# Severance pay over 40 - what changes?

> Counteroffer · Answers · severance
> Source: https://trycounteroffer.com/answers/severance-pay-over-40


**Short answer:** If you're 40 or older when laid off, federal law (the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act, part of ADEA) gives you specific procedural protections: 21 days to review the agreement for individual layoffs (45 days for group layoffs), 7 days to revoke after signing, and required notice of your right to consult an attorney. Group layoffs also require employers to provide a list of job titles and ages of all employees included and excluded from the decisional unit, which lets you assess potential age discrimination claims. The severance amount itself follows the same benchmarks as for younger employees.

## On this page
- [Procedural protections for employees 40+](#procedural-protections-for-employees-40)
- [Group layoff disclosure rights](#group-layoff-disclosure-rights)
- [Whether the severance amount differs](#whether-the-severance-amount-differs)
- [Age discrimination considerations](#age-discrimination-considerations)
- [How to leverage age 40+ status](#how-to-leverage-age-40-status)

## Procedural protections for employees 40+

The Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (OWBPA), part of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, gives specific procedural protections when an employee 40 or older is asked to release age-discrimination claims:

**Review periods:**
- 21 days minimum for an individual layoff
- 45 days minimum for a group layoff (defined as 2+ employees terminated as part of the same program)

**Revocation period:**
- 7 days after signing, during which you can rescind

**Required notices in the agreement:**
- Specific reference to ADEA claims being waived
- Statement of the right to consult with an attorney
- Statement of the review period
- Statement of the revocation period

**Format requirements:**
- Written in a manner calculated to be understood by the average employee
- Specific reference to rights or claims under ADEA

A release that fails any of these requirements is unenforceable as to ADEA claims, even if the employee signed it. The Supreme Court confirmed this in Oubre v. Entergy Operations (1998): an employee who signed a defective release does not have to return the severance money to sue for age discrimination.

## Group layoff disclosure rights

For group layoffs specifically (2+ employees), the OWBPA requires the employer to provide additional information:

> Decisional unit disclosure: A list of job titles and ages of all individuals eligible for the program (i.e., included in the decisional unit), and the ages of all individuals in the same job classification or organizational unit who are NOT eligible (excluded from the decisional unit).

This disclosure lets you (and your attorney if you have one) assess whether the layoff disproportionately affected older workers. For example, if 8 of 10 people laid off are over 50 while 2 of 30 retained are over 50, that pattern suggests potential age discrimination.

The disclosure must be specific enough to be meaningful. Vague categories like "everyone in the marketing department" without job title and age breakdown are insufficient.

If the employer fails to provide the required decisional unit disclosure, the release is again unenforceable as to ADEA claims.

## Whether the severance amount differs

The OWBPA procedural protections are about how the release is presented, not about the amount of severance. Employees 40+ should expect:

- The same severance multiple benchmarks as younger employees (2 weeks per year of service, with role-based floors)
- The same negotiable items (equity acceleration, COBRA bridge, etc.)
- Sometimes additional severance offered as recognition of more tenure (which often comes with older age)
- Sometimes targeted retention packages for senior leaders, regardless of age

If you're 40+ and the offered severance is dramatically below what younger peers received, that itself can suggest age discrimination and provide leverage for negotiation.

## Age discrimination considerations

The OWBPA exists because Congress recognized that older workers face heightened discrimination risk. If you suspect your layoff was age-motivated:

- Review the decisional unit disclosure carefully
- Note patterns: ages of those laid off vs retained, performance review history, recent management changes
- Document any age-related comments or pressure you experienced before the layoff
- Consider whether you were replaced by a younger employee in substance, if not in title

If patterns suggest potential discrimination:

- Use the 21/45 day review window to consult an employment attorney
- Do not sign the release without understanding what you might be giving up
- Filing an EEOC charge preserves your rights and may be a precondition to litigation in some contexts
- The severance offered may be a negotiating tool to prevent litigation; this is sometimes leverage for a much higher severance amount

This is a category of situation that warrants direct attorney consultation rather than a general contract review service. If your situation has potential discrimination indicators, get a licensed employment attorney involved.

## How to leverage age 40+ status

Even without specific discrimination concerns, age 40+ status gives you negotiation leverage:

- **Time**: You have 21 or 45 days to review. Use it. Companies that pressure you to sign in 5 days are violating the OWBPA if you're 40+.
- **Procedural review**: Make sure the agreement complies with OWBPA. If it doesn't, you have grounds to push for revisions before signing.
- **Attorney consultation**: The agreement must advise you to consult an attorney. Take that advice. Even a 1-hour consultation gives you better positioning.
- **Decisional unit disclosure**: For group layoffs, the disclosure can reveal patterns that strengthen your position.
- **Substantive review**: A delivered contract review service that knows OWBPA can identify compliance defects and recommend specific counters.

## What to do next

If you're 40 or older and have received a severance offer, the procedural protections give you both time and tools to negotiate. A delivered review identifies OWBPA compliance issues and recommends specific counter language for $199. See [Severance Review](https://trycounteroffer.com/severance).

If you suspect age discrimination played a role in your selection, the situation warrants direct attorney consultation rather than a contract review. Reach out to hello@trycounteroffer.com and we'll refer you to vetted employment attorneys in your state.

## Sources

- Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 USC § 621 et seq.
- Older Workers Benefit Protection Act amendments, 29 USC § 626(f)
- Oubre v. Entergy Operations, 522 U.S. 422 (1998)
- EEOC guidance: Understanding Waivers of Discrimination Claims in Employee Severance Agreements (2009)

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## Related answers
- [What is ADEA and why does it matter for my severance?](https://trycounteroffer.com/answers/adea-explained)
- [How long do I have to sign my severance?](https://trycounteroffer.com/answers/how-long-to-sign-severance)
- [What's a fair severance package?](https://trycounteroffer.com/answers/whats-a-fair-severance-package)

## Get your contract reviewed
If you want a delivered review of your specific document with cited authority and counter language, see https://trycounteroffer.com/severance.

Last updated: Sun May 31 2026 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

_Counteroffer is a contract analysis service, not a law firm. This page is informational, not legal advice._
