Roofing Contractor Magazine / OSHA, 2025
Roofing is the deadliest trade in construction. Fall protection violations have been OSHA's #1 most cited standard every year for over a decade, and roofers receive more fall protection citations than any other trade.
OSHA knows this. That's why they look at roofing contractors closely — and why having a written safety program isn't just a good idea for roofers. It's the difference between staying in business and getting shut down.
What Written Programs Does OSHA Require for Roofers?
Required for all roofers:
- Fall Protection Program (29 CFR 1926 Subpart M) — the critical program for your trade. Must cover: fall hazard assessment, protection methods (guardrails, PFAS, safety nets), equipment inspection, rescue plan, and training requirements. OSHA requires fall protection at 6 feet in construction — on a roof, you're always above 6 feet.
- Hazard Communication Program (29 CFR 1926.59) — covers roofing adhesives, solvents, sealants, primers, spray foam, hot asphalt, and tar. Burn hazards and fume exposure must be addressed specifically if you use hot materials.
- Emergency Action Plan (29 CFR 1926.35) — evacuation, medical emergency response, emergency contacts
- PPE Program (29 CFR 1926.28) — hazard assessment documenting what PPE your crew needs
- Fire Prevention Plan (29 CFR 1926.24) — especially critical if your crew uses torch-down products or hot asphalt kettles
- Safety Training Program (29 CFR 1926.21) — new hire orientation, ongoing toolbox talks, fall protection training
Programs you may need based on your work:
- Scaffolding Safety (29 CFR 1926 Subpart L) — if your crew uses scaffolding for access or edge protection
- Silica Exposure Control (29 CFR 1926.1153) — if your crew cuts concrete roof tiles or does core drilling
- Heat Illness Prevention — enforced under the General Duty Clause + OSHA's National Emphasis Program on heat (2022). Rooftop crews in summer need a written plan covering water, rest, shade, acclimatization, and emergency response.
- Hearing Conservation (29 CFR 1926.52) — if your crew regularly uses loud equipment
If you have 10 or more employees, OSHA also requires OSHA 300 Log recordkeeping under 29 CFR 1904.
Why Fall Protection Is Different for Roofers
Fall protection for roofers isn't one-size-fits-all. OSHA treats different roof types differently, and your written program needs to reflect the actual work your crew does.
Low-Slope Roofs (flat to 4:12)
- Warning line systems at 6 ft from edge
- Safety monitor systems (limited)
- Guardrail systems
- Personal Fall Arrest Systems (PFAS)
Steep-Slope Roofs (above 4:12)
- Guardrail systems
- Safety net systems
- Personal Fall Arrest Systems (PFAS) — harness, lanyard, anchor point
Residential roofing has additional complexity. OSHA's residential construction fall protection guidelines allow alternative methods for certain work, but you still need a written plan that documents your approach.
Your written fall protection program needs to specify which methods your crew uses, how anchor points are selected and inspected for different roof types, and your rescue plan for a suspended worker. OSHA requires rescue to be initiated within minutes — suspension trauma can become life-threatening in under 30 minutes.
Generic fall protection templates written for general construction don't address the residential vs. commercial distinction, roof pitch considerations, or roofing-specific anchor challenges. A roofer's fall protection program needs to be written for roofing work.
The Real Cost of Not Having a Program
⚠️ OSHA Penalty Ranges (January 2025)
- Serious violation: up to $16,550 per violation
- Willful or repeated violation: up to $165,514 per violation
But for roofers, the penalties aren't even the biggest risk. The bigger costs are:
- Lost contracts. General contractors increasingly require subcontractors to submit safety programs before starting work. No program = no job.
- Higher insurance premiums. Workers' comp carriers look at your safety program during underwriting. A well-documented program can lower your Experience Modification Rate (EMR). No program means higher premiums.
- ISNetworld qualification delays. Missing or incomplete programs fail RAVS verification and block you from bidding. See how CrewCompliance handles ISNetworld →
- Post-incident liability. If a worker falls and you don't have a written fall protection program, "we tell guys to be careful" is not a legal defense.
How to Get Your Roofing Safety Program Done
Safety consultants charge $2,000–$10,000 for a custom safety program. Generic templates cost $50–$300 but don't cover roofing-specific hazards like steep-slope fall protection, hot asphalt procedures, or heat illness prevention on summer rooftops.
CrewCompliance generates a complete roofing safety program in 10 minutes for $149. You answer 15 questions about your company — residential or commercial, steep-slope or flat, what materials you use, your crew size — and get a professional PDF with every section a GC, insurance company, or OSHA inspector expects to see.
Your company name on every page. Roofing-specific fall protection with the right methods for your roof types. HazCom written for the chemicals you actually use. Heat illness prevention for summer rooftop work. All the correct 29 CFR citations.
Your second program: $99. Third and beyond: $49.
82% of roofing fatalities are from falls.
A written fall protection program is the first line of defense — and it's what OSHA, your GC, and your insurance company expect to see.
Get My Roofing Safety Program — $149