What Is a Governing Law Clause?
A governing law clause specifies which state's or country's laws will apply if there is a dispute about your contract. It does not control where a lawsuit must be filed — that's a separate jurisdiction clause — but it determines which legal rules govern the interpretation of your obligations, IP ownership, payment rights, and non-compete enforceability. Courts have consistently held that governing law clauses are enforceable as written, with limited exceptions for states with mandatory rules that cannot be contracted away. According to a 2023 analysis by the American Bar Association, choice-of-law disputes are among the top five most litigated contract issues in commercial cases.
Definition
Imagine you're a freelance developer in California who signs a contract with a client headquartered in Delaware. The contract says "this agreement shall be governed by the laws of the State of Delaware." If a dispute arises about who owns the code you built, Delaware courts applying Delaware law will decide — not California courts applying California law. That distinction may determine whether a non-compete clause in the same contract is enforceable, since California broadly voids non-competes while Delaware may enforce them.
The governing law clause is a quiet but powerful provision. Most people skip over it because it sounds procedural. In reality, it can determine which party has leverage in a dispute, which IP rules apply, and whether your non-compete or non-solicitation obligations are enforceable at all.
Large companies almost always specify their home state's law as the governing law. That choice typically favors the company, since it operates under familiar rules and has local counsel. For freelancers and small business owners, this clause is worth scrutinizing — and sometimes worth negotiating.
Key Elements of a Governing Law Clause
- Specified jurisdiction: The exact state or country named. A clause that says "laws of the State of New York" is different from one that says "laws of the United Kingdom."
- Conflict-of-laws exclusion: Many governing law clauses exclude conflict-of-laws rules (e.g., "excluding its conflict-of-laws provisions"). This ensures the named state's substantive law applies directly, without first going through a choice-of-law analysis that might pick a different state.
- Scope: Whether the governing law applies only to the contract itself or also to tort claims, statutory claims, and related disputes arising from the relationship.
- Relationship to jurisdiction clause: Governing law and jurisdiction are separate — read both. A contract can require California governing law but New York courts.
Red Flags to Watch For
Legal practice recommends reviewing governing law alongside every other significant clause in the contract, because the governing law colors how every other provision is interpreted.
- 🚩 A state you've never operated in: If the governing law is a state with which you have no connection, the choice almost certainly favors the drafter (the client). Push for your home state's law or a mutual, neutral choice.
- 🚩 No conflict-of-laws exclusion: Without this exclusion, a court may apply a different state's law than the one named, adding uncertainty.
- 🚩 Governing law paired with a distant jurisdiction clause: If governing law is Delaware and jurisdiction is also Delaware, any lawsuit requires you to litigate in Delaware — expensive and inconvenient for a freelancer on the West Coast.
- 🚩 Governing law that nullifies your state's protections: Check whether the named state's laws affect your non-compete, IP ownership, or payment rights in ways that your home state would not allow.
Tools like NovaDocs flag governing law clauses and surface their implications when you upload a contract. See this clause in your contract →
Sample Governing Law Clause Language
"This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of [STATE], without regard to its conflict of laws principles. Any dispute arising out of or relating to this Agreement shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the state and federal courts located in [COUNTY], [STATE], and each party hereby consents to the personal jurisdiction of such courts."
Note: This sample is for educational purposes only. Always have a qualified attorney review contracts before signing.
By the Numbers
- According to the American Bar Association, choice-of-law disputes are among the top five most frequently litigated commercial contract issues, with governing law provisions being contested in a significant minority of breach-of-contract cases that reach appellate courts.
- A 2024 survey by the World Commerce & Contracting organization found that 67% of small business owners and independent contractors were unaware that the governing law clause in their contracts could affect whether their non-compete obligations were enforceable in their home state.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is a governing law clause in a contract?
- A governing law clause (also called a "choice of law" clause) specifies which state's or country's laws will apply if there is a dispute about the contract. It determines which legal rules govern interpretation of your obligations, IP ownership, payment rights, and non-compete enforceability. Courts generally enforce governing law clauses as written, with limited exceptions for mandatory state rules.
- Does governing law mean I have to sue in that state?
- Not necessarily. Governing law and jurisdiction (venue) are separate clauses. Governing law determines which state's laws apply; a jurisdiction clause determines where disputes must be litigated. A contract can specify California governing law but New York jurisdiction, meaning a New York court would apply California law. Always review both clauses together.
- Can a governing law clause override my state's protections?
- Partially. Courts generally enforce governing law clauses, but most states have mandatory rules that cannot be contracted away. California, for example, applies its non-compete ban to California residents regardless of a governing law clause selecting another state. Always check whether your home state has mandatory rules that supersede the chosen governing law.
- What happens if there's no governing law clause?
- Without a governing law clause, courts apply choice-of-law rules to determine which state's laws govern — rules that vary by state and can produce unpredictable results. A governing law clause removes this uncertainty and gives both parties clarity from the start.
- Is it better for governing law to be my state or the client's state?
- It depends on which state offers stronger protections for your specific situation. If your state has a broad non-compete ban or strong freelancer payment protections, you generally want your state's law to govern. Evaluate the full picture — including IP rules, payment enforcement, and indemnification standards — before agreeing to the client's preferred governing law.
See This Clause in Your Contract
Upload your contract to NovaDocs and get instant clause-by-clause analysis — including what governing law means for your specific obligations.
Get instant clause-by-clause analysis →
Last updated: May 20, 2026