The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) announced its preliminary top 10 most frequently cited workplace safety standards for FY 2024 at the NSC Safety Congress & Expo in Orlando in September 2024. Fall protection topped the list for the 14th consecutive year.
The total number of citations across the top 10 decreased from FY 2023 to FY 2024, though the same standards continue to drive the majority of workplace safety citations each year. The complete preliminary top 10 list of most frequently cited standards for FY 2024 follows. (Preliminary data presented at NSC; detailed analysis later published by Safety+Health.) Common citation issues under each standard include:
1. Fall Protection, General Requirements (29 CFR 1926.501): 6,307 citations
2. Hazard Communication (29 CFR 1910.1200): 2,888 citations
3. Ladders (29 CFR 1926.1053): 2,573 citations
4. Respiratory Protection (29 CFR 1910.134): 2,470 citations
5. Lockout/Tagout (29 CFR 1910.147): 2,443 citations
6. Powered Industrial Trucks (29 CFR 1910.178): 2,248 citations
7. Fall Protection Training (29 CFR 1926.503): 2,050 citations
8. Scaffolding (29 CFR 1926.451): 1,873 citations
9. Eye and Face Protection (29 CFR 1926.102): 1,814 citations
10. Machine Guarding (29 CFR 1910.212): 1,541 citations
The same standards continue to appear on OSHA's Top 10 list year after year, which signals that many employers are still falling short on well-known hazards. Based on the preliminary FY 2024 counts presented at NSC and the FY 2023 NSC counts, all 10 categories had fewer citations year over year, with an overall decrease of about 11.9% across the Top 10 based on the preliminary NSC counts. Even so, fall protection remained the leading standard cited and had more than twice the number of citations as the next closest standard.
The persistence of these same standards on the list underscores the need for employers to acknowledge these trends and take action to strengthen their compliance programs, including use of OSHA's no-cost On-Site Consultation Program.