Health and Safety Induction Training Online
Complete health and safety induction training online to understand hazards, controls, reporting and safer workplace duties.
Beginner
Health and safety induction training helps workers, contractors, visitors, supervisors and employers understand the basic safety responsibilities, hazards, controls, reporting routes and emergency procedures that support safer work from day one. Without a structured induction, people may enter unfamiliar workplaces without knowing who to report to, what hazards exist, which controls apply, how to respond in an emergency, or when to stop and ask for help.
This online Health and Safety Induction course helps learners understand employer and worker duties, worker participation, safety culture, risk assessment, common workplace hazards, hierarchy of controls, PPE, fire safety, first aid, chemical safety, machinery, electricity, site access, incident reporting, corrective action, training records, global legal alignment and effective induction delivery. It is designed for global workplace use while recognising that legal requirements, sector rules and employer procedures vary by country and organisation.
Health and safety induction training is introductory workplace safety training that gives workers and workplace visitors the information they need before starting work, changing roles, entering a new site or carrying out unfamiliar tasks. The ILO explains that new recruits need basic induction training on how to work safely, including first aid, fire and evacuation arrangements.
This course is designed to help learners recognise common hazards, understand everyday risk controls, follow reporting procedures, participate in safety culture and know when supervision or additional instruction is needed. It supports awareness and induction records, but it does not replace site-specific briefings, practical competency checks, task-specific training, legal advice or employer procedures.
This course is suitable for workers and organisations that need a structured introduction to general workplace safety responsibilities and safe work expectations.
This course is suitable for:
New employees who need a clear introduction to workplace safety rules and responsibilities
Contractors who need general safety awareness before entering a site or work area
Visitors and temporary workers who need basic safety briefings and emergency awareness
Supervisors and team leaders responsible for supporting safe work readiness
HR, training and onboarding teams responsible for induction programmes
Safety coordinators who need consistent general induction content for workers or teams
Small businesses building a structured safety induction process for staff
International learners seeking practical health and safety awareness for workplace use
Learners who want to go deeper into hazard review and control planning may also find GSA’s Workplace Risk Assessment course useful as a related learning pathway.
This health and safety induction course covers global safety responsibilities, including employer and worker safety duties, worker rights, participation, types of workplace induction, safety culture and speaking up. Learners then study hazards, risks and controls, including common hazard types, risk assessment in daily work, the hierarchy of controls, PPE, supervision and safe work readiness.
The course also covers essential workplace safety practices such as slips, trips, falls, manual handling, fire safety, first aid, evacuation, chemical safety, hazard communication, machinery, electricity and site access. Learners then explore reporting, records, compliance, root cause review, corrective action, training evidence, global legal alignment, inclusive induction delivery, digital and blended training, contractor and visitor briefings, lone worker induction, competence checks and continuous improvement.
Health and safety induction is important because people are more likely to make safe decisions when they understand hazards, controls, emergency arrangements and reporting expectations before work begins. The ILO states that everyone who works needs to know how to work safely and that employers should provide suitable information, instruction and training.
A good induction also supports risk management. HSE guidance explains that risk assessment involves deciding who might be harmed, what controls already exist, what further action is needed, who must carry out that action and when it should be done.
Poor induction can create operational and legal exposure. Workers may miss hazards, misunderstand PPE requirements, use unsafe access routes, fail to report near misses, ignore evacuation arrangements, handle chemicals incorrectly or operate near machinery without adequate supervision. These failures can lead to injuries, illness, property damage, delays, complaints, enforcement attention and weak audit evidence.
Health and safety induction also supports worker participation. OSHA’s recommended safety and health programme practices include management leadership, worker participation, hazard identification and hazard prevention and control as core programme areas.
This course helps learners build practical confidence in recognising hazards, following controls, reporting concerns and participating in safer workplace culture. For employers, it supports consistent onboarding, clearer expectations, stronger records and safer day-one readiness for workers, contractors and visitors.