This article continues our Friday’s Five series highlighting the major new California employment laws taking effect in 2026. In recent weeks, we’ve covered several significant bills impacting employers — from expanded employee rights and new recordkeeping requirements to pay transparency updates and workplace enforcement changes.
This week, we turn to Assembly Bill 692 (Kalra) — California’s latest move to strengthen worker mobility and curb restrictive employment practices. Effective January 1, 2026, AB 692 targets so-called “stay-or-pay” or training repayment agreement provisions (TRAPs) — a growing trend among employers seeking to discourage workers from leaving early by requiring repayment of training or relocation costs.California’s legislature continues its trend of expanding employee mobility protections. With AB 692, effective January 1, 2026, employers can no longer rely on “stay-or-pay” or training repayment agreement provisions (TRAPs) to discourage employees from leaving their jobs early.
Here are five key takeaways for employers:
1. AB 692 Closes the Loophole Around Non-Compete Alternatives
While California has long banned non-compete agreements under Business & Professions Code section 16600, some employers turned to “stay-or-pay” agreements — clauses requiring employees to repay training or relocation costs if they leave before a certain time. These TRAPs operated in a legal gray area, sometimes enforced, sometimes struck down as unconscionable. AB 692...
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