Roofing SWMS — Safe Work Method Statement for Roofers
A Safe Work Method Statement (SWMS) for roofing work is a mandatory safety planning document required under the Work Health and Safety (WHS) Regulation 2025. Roofing is inherently height work — there is no such thing as roofing below 2 metres on a construction site, and every time a worker steps onto a roof they are exposed to unprotected edges, fragile surfaces, variable pitch, and rapidly changing weather conditions. Falls from roofs remain one of the most common causes of workplace death in Australian construction, and the SafeWork NSW falls from heights enforcement programme (2023-2024) issued over $972,000 in penalty notices across 1,218 inspected sites with roofers prominently represented in the compliance findings. The falls HRCW applies to virtually every roofing task, and a site-specific SWMS is required before any worker steps onto the roof surface.
SWMS variants reference your state’s WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.
Legal Requirements
WHS Regulation 2025 Part 6.1 Division 3 — High Risk Construction Work
Work involving a risk of a person falling more than 2 metres; work involving structural alterations or repairs that require temporary support (truss installation); work involving powered mobile plant; work involving disturbance of asbestos (pre-2003 roofs) (WHS Regulation 2025 Schedule 1)
Code of Practice: Managing the Risk of Falls at Workplaces (2021); Code of Practice: How to Manage and Control Asbestos in the Workplace (2020); Code of Practice: How to Safely Remove Asbestos (2020); AS/NZS 1891 series; AS/NZS 4994; AS 1562.1
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Hazards
| Hazard | Consequence | Likelihood |
|---|---|---|
| Falls from unprotected roof edges during installation, repair, and inspection work | Falls from a roof edge are the signature fatal mechanism in Australian roofing. | Possible (C) |
| Falls through fragile surfaces including skylights, translucent sheeting, deteriorated fibre cement, and rusted metal | A worker who steps onto a fragile surface can fall through the roof to the ground or floor below without warning. | Possible (C) |
| Heat stress and heat stroke from elevated roof surface temperatures and exposure to direct sun | Roof surfaces in Australian summer reach 70 degrees Celsius or more on metal sheeting and dark tiles. | Likely (B) during summer daytime without heat management |
| Falling objects from the roof striking workers or members of the public below | Roofers handle tools, fixings, sheeting offcuts, and heavy materials above active work areas and in many cases above public pathways. | Likely (B) without exclusion zones and tool management |
| Wind exposure at roof level affecting worker stability and material handling | Wind speeds at roof level are typically 1.5 to 2 times higher than at ground level, and the worker on a roof presents a large cross-section to the wind. | Possible (C) |
| Loss of footing on steep-pitch roofs (above 25 degrees) and slide to edge | Working above 25 degrees pitch changes the dynamic of walking on a roof — friction between boot sole and surface may be insufficient to hold the worker in place, particularly on wet, frosty, or mossy surfaces. | Possible (C) |
| Disturbance of asbestos-containing roof materials during removal, repair, or re-roofing of pre-2003 buildings | Asbestos cement sheeting (commonly referred to as fibro), asbestos eaves lining, asbestos insulation, and asbestos backing to tile underlay are present in many Australian roofs constructed before 2003. | Possible (C) in pre-2003 buildings |
| UV radiation exposure causing severe sunburn and elevated long-term skin cancer risk | Roofers have the highest UV exposure of any construction trade because they work on elevated surfaces with no shade and high UV reflection from the roof material. | Almost Certain (A) without sun protection during summer daylight work |
| Electrical contact with overhead power lines during handling of long sheet materials, ladders, or tools near roof edges | Distribution power lines running close to residential eaves, factory roof edges, and commercial buildings create an electrocution hazard when long sheet materials, ladders, or metal tools approach within the safe approach distance. | Unlikely (D) |
| Ladder falls during roof access and egress | Workers accessing or leaving the roof via a ladder can fall from the ladder due to incorrect setup, unsecured base, inadequate extension above the roof line, or slip during transition. | Likely (B) |
Controls (Hierarchy of Controls)
Recent Prosecutions
SafeWork NSW's twelve-month targeted falls from heights enforcement programme included focused compliance activity on residential roofing contractors. Inspectors observed roofers working on pitched tiled and metal roofs without edge protection, without fall arrest systems, and without site-specific SWMS documentation. In one case, three workers were observed with inadequate fall protection on a pitched tile roof at Sawtell, and the contractor was convicted and fined by the Downing Centre Local Court. The programme issued 1,499 improvement notices, 727 prohibition notices, and 352 penalty notices amounting to $972,000 in penalties across 1,218 inspected worksites.
2024 — SafeWork NSW Falls from Heights Enforcement Programme Media Release
WorkSafe Queensland fined a demolition company $100,000 in 2024 for tearing down two houses in suburban Brisbane using an excavator without first safely removing the asbestos cement sheeting from the roof and walls. The case is directly relevant to re-roofing contractors because the same licensed removalist obligation applies whenever asbestos cement sheeting is removed from a roof. The prosecution demonstrates the mandatory sequence: licensed asbestos removal first, structural or re-roofing work second.
2024 — WorkSafe Queensland media release and prosecution register
What Your SWMS Must Include
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This SWMS template pre-loads roofing hazards including fall protection, fragile surfaces, heat stress, steep pitch, and asbestos controls. Covers metal, tile, and asbestos cement roofs across residential and commercial projects.
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