Forklift Operation SWMS — Warehousing
Forklift incidents remain the number one cause of workplace death in Australian warehousing, with pedestrian-forklift collisions, tip-overs, and load drops accounting for the majority of fatalities and serious injuries. Warehouses processing hundreds of forklift movements per shift face compounding risks as traffic density increases in confined aisle spaces. The WHS Regulation 2025 introduces Australia's first DPM workplace exposure limit at 0.1 mg/m3, directly affecting warehouses operating diesel forklifts indoors. This SWMS template covers counterbalance, reach, and order picker forklift operations with controls mapped to the Managing Risks of Plant in the Workplace Code of Practice binding from July 2026.
SWMS variants reference your state's WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.
Legal Requirements
WHS Regulation 2025 Part 5.2 — Plant; Part 5.3 — High Risk Plant; Part 8A — WEL
Work involving powered mobile plant (forklift — HRWL required)
Managing Risks of Plant in the Workplace (binding July 2026 under Section 26A)
Yes — Plant code binding July 2026. Non-compliance is admissible as evidence of breach.
Yes — LF class high risk work licence required for all forklift operators
Hazards
| Hazard | Consequence | Likelihood |
|---|---|---|
| Pedestrian struck by forklift in warehouse aisles and intersections | Fatal crush injuries, traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury | Possible |
| Forklift tip-over from overloading, uneven surfaces, or excessive speed on turns | Operator fatal crush injury, bystander crush | Unlikely |
| Load drop from forks during travel, stacking, or destacking operations | Crush injuries, fatalities from falling loads | Possible |
| Collision with racking causing structural damage or collapse | Racking cascade collapse, multiple casualties | Unlikely |
| Diesel particulate matter exposure from diesel forklifts operating indoors | Lung cancer, respiratory disease, cardiovascular disease | Likely |
Controls (Hierarchy of Controls)
Recent Prosecutions
A pedestrian worker was struck and killed by a forklift at an intersection in a distribution centre that had no physical segregation between pedestrian walkways and forklift operating zones. The site processed over 200 forklift movements per shift.
2024 — SafeWork NSW Prosecution Database
What Your SWMS Must Include
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