Pittsburgh Breach of Contract Lawyer

When an employer fails to honor an employment agreement, the consequences can affect your income, career, and future opportunities. Our Pittsburgh employment lawyers can review the contract, explain your rights, and help you determine what to do next.

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Did Your Employer Break an Agreement?

Your employer may have promised a specific salary, commission structure, bonus, severance payment, job term, or set of benefits. When those terms are ignored, changed, or denied, you may have grounds to pursue a breach of contract claim.

 

A lawyer can examine the exact language of your agreement, the actions of both parties, and the losses caused by the alleged breach.

Common Employment Contract Breaches

Contract disputes can arise while you are employed or after the working relationship ends.

An employer may breach an agreement by:

A disappointing workplace decision is not automatically a contract breach. The issue is whether the employer failed to perform an obligation created by an enforceable agreement.

What Can Count as an Employment Contract?

A formal employment agreement is often the starting point, but other records may also be relevant. These can include offer letters, compensation plans, commission policies, bonus agreements, severance documents, contract amendments, emails, and written promises from management.

 

The wording matters. Disclaimers, conditions, termination clauses, arbitration requirements, and employer policies can all affect whether a promise may be enforced.

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Evidence That Can Support Your Claim

Strong documentation can make the terms and timeline easier to establish.

Keep copies of the original agreement, later revisions, emails, compensation records, performance reviews, pay statements, commission calculations, termination notices, and severance communications.

 

You should also prepare a timeline showing what was promised, what you did to meet your obligations, when the employer failed to perform, and how the breach affected you financially.

 

Do not rely on documents stored only on a company device or work email account. Preserve information you are legally permitted to keep before access is removed.

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How a Pittsburgh Contract Lawyer Can Help

Our employment lawyers can review the agreement, identify disputed terms, assess possible defenses, and calculate losses connected to the breach. We can also communicate with the employer, pursue negotiations, and determine whether litigation or another dispute process may be appropriate.

 

We assist workers throughout Pittsburgh and Allegheny County with employment disputes involving compensation, termination, severance, executive agreements, and other workplace promises.

What May Be Recovered in a Contract Claim?

The available remedy depends on the agreement and the losses caused by the breach.

A claim may seek unpaid compensation, lost benefits, severance, commissions, bonuses, or other financial losses that resulted from the employer’s failure to perform.

 

Some agreements also contain provisions addressing attorney fees, arbitration, notice requirements, or how disputes must be filed. A lawyer can review these terms before you make a demand or take legal action.

Do Not Let the Employer Control the Record

Avoid signing a release, amendment, repayment agreement, or severance document before understanding how it may affect your rights. You should also be careful about making accusations or accepting a verbal explanation without preserving the employer’s position in writing.

 

Getting advice early can help you respond strategically and avoid actions that weaken your claim.

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Frequently Asked Questions

A breach may occur when an employer fails to perform a required term of an enforceable employment agreement. Examples can include refusing to pay promised compensation, denying agreed severance, or ending a fixed-term contract contrary to its termination provisions.

Possibly. Offer letters, compensation plans, emails, written policies, amendments, and other communications may contain relevant promises. Whether those documents create an enforceable agreement depends on their language and the surrounding circumstances.

No. A breach of contract claim focuses on whether the employer violated an enforceable agreement. A wrongful termination claim generally focuses on whether the firing violated a law, protected right, public policy, or contractual restriction. The same termination may sometimes raise more than one legal issue.

You may have a claim when the bonus or commission was earned under a contract or compensation plan and the employer failed to pay it. Eligibility requirements, payment conditions, discretionary language, and the timing of your termination can affect the analysis.

Bring the employment agreement, offer letter, compensation plans, amendments, relevant emails, pay records, performance reviews, termination documents, and any severance proposal. A written timeline of important events can also help the lawyer understand the dispute.

Strict deadlines apply to contract claims, but the correct deadline can depend on the type of agreement, when the breach occurred, and the dispute procedures written into the contract. Some agreements may also require early notice or arbitration. Speak with a lawyer promptly rather than assuming you have plenty of time.