What happens if I leave without serving notice?
Short answer: Leaving without notice (absconding) usually triggers salary forfeiture, negative or delayed experience letter, recovery notices, and failed background checks. Some employers mark “not eligible for rehire.” New employers may revoke offers if verification fails.
Step-by-step approach
- Calculate total cost: recovery letter + legal fees + offer loss vs buyout cost.
- Contact old HR to negotiate settlement—even after leaving—some accept buyout late.
- Document any harassment or illegal withholding if that forced exit (seek legal advice).
- Prepare honest explanation for future employers—avoid lying on verification forms.
- Complete PF/gratuity transfer separately—absconding complicates but does not always block PF.
- Rebuild trust with strong references from other managers/clients if possible.
Real-world example
Karthik absconded from a service firm after 20 days of 90-day notice to join a startup. BGV failed; startup withdrew offer. He paid settlement after 6 months, got experience letter, and re-applied—lost a year of seniority progression. Buyout would have cost less than career damage.
Mistakes to avoid
- Believing small companies “do not check” notice history—they use third-party BGV.
- Ignoring recovery emails—accumulates interest and legal escalation in some cases.
- Using fake experience letters—criminal fraud risk.
- Assuming new employer will always protect you—they protect their hiring compliance first.
Follow-up questions you may get
- “Why did you leave abruptly?” — Own mistake, explain settlement, emphasize reliability since then.
Almost always cheaper and safer to negotiate buyout or serve partial notice than to abscond.