OH Consultant
← All SWMS Documents
🌳

Tree Planting & Transplanting SWMS

Planting of advanced trees in residential or commercial landscape. Includes site assessment, root-zone excavation, plant delivery and craning (for large stock), staking, mulching, post-plant watering.

βš–οΈWHS Regulation 2025 & Codes of Practice β€” legally binding from 1 July 2026 (s26A)
πŸ‘·Reviewed by certified occupational health and safety professionals
πŸ—ΊοΈState-specific variants for all 8 Australian jurisdictions
$99 AUDβœ“ Instant Download Available

SWMS variants reference your state’s WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.

Tree planting and transplanting of advanced stock in residential and commercial landscapes combines several high-risk construction work triggers under WHS Regulation 2025 Schedule 1. The work involves site assessment, root-zone excavation often exceeding 1.5 metres for mature stock, delivery and craning of rootballs that can weigh 500 kg to several tonnes, staking with timber or steel posts, mulching, and post-plant irrigation. Each phase introduces distinct hazards β€” buried services strikes, suspended load failures, crush injuries from swinging rootballs, and cumulative musculoskeletal damage from repetitive lifting. A Safe Work Method Statement is mandatory because the work involves excavation deeper than 1.5 m, mobile plant operating near workers, and the use of powered equipment in proximity to the public. The SWMS documents the hazard identification, the agreed hierarchy of controls, the consultation record with workers, and the supervisor sign-on required before each shift commences under WHS Reg 2025 s299–300.

Hazards identified

7 hazards covered, sorted by priority.

Strike on underground services (gas, electrical, telecommunications, water) during root-zone excavationHIGH

Electrocution, gas explosion, scalding, service outage triggering notifiable incident and regulator investigation under WHS Act s38

Suspended rootball failure or sling slip during crane lift of advanced treesHIGH

Crush fatality or serious traumatic injury to dogger, landscaper or bystanders within the exclusion zone

Trench or planting pit collapse on workers positioning rootball at depthHIGH

Asphyxiation, crush injury and entrapment requiring confined space rescue and notifiable incident reporting

Manual handling of heavy rootballs, bagged soil amendments and stakesHIGH

Acute lumbar disc injury, chronic musculoskeletal disorder and workers compensation claims with permanent impairment

Mobile plant interaction β€” excavator, bobcat or truck-mounted crane operating in confined landscape areasHIGH

Worker run-over, crush between plant and structure, or struck-by injury from slewing counterweight

Hand-arm vibration and laceration from chainsaw or auger use during root pruning and pit boringMEDIUM

Vibration white finger, deep laceration to femoral or radial artery, and noise-induced hearing loss

Biological exposure to soil pathogens, Legionella longbeachae in potting media, and wasp or spider envenomationMEDIUM

Severe pneumonia, anaphylaxis or sepsis requiring hospitalisation and notifiable disease reporting to the regulator

Control measures

Hierarchy-of-controls order: elimination β†’ substitution β†’ isolation β†’ engineering β†’ administrative β†’ PPE.

  1. 1Elimination β€” Specify smaller advanced stock (45L–100L) wherever the landscape design allows, removing the need for craning and deep root-zone excavation entirely.
  2. 2Elimination β€” Complete Dial Before You Dig enquiry and on-site service location with electronic locator prior to any excavation, eliminating unknown buried service strike risk.
  3. 3Substitution β€” Substitute mechanical tree spades or hydraulic tree dollies for manual carrying of rootballs over 25 kg, removing repetitive heavy manual handling exposure.
  4. 4Substitution β€” Use lightweight composite stakes and pre-mixed bagged backfill under 20 kg in lieu of bulk soil shovelling and heavy hardwood stakes where structurally adequate.
  5. 5Engineering β€” Batter or bench planting pits deeper than 1.5 m per AS 5488 and WHS Reg 2025 s306, or use trench shields when working at depth alongside the rootball.
  6. 6Engineering β€” Establish a 1.5x boom-length crane exclusion zone with hard barriers, tagged lifting gear inspected per AS 2550.1, and certified dogger directing every lift.
  7. 7Administrative β€” Conduct documented pre-start brief using this SWMS, confirm HRCW notification lodged, rotate workers off repetitive tasks every 45 minutes, and maintain spotter for all plant movement.
  8. 8Administrative β€” Verify operator High Risk Work Licences (CN, CV, LF) and EWP/excavator competency, and prohibit lone working during lifts or excavation deeper than 1.2 m.
  9. 9PPE β€” Issue AS/NZS 1801 hard hats, AS/NZS 2210.3 steel-capped boots, AS/NZS 1337.1 eye protection, cut-5 gloves, and hi-vis class D/N garments to AS/NZS 4602.1.
  10. 10PPE β€” Provide P2 respirators for dry mulch and potting mix handling per AS/NZS 1715, chainsaw chaps to AS/NZS 4453.3, and Class 5 hearing protection during auger or saw use.

Applicable Codes of Practice

Excavation Work Code of Practice 2018 (Safe Work Australia) referencing AS 5488 Classification of Subsurface Utility Informationβš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Sets the duty to locate services, batter or shore excavations over 1.5 m, and notify the regulator of trenching β€” directly governs planting pit construction.

AS 2550.1:2011 Cranes, hoists and winches β€” Safe use (general requirements) and AS 2550.5 Mobile cranesβš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Mandates lift planning, exclusion zones, dogger involvement and gear inspection for all rootball craning operations over residential and commercial landscapes.

Hazardous Manual Tasks Code of Practice 2018 under WHS Reg 2025 s60

Requires risk assessment of repetitive lifting, awkward postures and sustained force β€” triggered by manual rootball handling, stake driving and mulch spreading.

Managing the Risks of Plant in the Workplace Code of Practice 2018 referencing AS/NZS 4576 Scaffolding and AS 2436 Guide to noise and vibrationβš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Governs guarding, isolation, operator competency and pre-start inspection of excavators, augers and chainsaws used in tree planting work.

High-Risk Construction Work triggered

3
Work involving the use of explosives

Not applicable to standard tree planting β€” included only where rock excavation for pit construction requires controlled blasting on commercial civil projects.

14
Work on or near energised electrical installations or services

Root-zone excavation routinely intersects buried electrical and communications services, triggering Schedule 1 category 14 controls and locator verification before digging.

21
Work involving structural alterations or repairs that require temporary support, and work in or near a trench deeper than 1.5 m

Advanced tree pits for 1000L–2000L stock regularly exceed 1.5 m depth, placing workers in a trench environment requiring shoring or battering.

Legal consequence

PCBUs must prepare, consult workers on, and retain this SWMS for the duration of the work plus two years after a notifiable incident under WHS Reg 2025 s299–300; penalties for non-compliance are substantial and indexed, with the current maximum following the prevailing WHS schedule.

Who this is for

  • β†’Landscape contractors installing advanced trees on commercial projects
  • β†’Civil and council arborists transplanting heritage or street trees
  • β†’Residential landscape supervisors managing crane-assisted plantings
  • β†’Property developers coordinating practical completion landscape works

What you receive

  • βœ“Editable DOCX template β€” Microsoft Word compatible
  • βœ“State-specific WHS legislation schedule (NSW/VIC/QLD/SA/WA/TAS/NT/ACT)
  • βœ“Hazard register with risk ratings + hierarchy-of-control mapping
  • βœ“Worker sign-on register, pre-start checklist, and incident escalation flow

Worked example

On a Tuesday morning at a new mixed-use development handover, a landscape foreman gathers four workers and the mobile crane dogger at the site shed for the pre-start brief. The crew is installing twelve 1000L advanced figs along the streetscape, each rootball weighing approximately 1.4 tonnes. The foreman opens this SWMS on a tablet and walks through the hazard register, pausing on the suspended load and excavation collapse entries. Workers identify that pit four sits within two metres of a marked telecommunications pit, so the locator is re-run and the pit is hand-dug for the final 300 mm to satisfy the engineering control. Each worker signs the consultation register on the SWMS, confirming they understand the 1.5x boom-length exclusion zone and the dogger's whistle signals. Mid-morning, an unexpected southerly gust exceeds the crane's wind cut-off threshold. The foreman halts the lift, returns to the SWMS, and documents the stop-work under the dynamic risk review section before re-briefing the crew on revised sequencing β€” completing the remaining pits manually with the tree dolly until winds drop. The SWMS sign-on sheet, dynamic review entries, and Dial Before You Dig receipts are filed in the site safety folder, providing the PCBU with a defensible compliance record should the regulator audit the project.

Related legislation

  • WHS Act 2011 (model)
  • WHS Regulation 2025
  • AS 2550 β€” Cranes, hoists and winches; AS 1418 series
What's in this SWMS

Document details

Regulation
WHS Regulation 2025, Schedule 1 β€” High Risk Construction Work
HRCW Category
Manual handling (heavy rootballs), excavation, plant equipment
Hazards Identified
6 hazards with controls
Format
Editable DOCX (Microsoft Word)
Author
Certified Industrial Hygienist (CIH)
Delivery
Instant download after payment