ConstructionSWMS

Manual Handling SWMS

Musculoskeletal disorders are the number one injury type in Australian construction, accounting for more workers compensation claims than any other mechanism. The WHS Regulation 2025 requires a SWMS for hazardous manual tasks that involve repetitive force, sustained postures, or high force exertion. This template covers task redesign, mechanical aids, team lifting protocols, and load limit controls mapped to the binding Hazardous Manual Tasks Code of Practice effective 1 July 2026 under Section 26A.

Legal Requirements

regulation

WHS Regulation 2025 Part 4.1 — Hazardous Manual Tasks

hrcw category

Hazardous manual tasks

code of practice

Hazardous Manual Tasks (binding 1 July 2026 under Section 26A)

section 26a binding

Yes — effective 1 July 2026. Non-compliance is admissible as evidence of breach.

Hazards

HazardConsequenceLikelihood
Lifting heavy materials — bricks, blocks, steel, formwork panelsLumbar disc herniation, chronic back painLikely
Repetitive overhead work — ceiling fixing, services installationRotator cuff injury, chronic shoulder painLikely
Sustained awkward postures — kneeling, bending, crouchingKnee injury, lower back strainLikely
High-force pushing and pulling of heavy equipment or materialsMuscle tears, hernias, joint injuryPossible
Hand-arm vibration from power tool use — grinders, drills, jackhammersHand-arm vibration syndrome, white fingerPossible

Controls (Hierarchy of Controls)

Eliminate manual handling by redesigning tasks to use mechanical aids — forklifts, hoists, vacuum lifters, trolleys
Reduce load weights by splitting materials into smaller units at procurement stage
Implement team lift protocols with minimum two persons for loads exceeding 20 kg
Redesign workstations to eliminate sustained awkward postures — adjustable platforms, kneeling pads, ceiling supports
Limit vibration exposure duration and provide anti-vibration gloves for power tool operators
Rotate workers between high-demand and low-demand tasks to reduce cumulative exposure
Provide task-specific manual handling training with practical demonstration and competency assessment

Recent Prosecutions

Manual handling MSD claims (industry data)$50,000–$200,000 (various cases)

Musculoskeletal disorders account for approximately 50% of all serious workers compensation claims in construction. Regulators increasingly prosecute PCBUs who fail to assess and control hazardous manual tasks.

2024Safe Work Australia Key Work Health and Safety Statistics

What Your SWMS Must Include

Hazardous manual task risk assessment identifying specific body regions at risk for each task
Mechanical aid specifications and availability confirmation for heavy or repetitive tasks
Load limits and team lift triggers for manual material handling
Task rotation schedule to manage cumulative exposure
Worker consultation records — workers performing the tasks must be consulted on controls

Related SWMS

Concrete WorkFormworkSteel Erection

Need a compliant Manual Handling SWMS?

Our WHS consultants develop manual handling SWMS with ergonomic task assessments and mechanical aid specifications that reduce injury rates and satisfy regulator expectations.

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