Vermont · Severance Pay

Vermont Severance
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Estimate severance pay based on Vermont employment law and industry standards.

8 min readReviewed by the Made for Law editorial team
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Estimate your Vermont Severance Pay

Estimate severance pay based on Vermont employment law and industry standards.

· Data sourced from Vermont statutes and court fee schedules.

Important: This tool provides educational estimates only — not legal advice. Made For Law is not a law firm and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government agency or court system. Calculator results are based on statutory formulas and publicly available fee schedules — not AI. Supporting content is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed. Results may not reflect recent legislative changes or your specific circumstances. Do not rely solely on these estimates — always verify with official sources and consult a licensed attorney before making legal or financial decisions. Full disclaimer

Quick answer

Vermont does not require employers to provide severance pay — it is typically negotiated. The common benchmark is 1-2 weeks of pay per year of service. Vermont employers with 100+ employees must provide 60 days' notice under the federal WARN Act (state law: 14 V.S.A. § 1218).

Key Takeaways

  • Vermont does not require severance pay by statute — it is always negotiable
  • Final paycheck deadline: within 72 hours of termination
  • State WARN Act (50 employees) requires 45 days' notice — violations = additional pay
  • Non-competes: enforceable if reasonable — negotiate release in severance
Vermont at a glance

Key facts for Vermont severance pay

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In depth

What drives severance pay in Vermont

HR professional discussing severance package with employee — Vermont
Severance Pay Calculator — Vermont

Severance Pay Laws in Vermont

Vermont is an at-will employment state, meaning employers can terminate employees for any lawful reason without notice or cause — and without any legal obligation to provide severance pay. There is no federal or Vermont state law requiring private employers to pay severance upon termination.

However, severance packages are extremely common in practice — especially for layoffs, reductions in force, and negotiated departures — because employers use them to obtain signed release agreements that waive the employee's right to sue.

When severance is offered in Vermont, it typically ranges from 1–2 weeks of pay per year of service for individual terminations, and 1–4 weeks per year of service for mass layoffs or executive-level employees. Executives and senior professionals in Vermont often negotiate significantly higher packages, ranging from 3–12 months of base salary plus benefits continuation.

The amount is almost always negotiable, and employees who understand Vermont's specific employment laws have far more leverage than those who accept the first offer.

Key factors that drive severance negotiations in Vermont include potential claims under federal and state anti-discrimination laws, Vermont's own WARN Act requirements (Vermont Notice of Potential Layoffs Act (21 V.S.A. §414a)), final paycheck timing rules, PTO payout obligations, and non-compete enforceability.

An employee who understands these levers can often negotiate 2–5x the initial severance offer. Below we break down each of these Vermont-specific factors.

Vermont's Dept. of Labor enforces final pay laws — wages are due within 72 hours of termination (21 V.S.A.

§ 342). Accrued vacation must be paid out on termination if the employer's written policy provides for it.

Vermont's WARN Act (21 V.S.A. § 491) requires 45 days' advance notice for employers with 50+ employees, combined with minimum severance obligations.

Non-competes are enforceable in Vermont if reasonable in time, geography, and scope — courts apply traditional reasonableness analysis and may blue-pencil. Chittenden County Superior Court (Burlington) is the primary venue for severance disputes.

Vermont WARN Act & Layoff Notice Requirements

The federal Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act requires employers with 100 or more employees to provide 60 days' advance written notice before a plant closing or mass layoff affecting 50 or more workers at a single site. Vermont goes further with its own state-level WARN Act — Vermont Notice of Potential Layoffs Act (21 V.S.A.

§414a) — which applies to employers with 50 employees and requires 45 days' advance notice. The state law may also cover situations the federal WARN Act does not, such as smaller layoffs or relocations.

WARN Act violations are a powerful severance negotiation tool. When an employer fails to provide the required 45-day notice, each affected employee is entitled to back pay and benefits for each day of the violation period — up to 45 days of pay.

In practice, many employers offer severance packages that include pay-in-lieu-of-notice to satisfy their WARN obligations, bundling the required notice period pay into the overall severance amount.

Even when WARN does not technically apply, the threat of a WARN Act claim can be a valuable bargaining chip. Many employers are uncertain about whether a layoff triggers WARN requirements, especially in situations involving rolling layoffs, partial closings, or remote workers.

A knowledgeable employee or attorney in Vermont can leverage this uncertainty to negotiate a more favorable severance package. Some Vermont employment contracts or collective bargaining agreements include their own notice and severance provisions that exceed statutory requirements.

Financial professional calculating severance pay amount in Vermont
Vermont severance pay calculator

Final Paycheck Laws in Vermont

Vermont law requires employers to deliver the final paycheck within 72 hours of termination. This deadline applies to all earned but unpaid wages, including regular salary, overtime, commissions, and in some cases accrued benefits.

Violations of final pay timing laws can result in penalties including statutory damages, interest, and attorney's fees.

The final paycheck requirement is separate from severance pay and is non-negotiable — employers must pay all earned wages regardless of whether the employee signs a release agreement. An employer who withholds the final paycheck to pressure an employee into signing a severance agreement is violating Vermont wage payment law.

This is a critical distinction: you are entitled to your final paycheck regardless of whether you accept or reject a severance offer. If your employer delays or withholds your final pay, you may have an additional claim that strengthens your negotiating position.

Final paycheck requirements in Vermont also apply to any earned but unused paid time off, depending on the state's PTO payout rules (discussed below). Employers who misclassify compensation components — for example, treating commissions as discretionary bonuses to avoid including them in the final paycheck — face additional penalties.

If you believe your final paycheck was calculated incorrectly, you can file a wage claim with Vermont's labor department while simultaneously negotiating your severance package.

PTO and Vacation Payout Requirements in Vermont

Vermont does not have a blanket statutory requirement to pay out accrued PTO upon termination. However, if an employer's written policy or employment agreement promises PTO payout, that promise becomes an enforceable obligation under Vermont law.

An employer who has a policy providing for PTO payout cannot retroactively change the policy to avoid paying out accrued time. Review your employee handbook carefully — if it promises PTO payout at separation, you are legally entitled to it regardless of how you separate from the company.

PTO payout obligations are separate from severance pay and should not be "double-counted" in a severance package. Some employers attempt to roll PTO payout into the severance amount, effectively reducing the actual severance.

For example, if you have 3 weeks of accrued PTO and the employer offers "6 weeks of severance" but includes your PTO payout in that figure, the actual severance is only 3 weeks. Always ensure the severance agreement clearly separates PTO payout from severance pay, and verify that your PTO balance is accurate before signing any agreement.

In addition to vacation time, consider whether you have accrued sick leave, personal days, floating holidays, or other paid time off categories. Vermont may treat these differently than vacation time — some states require vacation payout but not sick leave payout, for example.

If your employer offers unlimited PTO, the analysis changes significantly: courts in most states have held that unlimited PTO policies do not create an accrual obligation, meaning there is nothing to pay out upon termination. This is an increasingly important issue as more Vermont employers adopt unlimited PTO policies.

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Non-Compete Agreements and Severance in Vermont

Non-compete agreements in Vermont are enforceable if reasonable; courts apply traditional reasonableness test. This is one of the most critical factors in severance negotiations because a restrictive non-compete can prevent you from working in your field for months or even years after termination.

If you signed a non-compete as a condition of employment in Vermont, the enforceability of that agreement directly impacts both your severance negotiation leverage and your post-termination career options.

In severance negotiations, a non-compete clause can work both ways. On one hand, the employer may be willing to offer a larger severance package in exchange for a stricter or extended non-compete.

On the other hand, you can negotiate to have the non-compete released, shortened, or narrowed as part of the severance agreement. Many employees in Vermont successfully negotiate the complete removal of their non-compete in exchange for accepting a modest severance package — a tradeoff that can be far more valuable than additional severance pay if you have job prospects in the same industry.

When reviewing a severance agreement in Vermont, pay close attention to non-solicitation clauses, which are often buried alongside non-compete provisions but are treated differently under state law. Even in states that ban non-competes, non-solicitation agreements that prevent you from contacting former clients or coworkers are frequently upheld.

Also review whether the severance agreement introduces any new restrictive covenants that did not exist in your original employment agreement — some employers use the severance process to impose restrictions that were never part of the original employment relationship.

Attorney advising on severance agreement negotiation in Vermont
Severance Pay Calculator resources — Vermont

Severance Negotiation Strategies Under Vermont Law

The most common mistake employees in Vermont make is accepting the first severance offer without negotiation. Initial offers are almost always the employer's floor, not their ceiling.

Before responding, take the full review period available to you — under the federal Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (OWBPA), employees 40 and older must be given at least 21 days to consider a severance agreement (45 days in a group layoff), plus 7 days to revoke after signing. Even employees under 40 should request at least 7–14 days to review the agreement with an attorney.

In Vermont, leverage the state WARN Act (Vermont Notice of Potential Layoffs Act (21 V.S.A. §414a)) as a negotiation tool.

If your employer failed to provide 45 days of notice, you have a strong argument for additional severance pay equal to the shortfall in notice days. Other Vermont-specific leverage points include: negotiating the release or narrowing of non-compete restrictions, potential discrimination or retaliation claims under federal and Vermont law, and the employer's desire for a clean release of all claims.

Key elements to negotiate beyond base severance pay include: COBRA health insurance subsidies (typically 3–12 months), outplacement services, accelerated vesting of equity or stock options, a neutral or positive employment reference, extended eligibility for annual bonuses, continuation of life and disability insurance, retention of company equipment (laptop, phone), cooperation clauses that limit future obligations, and the scope of non-disparagement provisions. In Vermont, ensure the agreement does not contain an overly broad release that waives claims you may not yet be aware of, and confirm it complies with state-specific requirements for release agreements.

Frequently asked

Questions families ask about Vermont severance pay

Edited and reviewed by our editorial team. Answers are general information — not legal advice.

Is severance pay required in Vermont?

No — Vermont does not require employers to pay severance upon termination. Severance is a negotiated benefit, and the amount depends on your leverage, tenure, role, and the circumstances of your termination.

When must my employer deliver my final paycheck in Vermont?

Your employer must deliver your final paycheck within 72 hours of termination. This includes all earned wages, overtime, and commissions. Failure to pay on time can result in penalties and interest under Vermont law.

Does Vermont require PTO payout at termination?

Only if the employer's written policy promises PTO payout. If the handbook or employment agreement provides for payout at separation, the employer must honor it.

Are non-compete agreements enforceable in Vermont?

Yes, non-competes are generally enforceable in Vermont if they are reasonable in scope, duration, and geography. However, they can be negotiated or released as part of a severance agreement.

How much severance should I expect in Vermont?

While there is no legal formula, common benchmarks are 1–2 weeks of pay per year of service for standard layoffs and 2–4 weeks per year for executive-level employees. In Vermont, the state WARN Act can add up to 45 days of additional pay if notice requirements were not met. With proper negotiation, many employees secure 2–5x the initial offer. For the Department of Labor's guidance on severance pay and the WARN Act, see the Department of Labor severance pay information.

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Key statutes: 14 V.S.A. § 1218

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Legal information, not legal advice. The Severance Pay Calculator for Vermont produces estimates based on public fee schedules and state statutes. Actual costs vary by case. For advice about your situation, consult a licensed Vermont attorney.