legal system divides similar-sounding documents into surprisingly different categories — for example, a "general" power of attorney behaves quite differently from a "limited" or "durable" power of attorney, and a "quitclaim" deed conveys a very different bundle of rights than a "warranty" deed. Reading the overview on each form page before you start filling out blanks is the easiest way to avoid using the wrong document for your situation.
Please remember that templates published on FormVault are general-purpose and intended for educational use. State law governs almost every document in this category and the specific witnessing, notarization, and recording requirements vary from one jurisdiction to the next. When the dollar amounts or family relationships involved are significant, or when the document will be filed with a court or recorded against real estate, a brief consultation with a licensed attorney in your state is well worth the cost. FormVault is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.