Hierarchy of Control - Quick Reference
Overview
The Hierarchy of Control is a systematic approach to eliminating or minimizing risks, ordered from most effective to least effective.
[!important] Legal Requirement (WHS Reg 36) When controlling risks, must implement controls in accordance with hierarchy:
- Eliminate the hazard
- If elimination not reasonably practicable, minimize risk by:
- Substitution
- Isolation
- Engineering controls
- If risk remains, minimize by:
- Administrative controls
- PPE
Start at top, work down. Higher levels more effective.
The Six Levels
Level 1: Elimination ✅ MOST EFFECTIVE
Remove the hazard entirely.
Examples:
- Design out fall hazard (prefabricate at ground level instead of working at heights)
- Don't do hazardous work (use alternative construction method)
- Remove asbestos before other work
Why most effective: No hazard = no risk
Details: Elimination
Level 2: Substitution
Replace with something less hazardous.
Examples:
- Water-based paint instead of solvent-based (reduced flammability, vapor exposure)
- Electric saw instead of petrol saw (lower noise, no exhaust fumes)
- Non-silica abrasive instead of silica sand for blasting
Why effective: Reduces hazard at source
Details: Substitution
Level 2: Isolation
Separate people from hazard.
Examples:
- Guardrails at edges (physical barrier prevents falls)
- Barricade around excavation (prevents approach)
- Noisy equipment in acoustic enclosure or remote location
- Separate flammable storage from ignition sources
Why effective: People can't reach hazard, can't be harmed
Details: Isolation
Level 2: Engineering Controls
Control hazard through physical means.
Examples:
- Local exhaust ventilation (captures silica dust at source)
- Water suppression for concrete cutting (binds dust)
- Machine guards (prevents contact with moving parts)
- RCDs on electrical equipment (cuts power if fault)
- Rollover protection on excavators
Why effective: Controls hazard at source, doesn't rely on human behavior
Details: Engineering Controls
Level 3: Administrative Controls ⚠️ LESS EFFECTIVE
Procedures, training, work practices to reduce exposure.
Examples:
- Safe Work Method Statements (SWMS)
- Training in safe work procedures
- Job rotation (reduces exposure duration)
- Permits to work (hot work permit)
- Signage and warnings
Why less effective: Relies on human behavior (people forget, take shortcuts, may not understand importance)
Details: Administrative Controls
Level 3: Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) ❌ LEAST EFFECTIVE
Barrier between worker and hazard.
Examples:
- Hard hats (falling objects)
- Safety glasses (flying particles)
- Hearing protection (noise)
- Respirators (dust, fumes)
- Safety harness (fall arrest)
Why least effective:
- Doesn't remove hazard (if PPE fails, full exposure)
- Relies on correct, consistent use
- Protects only individual wearing it
- Requires maintenance
PPE only used:
- After higher controls implemented
- As additional protection (supplement)
- For residual risks
Details: Personal Protective Equipment
Applying the Hierarchy - Construction Example
Task: Concrete grinding (silica dust, noise, flying particles)
Hierarchy Application:
Level 1 - Eliminate:
- ❌ Can't eliminate grinding (required for surface preparation)
Level 2 - Substitution:
- ✅ Use diamond grinding wheel (produces less dust than abrasive wheel)
Level 2 - Isolation:
- ✅ Perform grinding in designated area, away from other workers
- ✅ Barricade area (prevents other workers entering dust cloud)
Level 2 - Engineering:
- ✅ Wet grinding (water suppression binds silica dust)
- ✅ On-tool vacuum extraction (HEPA filter captures dust at source)
- ✅ Grinder with low vibration handles
Level 3 - Administrative:
- ✅ SWMS prepared and followed
- ✅ Trained, competent operator
- ✅ Time limits (1-hour blocks, rotation between operators)
- ✅ Air monitoring to verify dust control effectiveness
Level 3 - PPE:
- ✅ P2 respirator (fit-tested) - additional protection for silica dust
- ✅ Earmuffs (Class 4, 28dB attenuation) - noise (grinder 100dB)
- ✅ Safety glasses with side shields - flying particles
- ✅ Gloves - vibration reduction
- ✅ Hard hat, safety boots, high-vis - general site PPE
Result: Multiple layers of control. Engineering controls substantially reduce silica and noise. PPE provides additional protection if engineering controls not 100% effective.
Key Principles
1. Start at top: Always consider elimination first. If not reasonably practicable, work down hierarchy.
2. Combination of controls: Often most effective approach uses multiple levels (engineering + administrative + PPE).
3. PPE is last resort: Never rely on PPE alone where higher-level controls reasonably practicable.
4. Review regularly: As technology advances, higher-level controls may become available.
5. Worker consultation: Workers often have practical insights on most effective controls.
Quick Decision Tree
Can the hazard be eliminated?
├─ YES → Eliminate (Level 1) ✅
└─ NO → Can we substitute with less hazardous?
├─ YES → Substitute (Level 2)
└─ NO → Can we isolate people from hazard?
├─ YES → Isolate (Level 2)
└─ NO → Can we use engineering controls?
├─ YES → Engineering (Level 2)
└─ NO → Risk still not adequately controlled?
└─ YES → Add administrative + PPE (Level 3)
At each step: "Is risk now adequately controlled?"
- If YES: May still add lower-level controls as extra protection
- If NO: Continue down hierarchy and/or combine controls
Common Mistakes
❌ Starting with PPE: "We'll just wear respirators" → Should first try elimination, substitution, engineering controls
❌ Administrative controls alone for serious risks: "We'll have a procedure and training" → Serious risks need engineering controls, not just procedures
❌ Assuming elimination impossible without investigation: "We've always done it this way" → May be alternative methods that eliminate hazard
❌ Using lower level when higher level reasonably practicable: "PPE is cheaper than engineering controls" → Cost alone doesn't determine reasonably practicable
Detailed Information
For comprehensive guidance on each level:
- Level 1: Elimination - Methods to eliminate hazards entirely
- Level 2: Substitution - Replacing hazardous with less hazardous
- Level 2: Isolation - Separating people from hazards
- Level 2: Engineering Controls - Physical means to control hazards
- Level 3: Administrative Controls - Procedures and training
- Level 3: Personal Protective Equipment - Last line of defense
Full process: Step 3: Control Risks