For Hospitality employers and workers, this guide explains how Irish weather changes the risk of working at height, and how a Working at Heights Course ties it to your day-to-day Hospitality work.
Weather and Winter Work in Hospitality
A hotel maintenance team rigging seasonal lighting across a high-ceilinged ballroom ahead of a busy events season. When it comes to how Irish weather changes the risk of working at height, Hospitality teams have to control hazards such as roof and gutter access on hotels, ladder use in kitchens and stores and seasonal external decoration. Hospitality premises mix public access with height work, so timing and exclusion zones matter as much as the equipment.
The Hospitality action list
- Record a risk assessment for each Hospitality task at height
- Choose collective protection before personal protection
- Certify the team with a Working at Heights Course
- Inspect equipment and keep the logs
- Plan rescue before work begins
The Working at Heights Course makes compliance simple
You do not need a classroom or a lost work day to fix this. Our Working at Heights Course is delivered fully online, takes about 45 minutes, and issues a downloadable certificate the same day. It is CPD certified, RoSPA approved and QQI aligned, and it is written specifically for Hospitality teams across Ireland.
The Working at Heights Training covers the avoid-prevent-minimise hierarchy, ladder and stepladder safety, MEWPs and scaffolds, harnesses and anchor points, and how to carry out a proper risk assessment. Every learner finishes with a recognised Working at Heights Certificate that stands up to HSA inspection and supports your insurance position.
Training that goes beyond the tick-box
Documentation is what turns good practice into proven compliance for Weather and Winter Work in Hospitality. Keep your risk assessment, your method statement, your equipment inspection logs and your training records together, and an HSA visit becomes a short, calm conversation rather than a drawn-out investigation.
Insurers now ask directly whether your team holds current Working at Heights certification before they price a policy or settle a claim involving Weather and Winter Work in Hospitality. A worker hurt at height with no Working at Heights Certificate turns a defensible incident into an indefensible one, and that follows your premium for years.
Frequently asked questions
When is it too windy or wet to work at height?
Stop or reassess height work in high winds, ice, heavy rain or poor visibility; frosted surfaces and gusts cause many Irish falls.
How does this affect Hospitality specifically?
In Hospitality, the same rules apply with sector-specific hazards. Our Working at Heights Training covers both.
Is online training enough for Hospitality?
Yes for the core legal and safe-system knowledge; add equipment-specific tickets where the Hospitality task requires them.
More on staying safe at height
Weather turns a routine job into a dangerous one faster than anything else in Ireland. Wind, rain, frost and poor light all raise the risk of hospitality work at height, and the right call is often to stop and reassess rather than push on. Knowing where that line sits is part of being properly trained.
The cheapest control is always to avoid the work at height in the first place. For hospitality work at height, that can mean long-handled tools, lowering the task to ground level, or designing the job so no one needs to climb. Where that is impossible, collective protection such as guardrails and platforms beats personal protection every time.
Get certified today
Do not wait for an HSA inspection or a near miss to act. Hospitality employers and workers can complete the Working at Heights Course online in 45 minutes and download a certificate the same day. For 10 or more learners, see our team training rates, or contact our team for a tailored quote.
Start the online Working at Heights Training now and put a recognised certificate in every worker's file before the next job at height begins.