Vineyard rows aerial view

WHS & Safety Documentation Guide

What health and safety documentation your farm needs to keep workers safe and stay compliant with Australian workplace health and safety laws.

Workplace Health and Safety (WHS) isn't optional in agriculture. Farming is one of Australia's most dangerous industries, and regulators take it seriously. Having the right documentation isn't just about ticking boxes — it's about protecting your workers and protecting yourself if something goes wrong.

What WHS Documentation Every Farm Needs

Under Australian WHS legislation, every farm that employs workers — whether directly or through a labour hire company — must have specific safety documentation in place. This applies to all states and territories.

WHS Policy

A written statement of your commitment to workplace health and safety, signed by the business owner or manager.

Risk Assessments

Documented assessments for every significant hazard on your property — machinery, chemicals, heights, heat, manual handling, vehicles.

Safe Work Procedures

Step-by-step instructions for high-risk tasks like operating machinery, applying chemicals, working at heights, and working in extreme heat.

Emergency Plan

Written procedures for emergencies including fires, chemical spills, severe weather, medical emergencies, and evacuation routes.

Organised green farmland

Site Inductions & Training Records

Every worker who sets foot on your property must receive a site-specific induction before they start work. Generic inductions from the labour hire company are not enough — your site has unique hazards that workers need to know about.

Site Induction Checklist

A documented induction covering your specific hazards, emergency procedures, first aid locations, reporting requirements, and site rules.

Induction Sign-Off Records

Signed records proving every worker completed the induction before starting work. Date, name, signature — keep these forever.

Training Records

Documentation of any task-specific training provided — machinery operation, chemical handling, first aid, forklift, working at heights.

Licence & Certification Copies

Copies of relevant licences held by workers — forklift tickets, chemical handling certificates, first aid qualifications, drone licences.

Modern agricultural facility

Chemical Handling & PPE Requirements

Agriculture relies heavily on chemicals — pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, fertilisers. Improper handling is one of the biggest safety risks on farms, and regulators pay close attention to chemical safety documentation.

Safety Data Sheets (SDS)

Current SDS for every chemical used on your property, accessible to all workers. These must be kept up to date (within 5 years).

Chemical Register

A complete list of all hazardous chemicals stored and used on the property, with quantities and locations.

PPE Requirements

Documentation of what Personal Protective Equipment is required for each task — gloves, masks, eye protection, protective clothing, boots.

Spray Records

Records of chemical applications including date, product, rate, area, weather conditions, operator, and withholding periods.

Farmland aerial view

Incident Reporting & Record Keeping

When something goes wrong, your documentation is your defence. Having proper incident reporting systems means you can demonstrate that you took reasonable steps, responded appropriately, and learned from what happened.

Incident Report Forms

Standardised forms for recording workplace injuries, near misses, property damage, and hazard reports. Every incident, no matter how minor.

Notifiable Incident Procedures

Clear procedures for notifying the regulator (WorkSafe/SafeWork) of serious injuries, deaths, or dangerous incidents within required timeframes.

Investigation Records

Documentation of how incidents were investigated, what root causes were identified, and what corrective actions were implemented.

First Aid Records

Records of all first aid treatments administered, including date, worker name, injury description, treatment provided, and follow-up actions.

Agricultural field harvest
Vineyard fields

Generic templates don't cut it — your WHS docs must be specific to YOUR workplace

Tailored to Your Workplace

The most common mistake we see is farms using generic, downloaded WHS templates that don't reflect their actual operations. Regulators and insurers can tell the difference. Your documentation needs to be specific to your site, your hazards, your chemicals, and your processes.

01

We Visit Your Site

We walk your property, identify your specific hazards, and understand how your operation actually works day-to-day.

02

We Build Your Docs

We create WHS policies, risk assessments, induction checklists, and procedures tailored specifically to your workplace.

03

We Train Your Team

We walk your supervisors and admin staff through the documentation so they understand it and can maintain it.

04

We Come Back

When your operation changes, regulations update, or you need a refresh, we come back and update everything.

Tractor in field

Need WHS Documentation Built for Your Farm?

We come to your site, assess your hazards, and build all the WHS documentation you need — tailored, compliant, and audit-ready.