Is Working at Height Training Required in Saudi Arabia?

Working at Height · KSA Safety Regulations

Is Working at Height Training Required in Saudi Arabia?

Yes. Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Human Resources regulations, Saudi Aramco GI standards and SABIC site rules all require workers to hold recognised training before performing tasks above ground level. The threshold that triggers mandatory protection requirements in KSA is two metres.

IN THIS GUIDE

  1. The Legal Framework for Height Safety in KSA
  2. Six Things Working at Height Training Addresses
  3. How Height Safety Is Enforced in Saudi Arabia
  4. Frequently Asked Questions
  5. The Short Answer: Yes, and the Consequences Are Serious

The Regulatory Baseline

The Legal Framework for Height Safety in KSA

The Saudi Ministry of Human Resources sets occupational safety and health standards under its Basic Standards for Occupational Safety and Health framework. These standards require that any worker performing tasks at a height where a fall could result in injury must hold training relevant to the work method being used. For work above two metres, personal fall arrest equipment is mandatory, and using it requires training.

Key figure: Two metres. In Saudi Arabia, work above two metres triggers mandatory fall protection requirements. This covers scaffolding, ladders, mobile elevated work platforms (MEWPs), rooftops, steel erection and any other elevated work position.

What the Training Covers

Six Things Working at Height Training Addresses

The Two-Metre Rule and Risk Assessment

Training establishes the legal threshold and teaches workers how to assess the specific risks of their elevated task before starting, including identifying anchor points, exclusion zones and rescue routes.

Harness Selection and Pre-Use Inspection

Full body harnesses must be inspected before every use. Training covers what to check, what damage looks like, when to remove equipment from service, and which harness type matches the task.

Scaffold Safety

Working on scaffolding involves separate competencies from general height safety. Training covers safe access and egress, load limits, handrails, toe boards and the difference between working on and erecting scaffolding.

Mobile Elevated Work Platforms (MEWPs)

Operating a cherry picker, scissor lift or boom lift requires specific operator certification in Saudi Arabia. This is separate from general working at height training and is site-access controlled by most major operators.

Simultaneous Operations and Exclusion Zones

When multiple teams work at different heights on the same structure, the risk of dropped objects and simultaneous activity requires specific controls covered in advanced height safety training.

Emergency Rescue from Height

A worker suspended in a harness after a fall faces suspension trauma within minutes. Training covers rescue procedures, the equipment needed, and who is responsible for carrying out the rescue when access is difficult.

KSA-Specific Requirements

How Height Safety Is Enforced in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Aramco Height Safety Requirements

Aramco's General Instructions specify that any contractor employee working above ground level must hold recognised height safety training. Aramco HSE inspectors verify certification during regular site audits.

Vision 2030 Mega-Projects

NEOM, Qiddiya, the Red Sea Project and other giga-projects have their own HSE plans that incorporate international standards for height safety. These projects have zero-tolerance policies for untrained workers at height.

Ministry of Human Resources Enforcement

Ministry inspectors conduct unannounced visits to construction and industrial sites. Workers found at height without training and appropriate PPE can result in the employer receiving a stop-work order and significant fines.

TVTC Accreditation Required for Certificates

To satisfy Saudi employer and contractor requirements, working at height certificates must be issued by a TVTC-accredited training provider. Certificates from non-accredited providers may be rejected at site access or during pre-qualification.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Frequently Asked Questions

What height requires safety training in Saudi Arabia?
Work above two metres triggers mandatory fall protection requirements under Saudi occupational safety standards. Some employer-specific requirements, particularly on Aramco and SABIC sites, apply even lower thresholds for certain work methods.
Does my employer have to pay for working at height training?
Under Saudi Labour Law, employers are responsible for ensuring workers receive safety training required for their role. The cost of training is an employer obligation. Workers should not be asked to fund mandatory safety training themselves.
Is scaffold erection training separate from working at height training?
Yes. Erecting, modifying or dismantling scaffolding requires a separate scaffold erection competency, typically a more advanced course than general working at height awareness training. Both may be required depending on the job.
How long is a working at height certificate valid in Saudi Arabia?
Certificate validity varies by issuing provider and employer requirements. Most TVTC-accredited working at height certificates are valid for three years, after which refresher training is required. Saudi Aramco and SABIC may specify shorter renewal intervals for contractor staff.
What are the penalties for working at height without training in KSA?
Employers face fines, stop-work orders and legal liability under Saudi Labour Law. For serious incidents involving untrained workers, criminal liability for responsible managers is also possible. Workers found at height without training can be immediately removed from site.

The Short Answer: Yes, and the Consequences Are Serious

Working at height without recognised training is not just risky. It is a legal violation in Saudi Arabia, enforceable through Ministry of Human Resources inspection, and a disqualifying event during contractor pre-qualification by Saudi Aramco and SABIC. The two-metre rule is well established, enforcement is active, and major projects have zero tolerance for untrained elevated workers. PITC KSA delivers TVTC-accredited working at height training across Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam and Jubail, with on-site delivery available for teams of ten or more.

Related reading: What Is Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)? | Standby Man Course Saudi Arabia | Permit to Work Training Saudi Arabia

Book Working at Height Training in Saudi Arabia

TVTC-accredited working at height certification from PITC KSA. Available in Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam, Jubail or at your facility.

What Is Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)? A Guide for Workers in KSA

PPE Guide · Workplace Safety in KSA

What Is Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)?

Personal Protective Equipment is the physical gear workers wear to protect themselves from hazards that engineering controls and safety systems cannot fully eliminate. It is the last line of defence between a workplace hazard and an injury. In Saudi Arabia, PPE use is mandated by Labour Law and enforced on every major industrial site.

IN THIS GUIDE

  1. Understanding PPE and When It Is Required
  2. The Six Main Categories of Personal Protective Equipment
  3. PPE Standards on Saudi Industrial Sites
  4. Frequently Asked Questions
  5. PPE Is the Last Line, Not the First

PPE Basics

Understanding PPE and When It Is Required

PPE works when everything else has already been done. The hierarchy of controls says you should first try to eliminate the hazard, then substitute it, then engineer around it. When those options are not possible, PPE is what protects the worker from what remains. This is why PPE training is not just about what to wear. It covers why it is needed, how to inspect it before use, how to maintain it, and when to replace it.

Employer obligation under Saudi Labour Law: Employers are legally required to provide appropriate PPE to all workers at no cost to the employee. Workers are required to use it. Failure by either party can result in legal liability when injuries occur.

Types of PPE

The Six Main Categories of Personal Protective Equipment

Head Protection

Hard hats (safety helmets) are mandatory on construction sites, Aramco facilities and anywhere with overhead hazards. Class E helmets with electrical protection are required in areas with electrical hazards.

Eye and Face Protection

Safety glasses protect against flying debris. Face shields are required for grinding, chemical handling and welding. Chemical splash goggles are specified wherever corrosive liquids are present.

Respiratory Protection

Dust masks, half-face respirators and full-face air-supplied respirators each protect against different airborne hazards. Confined space work and chemical handling environments require the highest level of respiratory protection.

Hand Protection

Cut-resistant gloves for sharp materials, chemical-resistant gloves for hazardous substances, heat-resistant gloves for hot work. The right glove depends on the specific hazard. Using the wrong type can create a false sense of protection.

Foot Protection

Steel-toecap safety boots with anti-slip soles are required on almost all industrial sites in KSA. Electrical hazard (EH-rated) boots are specified in areas with electrical risks.

Fall Protection

Full body harnesses, lanyards and self-retracting lifelines are mandatory for work above two metres in Saudi Arabia. The harness must be inspected before every use. A damaged harness must be removed from service immediately.

PPE Requirements in Saudi Arabia

PPE Standards on Saudi Industrial Sites

Saudi Aramco PPE Standards

Saudi Aramco requires specific PPE standards that go beyond general Labour Law requirements. Contractors on Aramco sites must ensure workers hold PPE training and that all equipment meets Aramco's approved specifications.

Construction and Infrastructure Projects

On major construction projects, PPE requirements are set by the project HSE plan. For NEOM, Qiddiya and similar Vision 2030 projects, international safety standards apply and are enforced through regular site audits.

Chemical and Petrochemical Environments

In Jubail and Yanbu industrial cities, task-specific PPE requirements are detailed in the relevant permit to work. Workers cannot enter a hazardous zone without the correct PPE specified on their permit.

Ministry of Human Resources Inspection

Ministry inspectors check PPE provision and usage during unannounced site visits. Employers found not providing PPE can face fines, stop-work orders and liability for any resulting injuries.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Frequently Asked Questions

Is PPE mandatory on Saudi construction sites?
Yes. Saudi Labour Law requires employers to provide and enforce PPE use. On major construction sites, particularly those run by Aramco or government-linked developers, PPE compliance is actively monitored and site access can be refused to workers without appropriate equipment.
Who provides PPE in Saudi Arabia, the employer or the worker?
The employer is legally required to provide PPE at no cost to the worker. Workers are required to use it correctly and to report damaged or inadequate equipment to their supervisor.
What PPE is required for working at height in KSA?
A full body harness, appropriate lanyard (shock-absorbing or self-retracting), and hard hat are the minimum requirements for work above two metres. The specific equipment required depends on the work method and is specified in the working at height permit.
How often should PPE be inspected?
Workers should inspect PPE before every use: check for cracks, wear, missing components and expiry dates on items like respirator cartridges. Formal inspections by a competent person should occur on a schedule defined by the manufacturer or the site HSE plan.
What is the legal requirement for PPE replacement in Saudi Arabia?
Employers must replace PPE that is damaged, worn out or has reached the end of its service life. Workers should report faulty equipment to their supervisor immediately. Using damaged PPE is not acceptable and may void the employer’s insurance in the event of an injury.

PPE Is the Last Line, Not the First

Personal Protective Equipment keeps workers safe when every other control measure has reached its limit. Understanding which PPE applies to your specific tasks, how to inspect it before use and when to replace it is not optional knowledge in Saudi Arabia’s industrial environment. It is the kind of practical training that prevents injuries. PITC KSA delivers TVTC-accredited safety training across the Kingdom covering PPE selection, inspection and maintenance as part of broader HSE competency programmes.

Related reading: Why Is Health and Safety Training Important? | Is Working at Height Training Required in KSA? | Standby Man Course Saudi Arabia

Equip Your Workforce With Proper Safety Training

PITC KSA delivers TVTC-accredited safety courses covering PPE, working at height, confined space and more, across Saudi Arabia.

Why Is Health and Safety Training Important? A Guide for Saudi Employers

HSE Training Guide · Saudi Arabia

Why Is Health and Safety Training Important?

Workplace injuries cost Saudi companies billions in lost productivity, medical costs and legal liability every year. Safety training is what reduces that number. It gives workers the knowledge to recognise hazards before they become incidents, and gives employers the documented evidence they need to show regulators, clients and insurers that they take their obligations seriously.

IN THIS GUIDE

  1. What Safety Training Actually Does
  2. Six Business Reasons to Invest in HSE Training
  3. Health and Safety Training Requirements in KSA
  4. Frequently Asked Questions
  5. The Bottom Line on Safety Training

The Case for Safety Training

What Safety Training Actually Does

Health and safety training transfers knowledge and skills from experienced safety professionals to the workers and supervisors who need them on the job. It covers hazard recognition, the controls that prevent injuries, emergency response when things go wrong, and the legal framework that defines what employers and employees are each responsible for. Done properly, it changes behaviour on site, not just awareness.

The cost of not training: Under Saudi Labour Law, employers are liable for workplace injuries that occur when adequate training was not provided. Beyond legal exposure, GOSI (General Organization for Social Insurance) records workplace injury rates and employers with poor safety records face higher contribution rates and potential regulatory action.

Key Reasons Safety Training Matters

Six Business Reasons to Invest in HSE Training

Injury Prevention

Trained workers identify hazards and apply controls before incidents happen. The data is consistent across industries: workforces with structured safety training have significantly lower injury rates than those without.

Legal Compliance

Saudi Labour Law requires employers to provide health and safety training relevant to each employee's role. Failure to do so creates direct legal liability when injuries occur and can result in significant fines and work stoppages.

Productivity

Every workplace injury generates indirect costs: investigation time, replacement worker recruitment, retraining, delays and morale impact. Safer workplaces lose less time to these events.

Contractor Pre-Qualification

Saudi Aramco, SABIC and government project clients assess contractor HSE records and training documentation during pre-qualification. Companies with weak training programmes are often disqualified before bid review begins.

Insurance and Liability

GOSI contribution rates reflect injury frequency. Companies with documented safety training programmes and lower incident rates pay less. Demonstrating training also reduces liability exposure when disputes arise.

Company Reputation

In Saudi Arabia's industrial sectors, safety record affects the ability to win government contracts, attract quality staff and maintain long-term relationships with major employers. A serious incident is very hard to recover from commercially.

The Saudi Regulatory Context

Health and Safety Training Requirements in KSA

Saudi Labour Law

Articles 121 to 135 of the Saudi Labour Law set out employer obligations for occupational safety and health, including the requirement to provide adequate safety training for all employees.

GOSI Workplace Safety Incentives

GOSI (General Organization for Social Insurance) runs programmes that reward companies with strong safety records and penalise those with high injury rates through adjusted contribution rates.

Vision 2030 Workplace Safety Targets

Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 programme includes specific targets for reducing workplace injury and fatality rates across industrial sectors, driving government and employer investment in safety training infrastructure.

Ministry of Human Resources Enforcement

The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development conducts workplace inspections and can issue stop-work orders and fines to employers found to be non-compliant with training and safety obligations.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Frequently Asked Questions

Is safety training mandatory for all employees in Saudi Arabia?
Saudi Labour Law requires employers to provide health and safety training appropriate to each employee’s role and the hazards they face. The specific training required varies by industry and job function, but the obligation to provide some form of safety training applies to all employers.
How often should safety training be refreshed in KSA?
There is no single answer: it depends on the course and the employer’s requirements. Most safety certifications require a refresher every one to three years. Saudi Aramco and SABIC contractor requirements often specify renewal intervals for specific competencies.
What happens if a company does not provide safety training?
Under Saudi Labour Law, employers who fail to provide adequate training and whose workers are then injured face direct legal liability. The Ministry of Human Resources can also issue fines, require remedial action, or suspend operations.
Who is responsible for safety training in a company?
Ultimately the employer is legally responsible. In practice, the HSE Manager or Safety Officer coordinates training delivery, records and compliance. For companies without an internal HSE function, PITC KSA can provide both training delivery and advisory support.
Does safety training actually improve productivity?
Consistently, yes. Reduced injury rates mean fewer work stoppages and less time spent on incident response, investigation and worker replacement. Insurance costs also fall as claims frequency drops.

The Bottom Line on Safety Training

Health and safety training is not optional in Saudi Arabia. Labour Law mandates it, major employers require it, and the financial consequences of not having it are significant. More practically, it saves lives. Workers who know how to identify and control hazards go home safely. That is the outcome every employer in KSA should be working toward, and structured, TVTC-accredited safety training from PITC KSA is one of the most direct paths to getting there.

Related reading: Why TVTC Certification Matters in Saudi Arabia | What Is Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)? | Standby Man Course Saudi Arabia

Start Your Team’s Safety Training Today

PITC KSA delivers TVTC-accredited health and safety courses for companies across Saudi Arabia. On-site delivery available for groups of ten or more.

Why TVTC Certification Matters for Safety Training in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia Safety Standards · TVTC Accreditation

Why TVTC Certification Matters in Saudi Arabia

TVTC is the Technical and Vocational Training Corporation, Saudi Arabia’s national authority for professional and vocational training. A certificate from a TVTC-accredited provider is not just a training record. It is the qualification that Saudi employers, government agencies and major contractors recognise as the national standard.

IN THIS GUIDE

  1. What TVTC Accreditation Actually Means
  2. What TVTC Accreditation Does for You
  3. Why TVTC Accreditation Is Non-Negotiable in KSA
  4. Frequently Asked Questions
  5. The Takeaway on TVTC

Understanding TVTC

What TVTC Accreditation Actually Means

TVTC sets the standards that training providers in Saudi Arabia must meet to operate legally and issue nationally recognised certificates. Accreditation requires approved curriculum content, qualified and verified trainers, appropriate training facilities, and regular quality audits. A TVTC-accredited certificate means the training met those standards. A certificate from a non-accredited provider means it did not.

Practical impact: Saudi Aramco, SABIC and most large contractors use TVTC accreditation as a filter in their pre-qualification process. Certificates from non-accredited providers may be rejected outright, regardless of the quality of the training itself.

Six Reasons TVTC Matters

What TVTC Accreditation Does for You

Nationally Recognised by Saudi Employers

Saudi government agencies, public sector bodies and private employers across all industries recognise TVTC certificates as the official standard for vocational and technical qualifications in the Kingdom.

Required for Contractor Pre-Qualification

Saudi Aramco, SABIC and major EPC contractors require TVTC-accredited safety training certificates during their contractor pre-qualification process. Non-accredited certificates are routinely rejected.

Supports Iqama and Visa Classification

For expatriate workers, TVTC-accredited qualifications can strengthen skilled worker classifications, supporting Iqama renewals and visa applications that require documented professional competency.

Curriculum Is Verified by Regulators

TVTC approval means the training content has been reviewed and approved by a government authority. The quality, accuracy and industry relevance of the material is not left to the training provider alone.

Trainers Must Be Qualified

TVTC accreditation requires that instructors meet verified standards of professional qualification and experience. You are not paying for someone's opinion. You are receiving instruction from a verified expert.

Certificates Are Verifiable

Employers and regulators can verify TVTC-accredited certificates through official channels. This matters in tender processes, site access approvals and audits where fraudulent certificates occasionally surface.

TVTC in the Saudi Context

Why TVTC Accreditation Is Non-Negotiable in KSA

Vision 2030 and Workforce Development

Vision 2030 prioritises developing a qualified Saudi workforce across technical disciplines. TVTC is the primary mechanism through which that qualification is defined, delivered and verified nationally.

Nitaqat and Saudisation

Under Nitaqat (the Saudisation quota system), employers must maintain minimum percentages of Saudi staff. TVTC-accredited training helps Saudi workers qualify for the roles that satisfy these requirements.

Safety Officer Licensing

To practise as a licensed safety officer in Saudi Arabia, candidates must hold recognised qualifications. TVTC-accredited safety training is the baseline qualification most licensing pathways require.

Government Tenders and Projects

Public sector contracts in Saudi Arabia increasingly require bidding companies to demonstrate TVTC-accredited training for their safety staff. Non-compliance can disqualify a bid regardless of price.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Frequently Asked Questions

Are all PITC KSA courses TVTC accredited?
PITC KSA operates as a TVTC-accredited training provider in Saudi Arabia. Our safety courses, including working at height, first aid, fire safety and industrial safety programmes, are delivered under TVTC accreditation. Specific accreditation details for each course are confirmed at the point of enquiry.
What does TVTC accreditation mean for my certificate?
It means your certificate was issued by a training provider that meets Saudi government standards for curriculum, trainers and facilities. Your certificate can be verified through official TVTC channels, which is what employers and regulators look for.
Can expatriate workers benefit from TVTC certification?
Yes. TVTC certificates are recognised for all workers in Saudi Arabia regardless of nationality. For expatriates, holding a TVTC-accredited qualification strengthens skilled worker status and is accepted by major employers across the Kingdom.
How do I verify if a training provider is TVTC accredited?
You can check accreditation status through the TVTC official website (tvtc.gov.sa) or the Manar platform. Alternatively, ask the training provider for their TVTC accreditation number and verify it directly with TVTC.
Does TVTC certification expire?
The certificates themselves do not carry a standard expiry date, though some employers and contractors require refresher training at set intervals (commonly every three years for safety roles). Check your employer’s specific requirements.

The Takeaway on TVTC

In Saudi Arabia, TVTC accreditation is how the market separates verified professional training from everything else. If you are building a career in safety, operations or any technical discipline in the Kingdom, training from a TVTC-accredited provider is the baseline expectation. It is what employers check, what contractors require for site access, and what government agencies look for when licensing safety professionals. PITC KSA is a TVTC-accredited provider with nine years of experience training safety professionals across Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam and Jubail.

Related reading: What Is an OSHA 30-Hour Course? | Why BLS Certification Is Required in KSA Workplaces | Third-Party Safety Courses

Get TVTC-Accredited Safety Training in Saudi Arabia

PITC KSA is a TVTC-accredited training provider. Courses available in Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam, Jubail and at your facility.

OSHA 10-Hour vs 30-Hour Course: Which One Do You Need?

OSHA Course Comparison · KSA Safety Training

OSHA 10-Hour vs 30-Hour: Which Course Is Right for You?

Two courses. Very different purposes. OSHA 10-hour gives front-line workers the baseline hazard awareness they need on site. OSHA 30-hour goes further, preparing supervisors and HSE professionals to evaluate hazards, manage safety programmes and satisfy the requirements of Saudi Aramco and SABIC contractors.

IN THIS GUIDE

  1. The Core Distinction: Role Level
  2. OSHA 10 vs OSHA 30: Six Key Differences
  3. Which Course Applies to Your Work in Saudi Arabia?
  4. Frequently Asked Questions
  5. The Short Answer

Understanding the Difference

The Core Distinction: Role Level

The simplest way to decide: OSHA 10 is for workers, OSHA 30 is for supervisors and safety staff. The 10-hour course covers the hazards a front-line worker encounters day to day. The 30-hour course covers those same hazards in greater depth, plus the regulatory, management and investigation knowledge that supervisors and HSE professionals need to run a safe worksite.

Quick rule: If your job is to follow safety instructions, OSHA 10-hour is the right starting point. If your job is to write those instructions, verify compliance, or supervise workers carrying out high-risk tasks, OSHA 30-hour is what you need.

Side-by-Side Comparison

OSHA 10 vs OSHA 30: Six Key Differences

Target Audience

OSHA 10: entry-level workers, labourers and site operatives who need basic hazard awareness. OSHA 30: supervisors, foremen, HSE officers, safety managers and anyone responsible for managing safety on a worksite.

Training Duration

OSHA 10 covers ten contact hours, typically completed in one to two days. OSHA 30 covers thirty hours, taking around four days in classroom delivery or four to six weeks online.

Content Depth

OSHA 10 introduces hazard categories and basic controls. OSHA 30 goes into hazard analysis methodology, incident investigation, regulatory compliance, safety programme management and emergency response planning.

Employer Requirements in KSA

OSHA 10 satisfies basic site induction requirements at many facilities. Saudi Aramco, SABIC and international EPC contractors typically require OSHA 30 for anyone in a supervisory or HSE role on their sites.

Career Progression

OSHA 10 is an appropriate first certification for workers new to industrial sites. OSHA 30 becomes relevant when moving into supervision or HSE responsibilities. Many professionals complete both over time.

Certificate and Validity

Both courses result in a NASP-issued OSHA wallet card. Neither expires. Some employers request refresher training every five years as good practice, but the original card remains valid indefinitely.

Choosing the Right Course for Your Role in KSA

Which Course Applies to Your Work in Saudi Arabia?

Construction and Infrastructure Workers

Most construction sites in KSA require OSHA 10-hour as a minimum for front-line workers. Site supervisors and foremen on Saudi Aramco or government-funded mega-projects are typically required to hold OSHA 30.

Oil, Gas and Petrochemical Professionals

SABIC and Aramco contractors consistently require OSHA 30 for HSE supervisors and permit-to-work coordinators. Entry-level workers on these sites satisfy requirements with OSHA 10 plus site-specific induction training.

HSE Officers and Safety Managers

If you are working as an HSE officer or safety manager on any major industrial project in KSA, OSHA 30 is the expected standard. OSHA 10 alone would not typically satisfy the pre-qualification requirements for these roles.

Upgrading from OSHA 10 to OSHA 30

Holding OSHA 10 does not give you credit toward OSHA 30. They are separate courses. Workers who complete OSHA 10 and later move into supervisory roles simply enrol in the 30-hour course separately.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I do OSHA 30-hour without completing OSHA 10-hour first?
Yes. OSHA 10-hour is not a prerequisite for OSHA 30-hour. You can enrol in OSHA 30 directly. In practice, many supervisors and HSE professionals go straight to OSHA 30 without having done OSHA 10.
Does OSHA 30-hour expire in Saudi Arabia?
No. OSHA certifications do not expire. The wallet card issued on completion is valid for life. Some Saudi Aramco contractors request a refresher every five years, but this is a company policy rather than an OSHA requirement.
Is OSHA 30-hour required for all supervisors in Saudi Arabia?
Not by Saudi law, but by major employer policy. Saudi Aramco, SABIC and the large EPC contractors operating in KSA routinely specify OSHA 30-hour in their contractor HSE pre-qualification requirements for supervisory and safety roles.
Which OSHA course is recognised by Saudi Aramco?
Saudi Aramco recognises both OSHA 10-hour and OSHA 30-hour, but the 30-hour qualification is typically required for supervisors and HSE professionals. The specific requirement varies by project scope and contractor agreement.
What is NASP and why does it issue OSHA cards?
NASP (National Association of Safety Professionals) is an OSHA-authorised training provider. It issues the OSHA wallet cards that certify completion of the 10-hour and 30-hour programmes. The cards carry OSHA’s official authorisation and are recognised internationally.

The Short Answer

If you are a worker new to industrial sites, start with OSHA 10-hour. If you are a supervisor, HSE officer or safety professional, OSHA 30-hour is the standard your employers and clients are looking for. Both courses carry lifetime validity and are recognised across KSA’s major industrial sectors. PITC KSA delivers OSHA-aligned training with TVTC accreditation, giving you the combined credentials most Saudi contractors require for site access and pre-qualification.

Related reading: What Is an OSHA 30-Hour Course? | Why TVTC Certification Matters in KSA | Third-Party Safety Courses

Get OSHA-Certified in Saudi Arabia

PITC KSA offers OSHA-aligned safety training with TVTC accreditation. Available in Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam and Jubail, or at your facility.

What Is an OSHA 30-Hour Course? A Guide for Safety Professionals in KSA

OSHA Training Guide · Safety Professionals in KSA

What Is an OSHA 30-Hour Course?

OSHA 30-hour is the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s advanced safety programme. In Saudi Arabia, Saudi Aramco, SABIC and most major EPC contractors require it as a condition of site access for supervisors and HSE professionals. Here is what it covers, who needs it, and how it works.

IN THIS GUIDE

  1. The OSHA 30-Hour Course Explained
  2. Six Things You Learn in OSHA 30-Hour Training
  3. OSHA 30-Hour in the KSA Context
  4. Frequently Asked Questions
  5. Is OSHA 30-Hour Worth It in Saudi Arabia?

Course Overview

The OSHA 30-Hour Course Explained

OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) is the US federal body that sets and enforces workplace safety standards. Its 30-hour training programme was designed for supervisors, managers and safety professionals who need to go beyond basic hazard awareness into hazard evaluation, regulatory compliance and safety management. The course covers 30 contact hours of structured safety content and finishes with an OSHA-authorised wallet card issued through a NASP-approved provider.

Who issues the card: OSHA 30-hour certificates are issued by NASP (National Association of Safety Professionals), an OSHA-authorised training provider. The wallet card carries lifetime validity and is recognised globally, including by Saudi Aramco, SABIC and Royal Commission contractors across KSA.

What the Course Covers

Six Things You Learn in OSHA 30-Hour Training

Introduction to OSHA Standards

The regulatory framework behind OSHA, how standards are created, worker rights, and how inspection and citation processes work for multinational contractors.

Hazard Identification and Control

A systematic approach to spotting physical, chemical, biological and ergonomic hazards, then applying the hierarchy of controls to eliminate or reduce them.

Fall Protection and Working at Height

Guardrail systems, personal fall arrest equipment, scaffolding safety, and the specific height thresholds that trigger mandatory protection requirements.

Electrical Safety

Lock-out/tag-out procedures, safe working distances, ground fault protection, and the most common causes of electrical fatalities on industrial sites.

Personal Protective Equipment

Selecting, inspecting and maintaining PPE for the specific hazards present on a given task. Covers head, eye, respiratory, hand and foot protection requirements.

Emergency Response and Incident Investigation

Emergency action plans, first aid requirements, incident classification, root cause analysis, and the documentation expected by OSHA and Saudi Aramco inspectors.

Why It Matters in Saudi Arabia

OSHA 30-Hour in the KSA Context

Saudi Aramco Accepts OSHA 30

Aramco's contractor HSE requirements list OSHA 30-hour as a recognised qualification for supervisory safety roles. Most major contractors on Aramco projects require it alongside TVTC certification.

NEOM and Giga-Projects

International EPC contractors working on NEOM, Qiddiya and the Red Sea Project routinely require OSHA 30 for all site supervisors and HSE coordinators, regardless of nationality.

Petrochemical Sector, Jubail and Yanbu

Industrial city operators and SABIC affiliates in Jubail and Yanbu regularly specify OSHA 30 for contractor pre-qualification, particularly on maintenance and turnaround projects.

Pair It With TVTC for Maximum Recognition

OSHA 30 combined with a TVTC-accredited certificate from PITC KSA gives the strongest combination for employment and contractor bid pre-qualification across the Kingdom.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Frequently Asked Questions

Is OSHA a US certification? Can I use it in Saudi Arabia?
OSHA 30-hour is a US standard but it is accepted internationally. Saudi Aramco, SABIC and most major EPC contractors in KSA explicitly recognise it in their contractor HSE requirements for supervisory and safety roles.
What is the difference between OSHA 10-hour and OSHA 30-hour?
OSHA 10-hour is designed for entry-level workers who need basic hazard awareness. OSHA 30-hour is aimed at supervisors, managers and HSE professionals who need to evaluate hazards, manage safety programmes and understand regulatory compliance in depth.
How long does OSHA 30-hour training take to complete?
Classroom delivery takes four days. Online options are available and typically take four to six weeks when done at a manageable pace. Both routes result in the same NASP-issued OSHA wallet card.
Does Saudi Aramco accept OSHA 30 certification?
Yes. OSHA 30-hour is listed in Saudi Aramco contractor HSE requirements as a recognised qualification for supervisory safety roles on their facilities and projects.
Does OSHA 30-hour certification expire?
OSHA 30-hour certification does not have an official expiry date. The wallet card carries lifetime validity. Some employers and contractors request a refresher every five years as good practice, but this is not an OSHA requirement.

Is OSHA 30-Hour Worth It in Saudi Arabia?

For any safety professional or supervisor working on Saudi Aramco, SABIC or international EPC projects in KSA, OSHA 30-hour is one of the most practical certifications you can carry. It is globally recognised, never expires, and specifically requested by the employers who run the Kingdom’s largest industrial sites. Pair it with a TVTC-accredited certificate from PITC KSA and you have the combination most contractors are looking for when shortlisting safety staff.

Related reading: OSHA 10-Hour vs 30-Hour: Which Do You Need? | Why TVTC Certification Matters in Saudi Arabia | Third-Party Safety Courses at PITC KSA

Ready to Get OSHA Certified in Saudi Arabia?

PITC KSA delivers OSHA-aligned safety training with TVTC accreditation. Courses available in Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam and Jubail.