Every worker has the legal right to a safe workplace. When your employer ignores hazards, you can report them — anonymously in most cases — without risking your job. Here is exactly how to do it.
Retaliation for reporting safety violations is illegal in every country covered here. Your employer cannot fire, demote, or punish you for making a good-faith safety complaint. If they do, that retaliation is itself a separate, significant legal violation.
✅ Your Employer's Legal Duty
In every country here, employers have a positive legal obligation to provide a workplace that is free from recognized hazards. This is not optional. The General Duty Clause (US), Section 25 of Ontario's OHSA, CNESST obligations (Quebec), the Health and Safety at Work Act (UK), and the NOM-036 (Mexico) all impose this duty. When your employer fails to meet it, reporting them to the relevant authority is both legal and protected.
🚫 What Counts as an Unsafe Working Condition
These are the most common reportable hazard categories. If you see your situation here, your employer has a legal obligation to fix it.
🚫 Physical hazardsUnsecured equipment, machinery without guards, blocked emergency exits, broken floors or stairs, inadequate lighting, collapsed or unstable structures, fall hazards at height without proper fall protection.
🚫 Chemical and toxic exposureUnventilated exposure to toxic fumes, chemicals, asbestos, lead, or pesticides. Lack of proper personal protective equipment (PPE) when required. Unlabelled hazardous substances. No safety data sheets (SDS).
🚫 Ergonomic and repetitive strain hazardsWorkstation setup that causes musculoskeletal injury, requiring heavy lifting without proper equipment or training, repetitive motions without adequate rest breaks — particularly in warehouse, manufacturing, and agricultural settings.
🚫 Biological hazardsExposure to bloodborne pathogens, infectious diseases, mould, or contaminated water without proper protective protocols — common in healthcare, food processing, and cleaning industries.
🚫 Fire and electrical hazardsNo or inadequate fire extinguishers, missing smoke detectors, overloaded electrical panels, exposed wiring, no fire exit plan, locked emergency exits, failure to conduct required fire drills.
🚫 Extreme temperatures and weatherRequiring outdoor work in extreme heat or cold without adequate breaks, water, shade, or protective gear. Lack of heat illness prevention plan. Cold stress exposure in unheated environments.
🚫 Violence and harassment as safety risksIn many jurisdictions, workplace violence — including threats and physical assault — is a reportable safety violation. Employers must have a violence prevention plan in place.
🚫 Inadequate training and PPERequiring workers to perform hazardous tasks without proper training or appropriate protective equipment. Providing defective or inadequate PPE that does not meet safety standards.
📝 How to Report — Step by Step
1Document the hazard before reporting
Photos, videos, and written descriptions — date, location, specific hazard, how long it has existed, who has been made aware, and any injuries or near-misses that have already occurred. Your documentation is what transforms a verbal complaint into an inspectable, enforceable report. Store everything on a personal device.
2Report internally first — in writing
Send a written notice (email, kept a copy) to your supervisor or safety officer identifying the specific hazard and requesting corrective action. State clearly that you consider it a health and safety risk. This internal report: triggers your employer's legal duty to respond, creates a documented record of their awareness, and is often required before an external complaint will be prioritized. Give a reasonable deadline (5–10 business days) for a response.
3If the employer doesn't act — file with the relevant safety agency
Most safety agencies can conduct an unannounced inspection within days of a serious complaint. You can request confidentiality — in most jurisdictions, your identity as the complainant is protected. Filing is free and requires no lawyer. Contact information for each country is in the section below.
4Document any retaliation immediately
If your employer cuts your hours, changes your assignments, issues disciplinary warnings, or terminates you after you report a safety issue — that is retaliation and it is illegal. Document the timing, the specific action, and any communications. File a separate retaliation complaint with the same agency. Retaliation cases often result in significantly higher compensation than the original safety complaint.
🌎 Reporting by Country
🇺🇸
United States — OSHA
Agency: Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) — federal. Many states also have state OSHA plans with additional protections.
How to report: Online at osha.gov/workers/file-complaint, by phone — 1-800-321-6742, or at your local OSHA area office. You can request that your name be kept confidential.
What happens: OSHA will evaluate the complaint and may conduct an unannounced inspection. For imminent danger situations, OSHA can act the same day.
Retaliation protection: Section 11(c) of the OSH Act prohibits retaliation for safety complaints. File a retaliation complaint within 30 days of the retaliatory act.
Worker rights during inspection: You have the right to accompany the OSHA inspector (called a "walkaround") and to speak to the inspector privately.
Imminent danger: If you believe you are in immediate danger, call OSHA's 24-hour hotline — 1-800-321-6742.
🇨🇦
Canada — CNESST, WorkSafeBC, WSIB & Federal
Quebec — CNESST: File a complaint online at cnesst.gouv.qc.ca or by calling 1-844-838-0808. CNESST inspectors can conduct unannounced visits. Workers can also exercise their right to refuse dangerous work under the Act Respecting Occupational Health and Safety.
BC — WorkSafeBC: Report online at worksafebc.com or call 1-888-621-7233. WorkSafeBC can dispatch an inspector the same day for imminent danger situations.
Ontario — Ministry of Labour: File at ontario.ca/page/report-unsafe-work or call 1-877-202-0008.
Federal (transport, banking, telecom): Contact Employment and Social Development Canada — 1-800-641-4049.
Right to refuse: Under every provincial and federal law, workers can refuse dangerous work without penalty — the employer must not assign another worker to that task until the danger is addressed.
🇬🇧
United Kingdom — HSE
Agency: Health and Safety Executive (HSE). Local authorities enforce health and safety in offices, shops, hotels, and restaurants.
How to report: Online at hse.gov.uk/contact/concerns or by phone — 0300 003 1647. Reports can be made anonymously.
What happens: HSE will assess the complaint. Serious concerns may result in an improvement notice, prohibition notice, or prosecution. HSE can issue a prohibition notice stopping dangerous work immediately.
Retaliation protection: The Employment Rights Act 1996 protects workers from detriment for making health and safety complaints. A dismissal for a safety reason is automatically unfair — no qualifying period required.
Safety representatives: Unionized workers can have their safety representative accompany HSE inspectors.
🇫🇷
France — Inspection du Travail
Agency: Inspection du travail handles workplace safety alongside the CARSAT (Caisse d'Assurance Retraite et de la Santé au Travail).
How to report: Contact the Inspection du travail at 3646 or through the online portal at travail-emploi.gouv.fr. Anonymous complaints are accepted.
Employer obligations: Under the Code du travail, employers must conduct a risk assessment (Document Unique d'Évaluation des Risques Professionnels — DUERP) and implement preventive measures. Failure is both a civil and criminal offence.
CHSCT / CSE: The Comité Social et Économique (CSE) has health and safety responsibilities and can exercise an "alert" on serious and imminent danger (droit d'alerte).
Right to withdraw: Workers can withdraw from a situation of serious and imminent danger without penalty.
🇲🇽
Mexico — STPS & IMSS
Agency: Secretaría del Trabajo y Previsión Social (STPS). IMSS also handles occupational health and workplace safety inspections.
How to report: File a complaint with the STPS at 800-911-7877 or online at stps.gob.mx. PROFEDET can also assist workers with safety complaints — 800-911-7877.
NOM standards: Mexico's Normas Oficiales Mexicanas (NOMs) set specific safety standards. NOM-036 covers ergonomic risk factors. NOM-001 covers electrical safety. NOM-017 covers personal protective equipment. Violations of these NOMs are reportable and enforceable.
IMSS occupational risk: If you are injured at work, your employer must report it to IMSS within 24 hours. You can also report directly to IMSS — 800-623-2323.
Retaliation protection: LFT Article 133 prohibits employer retaliation for safety complaints. Deadline to file: 2 months.
🔍 Top Questions Workers Ask
"Can I report anonymously? Will my employer find out?"
In most jurisdictions, you can request anonymity and your identity will be protected from the employer in the initial stages. OSHA (US), WorkSafeBC and CNESST (Canada), HSE (UK), and the Inspection du travail (France) all accept confidential complaints. That said, if the hazard is very specific, the employer may be able to identify who reported it based on context. In those cases, using an intermediary — a union safety rep, legal aid, or worker advocacy organization — adds an additional layer of protection.
"My employer told me to 'just deal with it' — is that a reportable response?"
Yes. Once you put a safety concern in writing and the employer acknowledges it but fails to act, that non-response is itself a documented safety violation. Save that exchange and include it in your external complaint. A documented refusal to address a hazard significantly strengthens a safety inspection order and any subsequent enforcement action.
"My coworkers are afraid to report because they fear deportation. Does immigration status affect safety rights?"
No. OSHA in the US, CNESST in Quebec, WorkSafeBC, and HSE in the UK all enforce safety rights regardless of immigration status. These agencies do not coordinate with immigration enforcement. A worker without status has the same right to a safe workplace as any other worker — and the same retaliation protections if they report a hazard.
"The hazard has already caused an injury. What do I do?"
If a workplace injury has occurred, report it immediately to the relevant workers' compensation body (OSHA, CNESST, WorkSafeBC, IMSS). Simultaneously file a safety complaint about the underlying hazard. Document your injury, seek medical attention, and keep all records. The injury itself is evidence that the hazard existed and that the employer failed to address it — this strengthens both the safety complaint and any workers' compensation or personal injury claim. See our dedicated guide: Workplace Accident: What to Do First.
"My employer fixed the hazard after I complained internally — is the danger over?"
Not necessarily. Verify the fix is complete and effective — not just cosmetically patched. Document what was done, when, and by whom. If the same hazard reappears, you have a record showing the employer was already on notice. A pattern of recurring hazards is taken more seriously by safety agencies than a one-off report.
Retaliation Complaint Deadlines Are Very Short
If your employer retaliates after a safety complaint, the window to file is extremely tight. In the US, OSHA retaliation complaints must be filed within 30 days. Don't wait.
🇺🇸 USA30 Days
OSHA retaliation complaint.
🇨🇦 CanadaVaries
Provincial — typically 30–90 days.
🇬🇧 UK3 Months −1 Day
Employment Tribunal — automatic UF.
🇫🇷 France5 Years
Prud'hommes civil claim.
🇲🇽 Mexico2 Months
STPS / Labour Tribunal.
*Always confirm exact deadlines with legal aid immediately.
Document Hazards Before You Report
Use the WORKWARS App to log hazards with photos, timestamps, and incident dates — building the evidence file that turns a verbal complaint into an inspectable, enforceable report.