Non-Disclosure Agreement in Nebraska: A Complete Legal Guide

State-specific requirements, essential clauses, and practical guidance for non-disclosure agreements in Nebraska

12 min read Last updated: March 2026

Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change frequently and may vary by jurisdiction. Consult a licensed attorney in Nebraska for advice specific to your situation.

Overview

Nebraska's insurance, agriculture, and financial technology sectors — with Omaha serving as a major financial hub — create demand for confidentiality protections, particularly around proprietary financial models and agricultural innovations.

This guide covers the key Nebraska laws that affect non-disclosure agreements, the essential clauses your agreement should include, common drafting mistakes to avoid, and practical guidance for creating an enforceable non-disclosure agreement under NE law.

Key Nebraska Laws Affecting Non-Disclosure Agreements

Several Nebraska laws directly impact how non-disclosure agreements must be structured and enforced:

  • Nebraska Trade Secrets Act (Neb. Rev. Stat. § 87-501 to 87-507)
  • Nebraska Employment Law provisions
  • Nebraska Revised Statutes Chapter 25 (Courts; Procedure)

Non-Compete Enforceability: In Nebraska, non-compete clauses are enforceable if reasonable in time and scope and necessary to protect a legitimate business interest. This directly impacts how restrictive covenants should be drafted in any non-disclosure agreement.

Statute of Limitations: Nebraska has a 5-year statute of limitations for written contracts under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-205.

Essential Clauses in a Nebraska Non-Disclosure Agreement

A well-drafted non-disclosure agreement for Nebraska should include these critical elements:

  1. Definition of Confidential Information: Ensure this section complies with applicable Nebraska law and clearly defines the rights and obligations of each party.
  2. Obligations of the Receiving Party: Ensure this section complies with applicable Nebraska law and clearly defines the rights and obligations of each party.
  3. Exclusions from Confidential Information: Ensure this section complies with applicable Nebraska law and clearly defines the rights and obligations of each party.
  4. Term and Duration: Ensure this section complies with applicable Nebraska law and clearly defines the rights and obligations of each party.
  5. Return or Destruction of Information: Ensure this section complies with applicable Nebraska law and clearly defines the rights and obligations of each party.
  6. Remedies for Breach: Ensure this section complies with applicable Nebraska law and clearly defines the rights and obligations of each party.
  7. Nebraska-Specific Compliance: Include express language confirming the agreement complies with all applicable NE statutes and regulations, and specify Nebraska as the governing law.
  8. Dispute Resolution: Nebraska District Courts handle business disputes. Arbitration is enforceable under the Nebraska Uniform Arbitration Act.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

When drafting non-disclosure agreements for Nebraska, avoid these frequently encountered pitfalls:

  • Defining confidential information too broadly or too narrowly
  • Failing to include standard exclusions (publicly available information, independent development)
  • Setting an unreasonable duration that a court may refuse to enforce
  • Not specifying what happens to confidential information when the agreement ends
  • Ignoring state-specific requirements for enforceability
  • Ignoring Nebraska-specific requirements: Nebraska has specific laws and judicial precedents that affect enforceability. Using a generic template without NE customization can result in unenforceable provisions.

Consideration and Enforceability in Nebraska

Continued at-will employment generally constitutes adequate consideration for NDAs entered at the time of hire.

For a non-disclosure agreement to be enforceable in Nebraska, it must generally satisfy the basic requirements of contract formation: a clear offer and acceptance, adequate consideration, mutual assent, and lawful purpose. Nebraska courts may decline to enforce agreements with unconscionable terms or those obtained through duress or undue influence.

How LexDraft Helps with Nebraska Non-Disclosure Agreements

LexDraft simplifies non-disclosure agreement creation for Nebraska with:

  • AI-Powered Drafting: Generate a customized non-disclosure agreement tailored for Nebraska requirements directly within Microsoft Word — saving hours of manual drafting time.
  • State-Aware Templates: Start with templates that incorporate NE-specific compliance language, so you're not working from a one-size-fits-all document.
  • Plain Language Explanations: LexDraft explains complex Nebraska legal requirements in clear terms, helping you understand what each clause does and why it matters.
  • Fast Iteration: Modify, update, and regenerate your non-disclosure agreement as requirements change, all without leaving your Word workflow.

Frequently Asked Questions

NDA duration in Nebraska varies by context. For employment NDAs, courts typically find 1-3 years reasonable for the non-disclosure period, though trade secrets may be protected indefinitely. The term should be proportional to the sensitivity and lifespan of the information being protected. Nebraska courts evaluate duration as part of the overall reasonableness analysis. Consult a Nebraska-licensed attorney for guidance specific to your situation.

Under Nebraska contract law, an NDA requires valid consideration to be enforceable. Continued at-will employment generally constitutes adequate consideration for NDAs entered at the time of hire. However, an NDA signed without any consideration may be treated as an unenforceable promise. If you are uncertain whether your NDA has adequate consideration, seek advice from a Nebraska-licensed attorney.

If an NDA is breached in Nebraska, the injured party may seek remedies including injunctive relief (a court order to stop further disclosure), monetary damages for actual losses, and potentially attorney's fees if the agreement includes a fee-shifting provision. Under Nebraska's trade secrets law, additional remedies such as exemplary damages may be available for willful and malicious misappropriation. Nebraska District Courts handle business disputes. Arbitration is enforceable under the Nebraska Uniform Arbitration Act.

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