When is Working at Heights Training required?
Understand exactly when Working at Heights Training is legally required in Ireland, who needs it, and when you should complete refresher training.
Training is required when handling poses a risk of injury.
Irish employers have clear legal duties under the Safety, Health and Welfare at Work (General Application) Regulations 2007.
- New starters before handling tasks
- Role changes and new equipment
- Refresher every 3 years
Working at Heights Training and the law in Ireland.
Irish employers have a clear legal duty to provide Working at Heights Training to workers who lift, carry, push, or pull loads that could cause injury. This duty is set out in the Safety, Health and Welfare at Work (General Application) Regulations 2007, enforced by the Health and Safety Authority (HSA).
The regulations do not list every scenario, but they do require employers to carry out risk assessments and provide appropriate training. If Working at Heights is part of the job and poses a risk of injury, training is required - whether that is a warehouse picker in Dublin, a care worker in Cork, or a site labourer in Galway.
This page explains when training applies, who needs it, and how often refresher training should be completed so your certification stays valid and your workplace stays compliant.
Situations that require Working at Heights Training.
Working at Heights Training is required in these common workplace scenarios across Ireland.
New Employees
All new workers must receive Working at Heights Training before performing tasks that involve lifting, carrying, pushing, or pulling loads.
Change of Role
Workers moving to a role with different Working at Heights requirements need additional or refreshed training for new tasks.
Certificate Expiry
Refresher training is required every 3 years to maintain a valid Working at Heights Certificate - sooner if employer policy requires.
New Equipment
Introduction of new handling equipment or changes to work processes require updated training on safe use.
After an Incident
Following a Working at Heights injury or near-miss, affected workers should receive refresher training on safe techniques.
Job Requirements
Many employers and recruitment agencies require a valid Working at Heights Certificate before starting work or being placed.
Legal requirements for Working at Heights Training
Under the Safety, Health and Welfare at Work (General Application) Regulations 2007, employers must provide training to workers who perform work-at-height tasks that pose a risk of injury.
The regulations do not specify exact circumstances - instead they require employers to assess risks and provide appropriate training based on those assessments. However, general guidance indicates training is required when:
- Workers regularly lift, carry, push, or pull loads
- Tasks involve loads that could cause injury
- Work involves unstable stance on a ladder or platforms or confined spaces
- Repetitive handling could cause cumulative harm
- Environmental factors increase risk (slopes, obstacles, temperatures)
The key test is whether Working at Heights is part of the job and poses a risk of injury. If both are true, training is required.
Who needs Working at Heights Training?
Working at Heights Training is needed across almost every industry sector in Ireland:
Healthcare
Nurses, carers, healthcare assistants, porters, and support staff who handle patients or equipment need training. working at height in care settings has specific additional requirements.
Construction
Building workers, labourers, electricians, plumbers, and site managers who handle materials and tools need training. The construction industry has particularly high Working at Heights injury rates.
Retail and Hospitality
Shop staff, construction workers, roofers and maintenance staff, hotel housekeeping, kitchen staff, and bar workers regularly handle stock, deliveries, and equipment requiring proper technique.
Office Work
Even office workers may need training if they handle files, equipment, or assist with office moves. The training need is based on actual tasks, not job title.
Refresher training requirements
The standard recommendation is to complete refresher training every 3 years. However, refresher training may be needed sooner if:
- Your role changes significantly
- New equipment or processes are introduced
- An incident highlights training gaps
- Your employer policy requires it
- You have been away from work for an extended period
Our online Working at Heights Refresher Course builds on existing knowledge and updates learners on current best practice, so your certification stays valid and your workplace stays compliant.
Common questions about training requirements.
Quick answers to the most common Working at Heights Training questions in Ireland.
Does everyone need Working at Heights Training?
Is training required for light office work?
How often do I need to renew my certificate?
What if my employer does not provide training?
Is Working at Heights Training a legal requirement in Ireland?
Need Working at Heights Training today?
Complete your HSA compliant Working at Heights Course online in about 45 minutes and receive your certificate instantly. Valid for 3 years across Ireland.
Explore more Working at Heights resources.
Continue learning with related guides on training, employer duties and certification.
Working at Heights Training, everywhere you work.
One HSA compliant, QQI aligned, CPD and RoSPA approved Working at Heights Course - delivered online to every Irish city, every industry and every role. Instant Working at Heights Certificate on passing, valid for 3 years nationwide.
Renewing? Use our fast Working at Heights Refresher. Looking for formally recognised training? See our Working at Heights QQI page. Need the basics first? Start with what Working at Heights actually is and the risk assessment for work at height.
Find your city
Every major Irish city has its own dedicated Working at Heights Course page - same HSA compliant training, tuned to your local workforce.
Find your industry
Eight sector variants, from healthcare to farming, with real Irish workplace scenarios specific to your day-to-day.
Healthcare & HSE
Nurses, care assistants, porters, paramedics and home carers across every Irish health service.
Warehousing & logistics
Pickers, packers, forklift operators, couriers and distribution centre staff lifting daily.
Retail & supermarkets
Shop floor teams, stockroom workers and delivery drivers in stores and shopping centres.
Construction & trades
Labourers, carpenters, electricians, plumbers and plant operators on every Irish site.
Manufacturing
Production line, assembly, quality control and maintenance in pharma, food and medtech.
Hospitality & catering
Kitchen, housekeeping, maintenance and event teams across hotels and venues.
Office & administration
Office teams handling deliveries, IT equipment, file boxes and furniture moves.
Agriculture & farming
Farm workers, livestock handlers, agricultural contractors and seasonal crews.
Every Working at Heights resource
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