Who is considered a lone worker under Australian workplace health and safety law?
Under Australian WHS law, a lone worker is generally defined as anyone who works without close or direct supervision[cite: 332]. This includes remote field workers, retail staff closing alone, community workers, and maintenance workers after hours [cite: 333].
Lone Working Is Broader Than Most Employers Realise
There is no single statutory definition in Australian WHS legislation[cite: 335]. SafeWork Australia defines it as anyone who works in isolation from other workers and direct supervision due to distance, time, or the nature of work[cite: 336]. This captures nurses doing home visits, tradespeople on residential sites, and retail staff working at night [cite: 337].
Roles That Are Often Overlooked
- Retail and hospitality staff opening or closing premises alone [cite: 339]
- Community services workers visiting clients at home [cite: 340]
- Real estate agents conducting inspections alone [cite: 341]
- Maintenance and facilities workers on site outside standard hours [cite: 342]
- Delivery and field sales staff working independently [cite: 343]
Protecting Every Worker Who Fits the Definition
Guardian Angel Safety works with Australian businesses to identify all roles that carry lone worker risk[cite: 345]. We provide role-based risk assessments and scalable monitoring solutions[cite: 346]. Getting the definition right is the first step to protection[cite: 347].