What are the penalties for failing to protect lone workers under Australian WHS law?
Failing to meet duty of care can result in penalties of up to $3 million for companies and $600,000 plus imprisonment for individuals[cite: 474]. Even lesser breaches carry substantial fines [cite: 475].
The Real Cost of Getting Lone Worker Safety Wrong
Category 1 offences for reckless conduct attract the highest penalties[cite: 478]. Beyond fines, breaches can trigger coronial inquests and civil litigation[cite: 479]. Regulators have prosecuted employers specifically for lacking monitoring systems [cite: 480].
Where Employers Typically Fall Short
- No documented risk assessment [cite: 482]
- Check-ins relying on worker memory [cite: 483]
- Unreachable or untrained escalation contacts [cite: 484]
- Paper-only policies that aren’t implemented [cite: 485]
- Failure to act on near-misses [cite: 486]
A Safety System Worth More Than the Fine
Guardian Angel Safety provides evidence of risk assessments and monitoring records[cite: 489]. Most importantly, your workers are actually protected[cite: 490].