WHS Documents for Concreters
Site-specific, delivered in about 4 minutes ยท free revision within 24h if your builder asks for changes
Concreters on an Australian construction site need a core WHS document set built around the SWMS: a site-specific Safe Work Method Statement for each high risk activity, a SWMS register, current licences, Safety Data Sheets, and induction and sign-on records. Which SWMS you need is driven by the high risk construction work a concreter does: respirable crystalline silica from cutting and grinding, concrete pump line whipping, cement skin burns.
The core WHS documents a concreter needs
- โ Site-specific SWMS covering each high risk activity (legally required under your state's WHS Regulations, provision 299)
- โ A SWMS register indexing every document, version and review date
- โ High risk work licences and concreter trade licences
- โ Safety Data Sheets for hazardous chemicals, and a chemical register
- โ Site induction record and daily sign-on / SWMS acknowledgement sheets
The SWMS a concreter usually needs
A SWMS must cover each of these high risk construction work activities before the work starts. The Trade SWMS Pack generates one for each, site-specific to your job:
- โ Slab pours with concrete pump and agitator trucks
- โ Concrete cutting, coring and grinding (silica controls)
- โ Formwork erection and stripping
- โ Steel fixing and rebar installation
- โ Tilt-up and precast panel work
- โ Screeding and power trowelling
- โ Footing and pier excavation pours
- โ Exposed aggregate and driveway works near traffic
The high risk construction work that triggers a concreter's SWMS
A SWMS is legally required because concreters routinely do this high risk construction work:
- โ Work in an area with movement of powered mobile plant
- โ Tilt-up or precast concrete work
See all 18 high risk construction work categories and how they map to your work.
Same documents, different state citations
A concreter in NSW and one in Victoria need the same documents, but each SWMS must cite the right law: the harmonised WHS Regulations in seven jurisdictions, or the OHS Regulations 2017 in Victoria. See the full SWMS requirements by state, or open the concreter WHS documents page for your state:
Concreter WHS documents NSWConcreter WHS documents VICConcreter WHS documents QLDConcreter WHS documents WAConcreter WHS documents SAConcreter WHS documents TASConcreter WHS documents ACTConcreter WHS documents NT
Common questions
โธWhat WHS documents does a concreter need on site?
At minimum, site-specific SWMS covering every high risk activity you perform (one SWMS can cover several activities), a SWMS register, your high risk work and trade licences, Safety Data Sheets for any hazardous chemicals, and proof of induction. The SWMS is the legally required one and the one a principal contractor checks first.
โธHow many SWMS does a concreter need?
Every high risk construction work activity you do must be covered, which for concreters is usually the 8 activities listed above. One SWMS can legally cover several activities, but most trades keep one per activity because that is how builders review them. The Trade SWMS Pack generates all of them from one questionnaire for A$179.
โธDo concreters need different documents in different states?
The documents are the same; the legislation they cite differs. Seven jurisdictions use the harmonised WHS Regulations (provision 299 for the SWMS duty; NSW's WHS Regulation 2025 cites it as s 299); Victoria uses its OHS Regulations 2017. A SWMS should be re-cited and re-reviewed before it is used in another state.
Every SWMS a concreter needs, in one go
The Trade SWMS Pack generates all 8 SWMS above from a single questionnaire, plus the register, toolbox talks and sign-on sheets, for A$179.
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