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On 30 April 2026, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) delivered its first ruling on no-poach agreements between competing employers, confirming that such agreements are, as a rule, restrictions of competition by object under Article 101(1) TFEU.
While the ECJ acknowledged that the by-object classification may not apply in specific circumstances, the headline message is clear: the European Commission's hard line on labor market cartels has been broadly confirmed by the ECJ.
In practice, this consolidated framework now sets the benchmark for labor market arrangements – from no-poach clauses in shareholder agreements and M&A documentation to joint ventures and informal industry exchanges – with continued strict enforcement to be expected.
In its first ruling on no-poach agreements between competing employers in the Tondela proceedings (C-133/24), the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has confirmed that such agreements are, as a rule, restrictions of competition by object under Article 101(1) TFEU. For employers, this matters: regulators can establish an infringement without proving anti-competitive effect. But the judgment leaves real uncertainty: the ECJ did not itself categorise the no-poach agreement at issue, remitting that question to the national court, and acknowledged that specific circumstances may preclude the by-object classification – without sharply defining when.
The Tondela case reached the ECJ as a preliminary ruling reference under Article 267 TFEU from the Portuguese Tribunal da Concorrência, Regulação e Supervisão. The underlying dispute concerned a no-poach arrangement concluded in April 2020 between the Liga Portuguesa de Futebol Profissional (LPFP) and almost all Portuguese First and Second Division football clubs. In the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic – with the 2019/2020 season suspended – the clubs convened and committed not to hire any player who had unilaterally terminated their contract for pandemic-related reasons.
The agreement addressed a specific timing problem: many contracts were due to expire on 30 June 2020 (the original season end date), so without coordinated action, players whose contracts expired mid-suspension could have signed with rival clubs before the championship resumed, altering team compositions. The Portuguese Competition Authority found that the arrangement constituted a restriction of competition by object on the player recruitment market and imposed fines.
The main question of the referring court was whether a no-poach agreement as the one between Portuguese football clubs must be considered as restricting competition “by object”. For employers, the stakes of the by object question are high. A by object finding allows regulators to establish an infringement without proving any anti-competitive effect, while a finding of an restriction of competition by effect requires concrete proof of harm which is a much higher bar.
In the Tondela judgment, the ECJ now confirms that no-poach agreements between competing employers will, as a rule, fall into the by-object category. At the same time, the ECJ left room for no-poach agreements to fall into the effects category. To discern whether no-poach agreements restrict competition by object or by effect, the ECJ points to a three-step test:
Taken together, the by-object classification stands as the rule. But the rule is not absolute: where a concrete examination of these three elements reveals “the precise reasons” why such a classification would be unjustified, the agreement may need to be assessed against its actual or potential anti-competitive effects instead. The ECJ's framework largely tracks the European Commission's policy brief and its Delivery Hero / Glovo decision which generally consider no-poach agreements restrictions of competition by object. At the same time, at least in principle, the ECJ leaves more room for case-by-case examination – although the practical scope remains uncertain.
There remains one point to note which may play a role when considering whether a no-poach agreement may in fact be a restriction by effect only. In its judgment the ECJ treats no-poach agreements as a single category, but there is a crucial distinction to make: that between non-hire agreements (commitments not to hire each other's workers) and non-solicit agreements (commitments not to actively approach them). We see room to argue that the three-step test may yield different outcomes for the two, particularly under its first and second limb.
On the level of potential justifications of no-poach agreements, the Tondela judgment foresees the Superleague doctrine. This case-law enshrined in the ECJ’s Superleague decision holds that agreements occurring within the umbrella of a professional or sporting body escape Article 101(1) TFEU where they pursue a legitimate public interest by genuinely necessary and proportionate means. The distinction between agreements restricting competition by object or by effect is crucial in this regard: the Superleague doctrine only applies where an agreement is found to restrict competition by effect.
In the Tondela judgment, the ECJ accepted – as established in its past case law – that the integrity of sporting competitions qualifies as a legitimate public-interest objective. However, whether the exception would apply to the specific no-poach agreement at issue was left open by the ECJ and is for the national court to decide.
The remaining hypothetical defense for agreements restricting competition by object and by effect agreements that fail the Superleague test is Art. 101(3) TFEU which would require employers to demonstrate efficiency gains from their agreement. However, the evidentiary bar is high and is – in non-labor market contexts – rarely met in practice.
The Tondela case arose in professional football, but it will have consequences across sectors. The three-step test outlined above will become the benchmark for assessing no-poach agreements. In addition, we see three takeaways that will matter for no-poach agreements outside of the sports context:
In short: outside sport-specific contexts, no-poach agreements will generally remain in the by-object category, with the now well-established consequences for enforcement and exposure.
For legal departments, HR managers, and compliance officers, the doctrinal direction of travel is clear. The Tondela judgment completes the doctrinal arc that began with the European Commission's 2024 policy brief and continued with the first fines in Delivery Hero / Glovo. The ECJ has now confirmed, judicially and authoritatively, that no-poach agreements between competing employers will, as a rule, be classified as restrictions of competition by object.
Although the case now returns to the Tribunal da Concorrência for application of the framework on the facts, it is the framework set by the ECJ that matters most for the rest of the European market.
Authored by Christian Ritz and Friedrich Preetz.
With the ECJ now confirming the strict framework, existing labor market arrangements deserve a fresh review:
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