Should You Sign a Severance Agreement Without a Lawyer? What Nevada Employees Need to Know

By Milan Chatterjee | Founding Attorney, Milan Legal

Nevada employee reviewing severance agreement before signing employment separation documents

When an employer presents a severance agreement, many employees assume they have only two choices: sign the agreement immediately or walk away with nothing.

In reality, severance agreements are often far more important and negotiable than many people realize.

Most severance packages contain legal language that affects your future rights, your ability to bring legal claims, and sometimes even your future employment opportunities. Yet employees are frequently asked to make a decision within days of losing their jobs.

The emotional stress of termination often causes people to focus only on the amount of money being offered. Unfortunately, the most important provisions in a severance agreement are not always the compensation terms.

Before signing any severance package, Nevada employees should understand exactly what they are agreeing to and what rights they may be giving up.


Why Employers Offer Severance Agreements

Contrary to popular belief, employers do not usually offer severance packages simply as a gesture of goodwill.

In many situations, the employer is seeking something valuable in return.

Typically, a severance agreement requires the employee to release potential legal claims against the company. Once signed, the agreement may prevent the employee from pursuing certain employment-related claims in the future.

For employers, severance agreements provide certainty and reduce legal risk. For employees, they create an opportunity to obtain compensation while negotiating favorable terms.

Understanding this exchange is critical before making a decision.


The Biggest Mistake Employees Make

One of the most common mistakes is signing too quickly.

After losing a job, employees often feel pressure to secure immediate financial stability. Employers know this.

Many workers sign agreements without fully understanding confidentiality provisions, non-disparagement clauses, release language, or restrictive covenants.

Months later, they may discover they waived valuable legal rights without realizing it.

Taking time to review the agreement carefully is usually one of the smartest decisions an employee can make.

What Rights Are You Giving Up?

Most severance agreements contain a release of claims.

This means the employee agrees not to sue the employer for certain employment-related issues arising before the agreement was signed.

Depending on the circumstances, those claims may involve:

  • Discrimination
  • Harassment
  • Retaliation
  • Wrongful termination
  • Wage disputes
  • Contract issues

Many employees never consider whether they may have a viable legal claim before accepting a severance offer.

That can be a costly mistake.

An attorney can help evaluate whether potential claims exist and whether the severance offer appropriately reflects the circumstances of the separation.


Severance Agreements Are Often Negotiable

Many employees assume the severance package is final.

Often, it is not.

Employers may be willing to negotiate:

  • Additional severance pay
  • Extended healthcare benefits
  • Positive reference language
  • Non-disparagement provisions
  • Payment schedules
  • Restrictive covenants

The willingness to negotiate depends on many factors, including the employee’s position, tenure, and potential legal claims.

In some situations, relatively small changes to an agreement can create significant long-term benefits.

Employment attorney reviewing severance package and legal terms for Nevada employee

When Legal Review Is Especially Important

Certain situations deserve extra attention.

For example, legal review may be particularly valuable when:

  • The employee was recently terminated
  • A discrimination complaint preceded the separation
  • The employee reported misconduct
  • The employee held a management position
  • A non-compete agreement is involved
  • The severance package appears unusually complex

In these situations, understanding the legal implications of the agreement becomes even more important.

How a Severance Negotiation Lawyer Can Help

An experienced employment attorney does more than review legal language.

A lawyer can identify hidden risks, evaluate potential claims, assess negotiation opportunities, and explain how specific provisions may affect your future.

In many cases, employees simply want clarity. They want to know whether the offer is reasonable and whether accepting it makes sense.

Even when no legal claim exists, understanding the agreement fully provides peace of mind during an already stressful transition.

Frequently Asked Questions

In most situations, employees benefit from reviewing the agreement carefully before signing. Rushing the decision may result in giving up important rights.

Often, yes. Many severance agreements contain terms that may be negotiable depending on the circumstances.

You are not required to hire a lawyer, but legal review can help you understand your rights and identify potential negotiation opportunities.

A release of claims may prevent you from pursuing certain legal actions against your employer related to your employment or termination.

Ideally before signing any agreement. Once an agreement is executed, opportunities for negotiation may be limited.

Conclusion

Severance agreements are often more significant than employees initially realize. While the financial offer may attract the most attention, the legal rights being waived can be equally important.

Before signing any severance agreement, employees should understand what they are giving up, whether the offer is negotiable, and whether legal claims may exist.

Best Employment Attorney helps employees throughout Las Vegas, Reno, and Nevada review severance agreements, negotiate severance packages, and protect their workplace rights. Contact our office today to discuss your situation.

Milan Chatterjee

Milan Chatterjee

Milan Chatterjee is a Nevada employment attorney representing both employees and employers across Las Vegas, Reno, and Northern Nevada. As former Associate Compliance Counsel at Las Vegas Sands Corp., a Fortune 500 hospitality company, Milan advised senior leadership on employment compliance, internal investigations, and litigation strategy across global operations. He uses that in-house perspective to anticipate how major Nevada employers approach termination decisions, document creation, and litigation defense โ€” and to dismantle those strategies for the employees and smaller employers he represents today. His practice covers wrongful termination, discrimination, harassment, wage and hour disputes, and HR compliance under NRS Chapter 608, NRS 613, Title VII, FLSA, and the ADA.

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