What Is a Offer Letter?
Formal job offer documenting compensation, start date, and employment conditions before the employment agreement. In New York, this document must comply with state-specific requirements that differ from federal standards and from other states.
Every employer extending a job offer in New York faces unique legal requirements. Failing to use the correct New York-compliant version of this document exposes your business to liability up to $1,000 - $50,000.
New York-Specific Offer Letter Requirements
NYC requires salary range in job postings and offers. Cannot ask salary history. Must include pay frequency.
New York Compliance Snapshot
Download the New York Offer Letter Checklist
A free checklist of every clause your New York offer letter must include to be legally defensible in 2026.
Key Clauses Your New York Offer Letter Must Include
A offer letter that is missing any of these elements may be unenforceable or create liability in New York.
- Job title and description
- Compensation structure
- Start date
- Benefits overview
- At-will employment statement
- Contingencies (background check, drug test)
- Offer expiration
Common New York Offer Letter Mistakes That Lead to Lawsuits
- Using a generic template not customized for New York - state law overrides federal minimums
- Not updating the document when New York law changes (required per new hire)
- Failing to have employees sign and date the document before their start date
- Missing New York-required disclosures or notices that must be included
- Not retaining signed copies for the required retention period
New York Offer Letter by Job Title
Different job roles require different clauses. Select your employee's job title to see a version customized for that role in New York.