Solar Installer SWMS in New South Wales
In New South Wales, solar installer contractors must prepare a Safe Work Method Statement before starting high risk construction work, under WHS Regulation 2025 (NSW) s 299, which requires a SWMS before any high risk construction work. The regulator is SafeWork NSW. For solar installer work the SWMS must be site-specific and cover the high risk categories the trade routinely hits: risk of a person falling more than 2 metres, work on or near energised electrical installations or services. One SWMS can cover several of those activities. A generic template can be reused for recurring work only if it is reviewed and adapted to each site's hazards first; an unreviewed copy does not meet the requirement.
The SWMS law in New South Wales
Solar Installer work in New South Wales is regulated by SafeWork NSW under the Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (NSW) and the Work Health and Safety Regulation 2025 (NSW). The duty to prepare a SWMS before high risk construction work is set by WHS Regulation 2025 (NSW) s 299, and the high risk construction work itself is defined in WHS Regulation 2025 (NSW) s 291. These follow the harmonised model WHS laws, so a SWMS prepared for another harmonised state transfers with a site-specific review.
NSW remade its regulations as the WHS Regulation 2025, which commenced on 22 August 2025 and replaced the WHS Regulation 2017, so the current SWMS duties are cited as sections (s 299, s 291) rather than clauses.
Industrial manslaughter under the WHS Act 2011 (NSW) carries up to 25 years imprisonment for an individual and a $20 million fine for a body corporate; the offence commenced in 2024. A site-specific SWMS is part of how a solar installer business shows it identified and controlled the high risk work these duties attach to, rather than relying on a generic template.
High risk work for solar installer crews
The high risk construction work categories a solar installer SWMS usually has to cover:
- ✓ Risk of a person falling more than 2 metres
- ✓ Work on or near energised electrical installations or services
Typical solar installer activities that each need their own SWMS:
- · Rooftop solar panel installation above 2 m
- · Panel lifting and loading onto roofs
- · DC wiring and string connection (energised work controls)
- · Inverter and switchboard connection
- · Battery energy storage system installation
- · Fall protection setup: rails, static lines, harnesses
Hazards a solar installer SWMS has to control
The hazards that recur on solar installer jobs and that a site-specific SWMS is expected to address:
- ⚠ Falls from roofs
- ⚠ DC electrical shock from energised strings
- ⚠ Fragile roof surfaces
- ⚠ Manual handling of panels on ladders
- ⚠ Heat exposure
- ⚠ Battery storage hazards
The rules a solar installer SWMS is written against
Beyond the general duty in WHS Regulation 2025 (NSW) s 299, a solar installer SWMS in New South Wales is written against the specific model WHS duties and standards that apply to the trade's activities:
- § reg 78 and reg 79: managing the risk of falls: all rooftop solar work above 2 m
- § reg 157 and reg 158: energised electrical work restrictions (DC strings cannot be fully isolated in daylight)
- § AS/NZS 3000: electrical installations (wiring rules)
- § AS/NZS 1891: industrial fall-arrest systems
- § reg 44 to reg 47: PPE duties
What New South Wales builders check before you start
A principal contractor in New South Wales collects your SWMS before your crew goes on site and checks four things: that it is site-specific to this job (not a reused template), that every high risk category for solar installer work is covered and controlled, that controls follow the hierarchy rather than jumping to PPE, and that it cites New South Wales legislation. SWMS Pack writes to all four: your site details throughout, WHS Regulation 2025 (NSW) s 299 cited, and an adversarial review pass before delivery.
Common questions
▸Do solar installer contractors need a SWMS in New South Wales?
Yes, whenever the work involves any high risk construction work, which for solar installer work it usually does (risk of a person falling more than 2 metres and work on or near energised electrical installations or services). The duty to prepare it sits with the PCBU carrying out the work, under WHS Regulation 2025 (NSW) s 299.
▸Which law covers SWMS in New South Wales?
The Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (NSW) and the Work Health and Safety Regulation 2025 (NSW), enforced by SafeWork NSW. These follow the harmonised model WHS laws used in most states.
▸How fast can I get a solar installer SWMS for a New South Wales site?
About 5 minutes of questions, then the document is generated and verified in a few minutes and downloads straight away, written to New South Wales legislation and to your specific site.
Solar Installer SWMS in other states
VictoriaQueenslandWestern AustraliaSouth AustraliaTasmaniaAustralian Capital TerritoryNorthern Territory
Other trades in New South Wales
ElectricianPlumberCarpenterRooferScaffolderConcreterBricklayerPainterTilerDemolitionExcavation / Earthmoving